Belle perf féminine en escalade !

Vu les photos, et Playboy et Freefight c’est à Lourmarin Lourmarin…

2 Likes

j’ai souvenir de roche principalement grise à St Leger.
Et ocre foncé à Lourmarin.

Laura doit être prise en photo dans les 2 gros toits tout en haut au dessus d’Overdose Etc

Quelqu’un sait si elle reste à L (ou à Buoux) quelques jours cette semaine ?

Ces croix à Lourmarin remontent à 10j . Planetgrimp est un peu à la bourre sur ce coup .
Et non même si j’aurai aimé la voir à Buoux elle s’est barré direct après cette journée à Lourmarin

2 Likes

Jolie perf de Manon ! :sunglasses:

4 Likes

Et ça continue pour Chaehyun :

1 Like

Première enchainement féminin en libre de « Platinum Wall » par Sasha DiGiulian après 23 jours sur la paroie !

6 Likes

Laura Rogora torpille « Niobe », le 9a dalle mis à la mode par Ondra

" My 42nd route above 9a… but my very first slab above 7a :joy: "

2 Likes

Déjà 3 répétitions pour cette voie. Elle a pas recoté ça à 8b ? :stuck_out_tongue_winking_eye:

à priori non.
Mais c’est sûrement très complexe à coter ce style de voie

La video de Laura :

2 Likes

Et les bambin(e)s sont mutants

À 12 ans, Alizée Blass enchaîne « Guerre Future » (8c+) à Claret !

1 Like

À 20 ans, cette jeune Espagnole signe déjà sa cinquième voie dans le neuvième degré ! · PlanetGrimpe - Toute l’actualité escalade

3 Likes
4 Likes

Et sa video qui vient de sortir
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3WyOs81TKGU

1 Like

Manon Hily, s’attaque à l’une des voies emblématiques des Gorges du Loup, dans le sud de la France Trip Tik Tonik (9a/5.14d)

3 Likes

Michaela Kiersch signe la première féminine de “Dolby Surround” et propose 9a+ · PlanetGrimpe - Toute l’actualité escalade

La classe!

1 Like

Katherine Choong enchaine Ravage

2 Likes

Janja
Ceuse - Bibliographie 9b+

Je trouvais étonnant qu’elle ne soit pas à la coupe du monde de bloc/diff de ce we :thinking: Elle prenait le frais dans le 05 :grin:

" Bibliographie. 9b+ ❤️

Some routes leave a mark on you long before you ever reach the chains.

For a long time, projecting was one of the hardest parts of climbing for me. I love the variety of climbing. I wake up wanting to try something different every day. A different climb, a different style, a different challenge. That’s what has always excited me.

Because of that, if a route didn’t happen quickly, I often lost interest. There was always another route, another goal, another idea waiting. Coming back, failing again, and choosing the same route day after day was never something that came naturally to me.

This route asked something different of me: patience, commitment, and presence. It asked me to listen, to trust, to learn, and sometimes to let go. To return again and again, even when progress felt small or invisible. It taught me to slow down and accept that growth isn’t always obvious. To trust that every attempt, every small adjustment, every lesson was adding up to something, even when it didn’t feel like it.

There were days when I left the wall smiling and days when I left frustrated. Days when every move felt possible, and days when I questioned everything. Days when the old version of me wanted to walk away and chase something new. But somehow, I kept coming back.

More than a grade, this feels like a personal victory over an old mindset. I learnt that not every goal has to happen immediately. It’s discovering a level of patience I wasn’t sure I had. It’s understanding that some of the most beautiful things in life happen when you fully embrace the journey instead of rushing to the destination.

Clipping the chains, I wasn’t thinking about grades or milestones. I was thinking about how lucky I am. Lucky to have found a passion that still inspires me after all these years. Lucky to share it with people who make every experience richer. Lucky to keep discovering new things about myself through climbing.

To everyone who supported me, encouraged me, believed in me, and shared this journey with me: thank you. ❤️

Routes come and go. Grades come and go. But some experiences stay with you forever.

My heart is very full."

Janja Garnbret: First female ascent of Bibliographie

8 Likes
  • " Ironically, the winning attempt wasn’t supposed to be the winning attempt. “I honestly thought it would just be a warm-up,” she remembers. “But my head was super calm. I was honestly just vibing on the wall. I had zero thoughts – just warming up, trying to feel the moves.”

- " « This route required a lot of commitment, going up, all the time, trying, failing, failing again, failing again. Again and again until I succeeded. Usually, in the past, if I couldn’t do a route in two to three tries, I would walk away and never come back. But this route required me to be a different climber. To commit, to be patient – the challenge was mostly mental. »

Du lien précédent

(message supprimé par son auteur, sera supprimé automatiquement dans 100 heures à moins qu’il ne soit signalé)