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Emily Harrington Becomes First Woman to Free Climb El Cap’s Golden Gate in a Day

On Wednesday, November 4th, Emily Harrington was unsure if she would be making history that day when she began to ascend one of the most challenging climbs in the world. 21 hours and 13 minutes later, she became the first woman to free-climb the treacherous 3,200 foot El Capitan Golden Gate route in a day.

At 1:34 am Harrington began the climb of the Golden Gate route with her goal being to complete the route from base to summit in under twenty-four hours. While Harrington, like the rest of the country, was awaiting anxiously for election results, she was fighting for her biggest dream.

“I knew I was in for a big day — but that’s exactly why I was there. I wanted to find my limit and exist in it and fight beyond it,” she wrote on Instagram.

The Golden Gate is a grade VI 5.13 route on the southwest face of El Capitan and is one of the most well-known and most challenging routes in the world. Harrington’s success makes her the first woman to free-climb Golden Gate in a day, the fourth woman to free-climb El Capitan in a day, and the fourth person to free-climb Golden Gate in a day, according to Climbing Magazine.

“I never believed I could actually free climb El Cap in a day when I first set the goal for myself. It didn’t seem like a realistic objective for me,” she wrote on Instagram. “Impossible dreams challenge us to rise above who we are now to see if we can become better versions of ourselves.”

View this post on Instagram

Golden Gate ✨ Free 💫 In A Day ⚡📸 @jonglassberg / @jess_talley / @louderthan11 I never believed I could actually free climb El Cap in a day when I first set the goal for myself. It didn’t seem like a realistic objective for me. I didn’t have the skills, fitness, or risk profile to move so quickly over such a large piece of stone. But I chose it exactly for that reason. Impossible dreams challenge us to rise above who we are now to see if we can become better versions of ourselves. On Nov 4 I started climbing with @alexhonnold at 1:34am, caught between my own internal drama of achieving a life goal and the more prevalent one of the elections – both unfolding in parallel ways in my brain. I knew I was in for a big day – but that’s exactly why I was there. I wanted to find my limit and exist in it and fight beyond it. A nasty slip on the 13a Golden Desert pitch almost took my resolve – a deep gash on my forehead left me bloody and defeated. I pulled on again, part of me not really wanting to stay on the wall, the other part gathering courage and flow. I kept thinking “why am I still hanging on?” The next pitch was the A5 traverse, where I failed last year. This time it was not my limit. I fought hard but with flawless movements in the dark. I cried at the belay – it could happen this time….The final 5 pitches felt scary in my current state but I pulled over the final lip at 10:30pm in disbelief. There’s a lot more to say but mostly I wanted to express my gratitude for the love and support from friends, family, and strangers. I feel the love so intensely right now. Thank you all 🙏🏻 Massive thanks to @alexhonnold for climbing with me over these years, you’ve inspired me to think bigger and believe in myself in ways you cannot imagine. To @jonglassberg for your friendship, creativity, and ability to capture a story while at the same time keeping it light and always fun. And finally to my best friend, partner, lover, fave human of all time @adrianballinger – your support and love for me through the darkness and the light has never wavered. I love you endlessly ❤❤❤ More to come!!! @thenorthface / @kodiakcakes / @petzl_official / @lasportivana

A post shared by ᴇᴍɪʟʏ ʜᴀʀʀɪɴɢᴛᴏɴ (@emilyaharrington) on Nov 7, 2020 at 8:06am PST

Adrian Ballinger, Harrington’s fiancé and a renowned Mount Everest guide, and Alex Honnold, famous for  free solo climbing El Capitan, were her belays for the climb, swapping each other out. Harrington had one bad fall on one of the route’s most difficult sections, Golden Desert, where she hit her head on the granite wall, reminding the climbers of a scary day that happened just last year.

When her name made headlines in fall 2019 at El Capitan, it had a much different tone. The professional climber suffered a major fall of nearly 47 feet while attempting the same climb she conquered this year. She made a post with her thoughts on the climb and injuries. 

View this post on Instagram

I had an accident yesterday on El Cap. I’m banged up but gonna be ok thankfully. Not much to say except I took a bad fall and pin balled a bit then somehow hit the rope w my neck – 🤷🏼‍♀️🤦🏼‍♀️ All I know is that I am extremely grateful to have had @adrianballinger @alexhonnold @jonglassberg @sannimccandless @tarakerzhner and YOSAR of course there to get me out and help me through ❤ // thanks everyone who sent kind messages and thoughts – feeling so supported and loved 💕 // 📸 portrait by @tarakerzhner + neck selfie

A post shared by ᴇᴍɪʟʏ ʜᴀʀʀɪɴɢᴛᴏɴ (@emilyaharrington) on Nov 25, 2019 at 10:53am PST

The five-time U.S. sport climbing champion was lucky to walk away from the brutal 2019 fall with only a concussion, a large rope burn to the neck, and cuts and bruises. She vowed to not give up on her dream to finish the route in a single day. 

Now, a year later, she is climbing over the summit’s edge at around 10:30 pm and walking away with just a head gash and a major achievement.

“I’ve never been more tired or scared leading the final 5.11 pitches out,” Harrington told Climbing Magazine. “Fully at my limit physically and mentally—just like it’s meant to be!”

Featured Image: El Capitan, Yosemite National Park, California by Mike Murphy via Wikimedia Commons

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The Best Free Camping in Texas

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You have dozens upon dozens of options for free camping in Texas. Not only is free camping a great way to save money on your next outdoor adventure, but many of the best free campsites in Texas are quiet, remote, secluded, and supremely beautiful. These free campsites are located all throughout the region, including the …

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Beyond The Tent – Family and RV Camping Adventures
Jake Walnut

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Why Sasha DiGiulian Lobbies Congress in Her Free Time

When I was nine years old, my mom drove me to Boone, North Carolina, to a place called Hound Ears. We stayed in a little log cabin and woke up early the next day. Climbers from all over sat on crash pads, sipping steamy beverages from their thermoses. People gathered around vendor tents trying to warm themselves against the chilly morning air. Still others flipped through a paper topographic pamphlet, planning their climbing day. This was the first-ever Triple Crown event, a competition and festival in the Southeast in which participants aim to do their best ten boulder problems in a day. It takes place in three locations: Hound Ears, Stone Fort in Tennessee, and Horse Pens 40 in Alabama. But Hound Ears is located on private land, so climbers can only come together to one day a year to recreate there. 

That day, climbers ran up and down the mountain, looking for specific problems and trying their hardest to complete them. People from all over pulled pads together to create safe landings and cheered beta and encouragement to each other. I was young and new to the sport, and while my mom was there to support me, she wasn’t a climber herself, so we relied on other participants to help me locate boulder problems and spot me as I made my way to the top of them. 

Walking along the crunchy fallen leaves, biting into my cold PB&J, and feeling the grippy sandstone under my skin and the camaraderie in the air heightened my love of the outdoors. It was just plain fun. I returned to school the following Monday and couldn’t wait for Horse Pens 40, the next Triple Crown event.

Jim Horton founded the Triple Crown series in 1994 with one purpose: to raise money to keep one of his favorite climbing areas open. Climbing in Hound Ears, like many areas, faces access issues, because landowners do not want the sport happening on their property, often due to liability concerns. Coalitions like Access Fund, the Southeastern Climbers Coalition, and the Carolina Climbers Coalition purchase land to maintain and to develop the sport in these hard-to-access areas.

I have traveled to over 50 countries throughout my climbing career. What I cherish about the outdoors is what makes America so unique to people globally: our public lands. So recently, I went to Washington, D.C., for my fourth-annual Climb the Hill event, where Access Fund and the American Alpine Club team up to lobby on Capitol Hill. 

Lobbying means highlighting an issue for your elected officials or introducing a policy that you would like to see supported by representatives. It’s important to note that every American citizen has the constitutional right to lobby on Capitol Hill.

For me, protection of the places I love to climb is high on my lobbying list. According to Access Fund, nearly 60 percent of our climbing areas are on federally managed public lands. There are a growing number of bills, executive orders, and resolutions to transfer and diminish our public lands from public to privatized, and often they result in an extreme threat to our environment and wildlife.

As a climbing community, we may be politically diverse, but we all share the same passion. In this, climbing has the power to unite us and inspire all of us to protect America’s public lands. 

Here is an overview of our lobby efforts this year:

  • We supported the Colorado Outdoor Recreation and Economy Act (CORE), which aims to protect more than 40,000 acres of public lands in Colorado as well as withdraw 200,000 acres at Thompson Divide, near Snowmass and Aspen, from future oil and gas leasing. Want to tell the Senate to pass the CORE Act? Take action here. 
  • We also rallied around the Recreation Not Red Tape Act, which offers commonsense solutions to unite outdoor enthusiasts. It strives to improve and enhance outdoor recreation on our public lands.
  • We fought legislation and executive orders undermining the Antiquities Act, including rescinding Bears Ears National Monument in Utah.
  • We discouraged Congress and the president from prioritizing commercial interests over conservation.
  • We pushed to maintain regulations that protect the integrity of our public lands, including responsible public-land uses, environmental protections, and development.
  • We argued against cuts to the public-lands budget and supported maintaining the authority of those charged with protection of those lands.

My hope is that, together, we can respect the integrity of what sets America apart. A large portion of this comes down to protecting and advocating for our lands. While they cannot speak for themselves, the beauty of the land we all share should speak for itself.

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