So, any travel requires the flexibility to make multiple tiers
of plans in order to get where you need to go. Such is true with my quest to climb in Australia.
The original plan was that my climbing partner, Ant, would
get me in Melbourne in his van and we would drive out to the Arapiles where we
would then be able to climb for a week or so before driving down to Sydney, do
a bit more climbing, and then I would depart from Sydney for home. This seemed like an easy enough plan to
me, especially given it did not involve me having to know much about Australian
geography.
In pursuit of this plan, let’s call it Plan A, I have
dragged this enormous golf bag/portaledge all over creation which makes travel
by bus or train slightly difficult.
The first snag in the plan emerged when Ant informed me that
his car had broken down a few weeks prior in some part of the country nowhere
near where we wanted to be and so he had no transportation. I of course only learned of this a few
days before I was supposed to get to Arapiles.
The new revised plan, Plan B, was that he would make it into
Melbourne via bus and I would rent a car and then we would drive back out to
Arapiles together, thus alleviating the entire drive on the left side of the
road thing for me. Also, Ant
informed me that kangaroos, like deer, like to jump in front of the car in an
effort to kill themselves and you.
So he felt it would be prudent if he were in the car on my first backwards
driving attempt, in case a kangaroo jumped out from nowhere.
Plan B also was not a go when Ant didn’t make it to
Melbourne by missing the bus. It
was kind of a stupid plan requiring a lot of unnecessary driving on his part
anyway.
However, it made Plan C, the part where I rent and drive a
car out of the city of Melbourne on my own to meet Ant in the town of Horsham,
the current operative plan. Generally
speaking, I have managed to avoid driving in countries other than the U.S. and
certainly in countries where they drive on the left hand side of the road.
This was about to change.
With the car rented, I checked out of the hotel, left my
extensive luggage in the lobby and walked around the corner were conveniently
the rental car agency road was.
Melbourne seems to tend to concentrate like things all together – all
the electronics stores on one street, all the rental car agencies on another, all
the Italian restaurants, etc.
Fortunately, the rental car concentration in the city was right by the
hotel. For reasons I cannot
understand, Alamo was cleverly disguised as a company called Europcar and it
took me some amount of time to figure this out. Nobody I asked had ever heard of Alamo.
I had rented the economy standard vehicle, which meant that
I was going to be driving a 5-speed off the deck, so to speak, or in this case,
out of the basement parking garage. I figured that if you are going to have to learn to drive
backwards, you might as well increase the complexity by having to shift
backwards too. Besides, the race-
car driver in me loves driving manual transmission cars and while the Prius has
many benefits, it is kinda boring to drive.
My car turned out to be a bright yellow Skoda. I have no idea who makes this car, I
assume somewhere in Europe because it was adorable in a European sort of
way. I was a bit struck by how
bright yellow it was, especially given it was the only yellow vehicle in the
entire parking garage.
I have since gone on to test the theory that bright yellow
is not a color favored by Australians. It would seem that I am driving one of the
only bright yellow cars besides taxicabs in the entire country. I have now studied this empirically over
2,600 kilometers of driving.
Australians drive a lot of cute European cars, they also
drive this strange vehicle that looks like a retro 70s muscle car, is made by
Ford, but I think is actually new.
There are also versions not made by Ford around as well. Different permutations of these, like
mini-trucks, really, are everywhere.
Perhaps the most quintessential Australian car I have
encountered looks like this:
The bars on the front are for hitting kangaroos, though I am
sure this is not done intentionally.
Rather, they are standing in the road a lot and jump in all sorts of
directions. It is advised to avoid
hitting wombats, which while sort of small are evidently quite solid and have
been known to turn over trucks when struck. There are signs everywhere warning against hitting all the
different animals.
This sign combined all the things you shouldn't hit in the area onto one sign |
The plastic thing that looks like a spotlight is actually a
scuba device for the engine so that you can drive your car underwater. Evidently, Australians have to drive
under water a lot and this allows the engine to continue to function when
otherwise it would probably go ahead and die.
My suspicious that the color yellow is not ordinary for
Australians was further confirmed when this elderly couple – the kind that
travel around pulling an adorable Eurocar behind their RV – randomly drove into
our campsite one day and asked if it would be ok to take a picture of my yellow
Skoda. They claimed they needed it
for some sort of contest they were in and the only other yellow car they knew
about was never stationary and so they couldn’t get a picture of it.
Yellow also has the benefit, however, of making me easy to
spot if I ended up on the wrong side of the road. My driving mantra was “stay left” for the first week or so.
Back in the parking garage, after spending considerable time
trying figuring out how things worked and getting the occasional stare from the
rental car people who must have wondered if I actually planned to leave the
garage. The backwards shifting wasn’t going to be too bad because at least the
clutch and brake were in the same places. It took me a long time to figure out
where the lights were until I looked on the opposite side of the steering wheel
for that as well.
I finally had no more excuses for staying in the parking
garage and I was going to have to hit the road.
My initial goal was to make as few right turns as possible
and try to avoid hitting anything. I was planning my route accordingly.
Out of the garage, I had to make one right turn, almost
hitting a woman in a wheelchair in the process (actually one of those mobile
cart thingys) and then two lefts to get back to the hotel. I survived this trip without harm and
gained considerable confidence in the process.
The bright yellow car was quite sporty and easy to
maneuver. After picking up my
luggage from the hotel, I spent another considerable chunk of time sitting in
front of the hotel, trying to figure out the GPS system and see if it was going
to take me out of the city without taking any right turns.
Realizing I couldn’t just sit in front of the hotel all day,
I proceeded to employ the following strategy to get out of Melbourne. First, sort of listen to the GPS, but
more importantly, and secondly, follow the cars in front of me. This is a tactic I learned from reading
Douglas Adams’ less popular book, The
Long Dark Tea Time of the Soul and it works quite nicely most of the time –
if you are lost or don’t know where you are going, just follow the car in front
of you, at least until they end up at their home. The follow-the-car-in-front-of-you strategy was especially
important when going around roundabouts, which simply did me in
conceptually. Double-decker
backwards roundabouts simply can’t exist simultaneously in my brain with other
thoughts.
During this initial driving bonanza, I had feared that at
some point my mind would simply dissolve into a morass of confused directions and
I would end up screaming and taking my hands off the steering wheel as I
careened into oncoming traffic.
Fortunately, this didn’t happen and I made it safely out of town and successfully
drove the three hours to Horsham without having to turn right at all except to
follow cars onto a freeway. I also
didn’t see any suicide mission kangaroos.
I was to meet Ant, my climbing partner, at the public
library.
Ant at the moment basically lives at Arapiles in a
tent. He is what we call in the
climbing world a dirtbag climber.
These are people who travel and live for climbing, have eliminated most
worldly necessities and instead spend all their money on gear and the minimal
needs living in a tent requires. I
was bringing the portaledge for Ant and for a future climb we had planned. The portaledge is more expensive than
his current dwelling, which is a K-mart plastic tent.
The whole dirtbag thing means that most climbers access to
the Internet through free places like the library. Charging phones and stuff has to be done whenever possible
from public resources given that climber campgrounds tend to be primitive and
without any modern conveniences, like running water or toilets, so Internet
access is out of the question. The Mt. Arapiles campground had a very
nice pit toilet facility and a water catchment system for drinking water that
says not to drink it. There are no other facilities and all
the climbers there are living in tarp covered tent cities. Many, like Ant, have been there for
several months now. They have put up
the required slack line.
For some reason Ant’s phone could receive text messages but
not send them and I had bought a cheap pre-paid cell phone in order to be in
contact. Given I was driving the
only bright yellow car around, I was easy to spot.
After meeting up outside the public library, we stopped to
get tea and coffee, because that is just what Australians do. I have to admire a country that asks if
you want milk with your tea – and also makes a good cup of tea, unheard of in
the U.S. Also, technically, Ant
and I have never met in person – we met via the Internet when we were both
looking for climbing partners about a year ago. Thus, the tea/coffee stop was what I would call the “we have
not ever met before but need to establish some level of trust before driving
off into the dark wilderness together” meeting.
Next the provisioning began – we went to the Safeway to get
food for the next few weeks, which was a really interesting experience. Australians, for example, don’t
refrigerate their eggs, but the pet food was refrigerated in the meat isle. You can also buy kangaroo meat at the
Safeway, which we did. All that
brand names are different and so it took a long time to wander around and
figure out what I wanted.
Over the next few days we also spent a lot of time at the
local K-Mart, which is big in Australia.
There were lots of camping supplies that needed to be purchased,
including a cheap 4-person additional tent for the roadtrip part of the
adventure.
Laden with a lot of food, mostly because I wasn’t too clear
on how much to buy, we finally headed out to the campsite, which is about 20
miles out of Horsham – in the dark.
The camping ground was at the base of Mt. Arapiles and Ant’s
campsite was close to a group of school kids. He had two tents – the K-mart plastic tent, which he
generously let me use and a two-person tent he was using to store gear. When we arrived things were a bit in
disarray. Ant said that his friend
and her kids had been camping there for a few days and had just left. The evidence was in the form of lots of
little kid sleeping blankets and a pillow with a pink princess on it. Personally, I think Ant just didn’t
want to admit that the princess pillow and the power ranger sleeping bag was
his.
Given it was dark, Ant started a fire and we got things a
bit organized which required moving stuff around in the two tents. The golf bag/portaledge went into the
bigger tent with me, since it is the size of a human being, and we moved Ant’s
mattress and stuff into the other tent.
Climbers are not late night people because the fire dies and
it gets cold. Darkness in
Australia this time of year is about 5:30 so we didn’t stay up late, which
poses problems for me since I wake up early anyway. It doesn’t get light until 7:30 or so and so my goal was to
try to sleep at least until it was light.
I will say I slept a lot and pretty well on the trip which makes me
wonder if I should just go live in a tent somewhere.
The next morning dawned blue and beautiful and cold.
View of Mt. Arapiles |
I managed to fill the water bottles
from the catchment tank and tried to figure out how to make tea, but to no
avail. There was no fuel for the
jetboil stove and it turned out that Ant was just boiling water by making a
fire and sticking a pan in the flames – this is a level of primitive camping to
which I had not yet been exposed.
I had sort of assumed car camping, which is basically what we are doing,
would include a few extra amenities – like a stove.
Bird by the water supply |
I got the hang of the boiling water in a fire pit after the
first day.
Given that Ant and I had not yet climbed together and we had
moved through the, so you are not a serial killer part of the test, today was the,
“so you say you are a climber but now you have to demonstrate that you know
what you are doing” sort of day.
View from base of climbing area at Arapiles |
Ant geared up for the first lead of the day (at noon) |
As
a sometimes guide, I know firsthand that people often overestimate their
abilities and also tend to talk themselves up when trying to impress
people. My strategy is always to
do the opposite – to make sure that I am as honest as possible about what I can
climb. However, climbing
difficulty ranges given the type of climbing you are doing and the rating given
to the climbing by the local community.
In other words, it isn’t an exact science. It also means it is a good idea to begin on something pretty
easy to get a feel of the area and your climbing partner.
Ant doesn’t really function on what I call capitalist time,
meaning that once you live in a tent and climb all the time, you stop worrying
about time almost all together. It
was noon before we meandered up to the cliffline, which was all of a five-minute
walk from the tent to do our first few climbs. Arapiles is a trad area, meaning that you have to place your
own gear as you ascend. I had
brought lots of gear with me and Ant had his own so we had ample gear.
Our first climb ended up being a 3 pitch (meaning more than
one rope length) easy climb.
Australians grade things differently, in fact, I’ve spent my time here
constantly not knowing what the temperature was, how far I’ve gone, or what the
climbing grade is because Australians use Celsius, the metric system and their
own grading system that begins at 18 or something like that. I think that an 18 is around a 5.7 or
so and a 24 is around an 11d or 12a, depending on the guidebook. I didn’t climb anything harder than a
24 so I quit paying attention after that.
Our first climb was no more difficult than a 5.7. It was super fun, solid, and ended on a thin arête to the top
of a spire. I of course didn’t
bring my camera.
The challenge it would seem at Arapiles is really in the
descent. This area is so
traditional that they don’t put in any sort of rappel stations. Instead, the descent required us to
sling a rock, rappel, then fling the rope and the webbing it was attached to
off the rock to retrieve it. We
then had to downclimb these class 5 chimneys to get back to the base of the
cliff. In other words, the
downclimb was harder than the climb and we did it unroped. Kinda weird.
Upon returning to the ground, we did another single pitch
climb that I led. It was really
fun and also probably a 5.7 or so.
As with the first route, it also required a more difficult downclimb
than the climb itself – downclimbing the back of the ridge with fairly
significant exposure even though the climbing wasn’t hard. Exposure is a way of saying that if you
fall you probably go all the way down.
Anyway, we were running out of daylight and so we ended our
first day after these two climbs. Ant showed me some of the bouldering areas
around Arapiles and we took a brief tour of some of the other areas were we
would hopefully climb on future days, including the area where we could test
the portaledge.
Boulder Problem -- I did all the moves on this one just not in one go. |
View of what Arapiles looks like close up |
There were lots of kangaroos wandering around as we headed
back to camp. They are very cute,
though it did not dissuade me from eating kangaroo that night – roasted in a
frying pan over a wood fire, medium rare. Pretty tasty.
It is hard to get a good picture of a jumping kangaroo |
We woke the next morning to dark clouds and imminent
rain. This necessitated a Plan D –
instead of climbing today at Arapiles, we would drive to the Grampions, which
is evidently a better place to climb in the rain. The plan had been to climb a few days at the Grampions
anyway, which Ant said was about an hour from our camp, so it wasn’t too much a
deviation from our plan.
After a variety of errands and stuff in town, we embarked
upon the drive quite late. Given I
had no idea where we were going or how long it was going to take to get there,
I didn’t really have much input into this process. To further make matters complex, there had been floods in
the area the year before, some of the roads were closed and so we had to stop
at a visitor’s center to get the beta on what might be open and what access
existed to where. They then
provided us with directions to our trailhead, though Australians call them
tracks, and we then drove towards our goal – across quite a few miles of dirt
roads.
View of the Grampions National Park area |
Grampions National Park |
We finally reached the trailhead for the climbing area at
about 3:00. Given it got dark at
5:30, our day had turned into one of investigation, not climbing, we will call
it Plan E.
We began what Australians call “bushwalking” but what
Americans call “hiking.” When I
had heard the term bushwalking, I had developed an image of walking through an
area that looks something like Eastern Washington with lots of sagebrush and
things that look like bushes.
In Australia, bushwalking happens in a forest – which also
means that “bushfires” are really “forest fires.” I felt relatively enlightened once I figured this out and it
changed my internal vision of what Australia looks like. Mostly the trees are eucalyptus and I
kept my eyes peeled for koalas, but I didn’t see any outside of the nature
reserve we went to after the conference had finished.
For our bushwalk, we left the climbing gear in the car,
walked past some kangaroos, and walked up the trail to engage in a bit of
climber tourism – which is when you just look at rocks, you don’t climb them.
We actually didn’t make it all the way to the climbing area
– but were back at the car before dark.
Given I still had visions of last year’s bivouac in Yosemite on my mind,
I did not want to get lost in the woods and spend the night in the cold. Besides, we still had to drive on
untold miles of dirt roads infested with kangaroos before getting back to the
tent. As we drove out, there were
kangaroos standing all over the road, at least the dirt parts of it.
It was raining by the time we got back to the tent and so
dinner was cooked over a campstove in the rainfly of the k-mart tent. It did make for an early night.
It rained all night and the next morning too. We spent a good part of the morning
constructing a tarp cover for the campsite so that we would not be
tentbound. This involved a tarp,
strings, sticks, and rocks – also we had to move the fire ring.
The stick system didn't work so well in the wind |
Given it was still raining, we went into town to the public
library where all the other climbers were also hanging out waiting for the rain
to stop. The weather report said
it probably wasn’t going to stop any time soon.
Time to prepare Plan F.
That evening, as it rained, we visited some campers who were
camped not too far away. They were
folks who had climbed at Arapiles years ago and had just come up for a camping
visit to see what it was like. They
had this giant space-pod tent thing, which looked really cool and they fed us
banana bread. One of the cool
things about the dirtbag/tent life is that you live in the flow of other
interesting people where you can hear their stories and talk about your
different travels. People come and go, you hang out around campfires and talk
about climbing and stuff, people play music, there are the inevitable
slacklines around, and lots of climbing during the day. That night we talked about the great
polar expeditions, Australian politics, and their work. They were really nice guys.
It rained the whole time.
It was still raining the next morning when we decided that
we would deploy Plan F and head for a different climbing area. It is always a hard balance – the rain
could stop and then there would be excellent climbing, but at the same time,
how much time do you want to spend waiting for the rain to stop? It isn’t really an existential
question, but it is one that is continuously asked by those who want to be
outside in non-rainy conditions.
At one level, leaving now was not too far off the original
plan, which was to make our way down to Sydney anyway. Based upon this earlier plan, I had
booked my return flight from Sydney instead of Melbourne and so at some point,
I needed to get that direction anyway.
We packed up our stuff, though Ant left most of his in his camp, assuring
me that this was normal for Arapiles even though he was going to be gone for
two weeks or so. I should note
that the pink princess pillow came along.
We then made for a sport climbing area that was much closer
to Sydney. I’m not sure if it
confirmed that our choice was a good one, but it did rain most of the way
there.
1 comment:
Such great adventures!
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