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ACTIVITIES
Rocky Mountain Octopussy
Climbing a New Route in Ice
By Jeff Lowe
 THE FROZEN WATERFALLS on the limestone cliff bands east of Vail, Colorado have, over the years, provided ice climbers with a playground and laboratory on which to improve old skills and, occasionally, to develop new ones. The Rigid Designator area is particularly good in this regard. Easily approached and in a normally avalanche-free location, the Designator streaks upward like a comet trail, the crystal centerpiece of a 1 00-foot-high arc of inky rock. When it was first climbed in 1974 by Bob Culp, it was, at WI 5, one of Colorado's hardest ice climbs, surpassed in difficulty only by Telluride's Bridalveil Falls (WI 6), which Mike Weis and I climbed the same winter. Just to the right of the Rigid Designator is the Fang (WI 6+), a free-hanging 130-foot pencil of ice even more difficult than Bridalveil in the conditions of its first ascent, which was made by Alex Lowe in 1981.
I spent the winter of 1993-4 in Colorado, concentrating my efforts in the Vail area. In January, I made the first ascent of the Teriebel Traverse (M 7-), which traverses 35 feet across rotten rock from part way up the left side of the Rigid Designator to ascend a short pillar with a complex move out onto a fragile free-hanging curtain of ice that cascades over the lip of the roof above. Toward the end of the winter, I did the first ascent of the Seventh Tentacle (M 7+), pushing the possibilities of dry-tooling and leading up to a smear of ice that licks down to within 20 rocky feet of the ground behind the Fang. This 80-foot climb turned out to be the first pitch of the most interesting effort of the season, Octopussy.
On April 13, I went up to Vail, determined to end a good winter ice season on a strong note. After I had climbed the Seventh Tentacle, my belayer Teri Ebel jumared up. I set out on a 30-foot rock traverse left until I was directly behind Octopussy's frozen tentacles, which were dangling from the edge of a 10-foot horizontal roof I'd been passing beneath. With great effort, by stretching almost horizontally sideways, I managed to place two good pitons in the roof. Clipping into them proved to be incredibly strenuous and this was only the beginning of the wildest set of mixed climbing moves I've ever done. Hanging from a tiny hook placement in the limestone roof, I cut both feet free and simultaneously turned my body in mid-air, swinging like Tarzan to stick my other pick into the nearest tentaclewhich I managed to do after two tries! This left me dangling between my outstretched arms, wondering what to do next.
Another ape swing was all I could come up with, but I missed the first stick and had to exert great effort on several subsequent attempts before I finally got it. Absolutely pumped, I pulled into a front lever with my frontpoints barely contacting a more substantial icicle five feet away. I started walking my feet horizontally upward, making a few more vertical progressions with my tools before my feet slipped. Unable to tip back up into position, with no strength or feeling left in my forearms, I shrugged my picks from their meager placements and dropped free into a swinging fall.
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From the American Alpine Journal 1995
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