Archive for category: Gear Talk
Jarred Cobb / February 1, 2012 8:30 am
Here in our Gear Talk section, we bring you reviews and highlights of the latest climbing and lifestyle gear. The products that come through our shop range from ropes and shoes to jackets and water bottles. Everything we write about goes through a rigorous testing process and there are a few ways the gear finds its way to Climberism’s heart: [...]
Jarred Cobb / January 23, 2012 3:38 pm
I’ve had the opportunity to drink from many a reusable water bottle. It’s not because of my PhD in gear reviewing earned here at Climberism University, but instead my penchant for losing every one I get my hands on. Left a bottle at a crag? Check. On a bus in Nicaragua? Check. At my friend’s house who claims he never [...]
Guest Contributor / January 17, 2012 9:03 am
A few years, ago when I was getting a Wilderness First Responder certificate, our instructor made a comment about how a climber needed to have at least four pairs of crampons; aluminum for skiing and summer use, steel horizontals for glacier use, steel horizontals with a toe basket for general use, and technical ice crampons. Until this season, I agreed [...]
Guest Contributor / January 11, 2012 9:30 am
From Guest Contributor Krista Dewald: I have tried out climbing shoes designed specifically for women before, and am usually disappointed. They are most often a guys shoe with pink and purple splashed somewhere, and you can tell the designer was thinking more about how to market the shoes than what women actually want to wear. Mad Rock’s Onsight does not [...]
Jarred Cobb / December 30, 2011 3:34 pm
I’ve had the Julbo Contests for six months now, and am impressed with the product. The lenses are interchangeable, frame allows your face to breathe and design is just plain groovy. Based in the Green Mountains of Vermont and the Jura Mountains of France and around since the 1880s, Julbo is a family-owned company that produced the first pair of [...]
Jarred Cobb / December 16, 2011 3:02 pm
La Sportiva, maker of some of the best climbing shoes and boots in the business, will debut a full line of technical “ski mountaineering apparel” next year. The 48 piece collection will include hard and soft shells, and insulating and performance base layers. Says Jonathan Lantz, President of La Sportiva NA: “Our team of designers in the Dolomites used feedback from [...]
Ray Kania / December 12, 2011 10:18 am
This fall, a friend and I made the drive from Burlington, Vermont to New Hampshire’s Cannon Cliff with the Whitney-Gilman Ridge as our objective. The WG is likely the most classic multi-pitch climb in the Northeast — big belay ledges, spectacular views, extremely exposed, everything you can ask for in a multi-pitch climb. The hour long approach starts out moderate, following a [...]
David Crothers / November 29, 2011 10:24 am
The northeast is known for its stellar ice climbing but it is also known for being bitterly cold. I usually remedy the bitterness by carrying a thermos with me for instant warmth, but if you’re ice climbing in a remote part of the Adirondacks, a thermos is only going to go so far. The Primus EtaSolo Stove is great for [...]
Guest Contributor / November 17, 2011 12:44 pm
The SCARPA Vapor V is one of SCARPA’s all-arounders, it will do anything and go pretty much anywhere. We shipped the Vapor off to one of our friends in Maine, Doug Koughlin. Doug has guided in Colorado, Alaska, the Northwest and is from the Northeast — his rock and alpine experience far exceed most. Here is what he had to [...]
Jarred Cobb / October 27, 2011 3:44 pm
“Projects beware!” says Mad Rock of its new Demon 2.0. With an aggressively down-turned nose and concave sole, this shoe is as mean-looking as a pitbull on steroids. Our reviewer was able to take them out for some fine fall sport climbing at Rumney, and spoke highly of its edging stiffness, ability to smear and overall comfort level. The Demon 2.0 [...]