Good wide fun. Red-point because my footer slipped on the lower section and I fell off. Lowered off and climbed clean from the ground to the top. The lower 1/3rd is the crux, but I'm sure the wide-section stumps many a prospective climber. Get on it!
A committing solo. After the crux move is made it's pure friction slab to the top. Though not hard, the tenuousness of such climbing made it exciting. A funkly little pebble-pulling, friction-slabbing novelty.
Would be a classic newbie trad lead over here. A variety of bomber jamming techniques and good gear. All of this was irrelevent since I was soloing, but I'm beginning to think that the Poms need to send a few of their low-grade trad routes over here to the Blueys.
This would be considered a descent climb at many Aussie crags. Pretty easy but fun moving on rock. The peak would be a great place to learn trad, so many easy trad routes.
No gear, so no rope. After the hard start, there are a few committing thin moves, then it's all over. If you had to tie in, I wouldn't say that this climb is worth it, but since its a free solo, you might as well cut a lap.
Looked good (watching another climber on it), and the conditions were great. The longest route I've ever solo'd in terms of distance, though quite easy. Sustained at the (easy) grade, and would be an awesome beginners lead.
I pushed the boat out a little bit to far on this one and gave myself a fright. Last solo of the day and pretty gripping, the only gear on the route is after the crux so solo it is.
Probably my hardest solo to date grade-wise. Short, but with the hardest committing move in the do-not-fall zone at a point where the climb is irreversible it is a touch dangerous. Thin slab, two hard moves. Fun.
Free solo to pick up Dana's gear so that we didn't have to second/rap clean it. Using a nut key to knock out stuck wires on a free solo is exciting. Bomber jams to a funky top out.