Matt Segal

Mar 18 | Gear Up + Get Out

Crimea - Matt WallMatt Segal in Crimea wearing the Verto Climb Collection, which you could win by entering the Gear Up + Get Out Sweepstakes

The North Face wants people to get outside and they are giving away the gear to help make it happen. The “Gear Up + Get Out” Sweepstakes launches today, and to celebrate, The North Face is giving people across the country a chance to win great gear packages up to a $1,000 value. 

Beginning today through October 31, sign up by visiting thenorthface.com/getout and be entered for a chance to win and Winners will be announced on the first of each month and a new gear package will be up for grabs full. Each month, gear packages will be focused on specific activities, including camping, climbing, running, mountaineering and yoga. 

The “Gear Up + Get Out” Sweepstakes is made possible through PlanetExplore, the online community and resource for outdoor recreational activities designed to help individuals and families learn about and participate in outdoor activities in their area. PlanetExplore provides valuable resources and continues to grow its non-profit partner base and event calendar, which no features more than 300,000 events annually.

The North Face is partnering with with top outdoor gear review blog and news source, Gear Junkie, to offer a second chance to win. Check out the latest gear and gadgets for getting outdoors, and enter for another chance to win a great gear package from The North Face.

For more information or to sign up for a chance to win, visit www.thenorthface.com/getout and www.gearjunkie.com/gear-up. Follow the conversation online with the hashtag #GearUpGetOut

Feb 14 | China's First Ever Trad Climbing Festival.

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A couple of months ago I attended China’s first ever Trad-Climbing Festival in the small village of Li Ming with fellow athletes and good friends Matt Segal, and Yuji Hirayama.  Matt had visited Li Ming the year before and established “Air China,” the hardest trad-climb in China, and roped me into the trip.  “Dude you are going to love it their,” he told me.  I’m always game for something new and adventurous, but was skeptical.  As far as I was concerned the only good sandstone crack climbing was in the U.S.

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Li Ming is located in a river valley surrounded by wild red and black streaked Sandstone walls and happens to have hundreds of cracks of all sizes splitting through the steep towering walls.   The terrain is reminiscent of Zion, Arches National Park, and Indian Creek, if you mashed them together with the sensibilities of a Buddhist landscape artist, and then dropped the amalgam into a mountainous high altitude jungle.

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I first visited China for climbing about eight years ago to visit Yangshuo, the premiere limestone sport climbing area in China.  I was excited to see a budding Chinese climbing community that was still finding its legs, and “learning the ropes.”   Returning this year I was impressed by how quickly the climbing community has grown and progressed in China.  Not only were are ten times as many competent climbers as my last visit, but many had graduated from sport climbing, to the more technical and committing world of gear protected Trad-Climbing.

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Three years ago there was no climbing in Li Ming to be heard of!  American Mike Dobie was one of the first climbers to realize the epic potential of Li Ming and has spent the last three years leading the charge to develop what may be China’s best Trad-Climbing resource.   Mike, put up countless routes, established trails, and made a guidebook.  With the area opened, word caught on in the Chinese climbing community.  Soon, the Chinese were putting down their quickdraws and putting together racks of Cams for burly crack climb assaults!

Pioneer Mike Dobe

For Mike this years Li Ming Trad-Climbing festival jointly sponsored by The North Face, and Black Diamond was a emotional and cathartic experience.  Over two hundred climbers from around the world showed up to climb on the routes that he had developed.  “Sometimes I wondered if I was crazy to spend so much energy on this project,” he told me one evening, “but seeing everyone enjoying the climbs here makes it feel like it was all worth it!”  Yuji, Matt and I all agreed that Mike’s time was well spent!

Cedar Cranking

I lead two days of intermediate crack climbing clinics, and was impressed by the enthusiasm of my group.  Most of them were sport climbers but they seemed much more open to trying something new than most American sport climbers.  I think because China is a young climbing community there are less preconceived notions of a separation between sport and trad that have developed over time in the U.S.  To them it’s all just climbing. 

Festival Cear and Yuji

I put up several burly offwidth climbs for them to practice on.  Offwidths are considered by many to be the most physically demanding and miserable form of climbing in existence.   I think offwidth climbing takes, heart and grit.  Most American climbers avoid offwidths like the plague, so it was heart warming to see my motley crew of Chinese climbers throwing themselves at this unique type of challenge with boundless enthusiasm. 

Local Climber

Almost all of the good sandstone crack climbing is in the United states, so the fact that China now has what I would consider a world-class crack climbing destination is huge for Chinese climbers, but also for Eastern European climbers who now have a way practice this unique art form much closer to their homes!  And Li Ming is only about twenty percent developed, with many side valleys that have yet to see first ascents, so crack climbing only just beginning in China!

Yuji Hirayama

In America the routes of our climbing history are in trad-climbing and while I believe it’s all just climbing, there is a special place in my hear for trad-climbing.  It requires more expertise, commitment and risk, and therefore I believe yields a deeper and more meaningful reward than sport climbing.  To put it simply, Trad-Climbing is more adventurous.  To put it colloquially, Trad-Climbing is more badass!

Wild Cracks

Because China is still a developing country, especially in terms of climbing, there are literally hundreds of world-class crags waiting for a motivated soul to develop.  In the United States several generations of climbers have left few crags left to pioneer, but in China a country with as much land and variety of terrain as the U.S.A.!   It is truly a climbers frontier of mind boggling proportions. 

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I’m already planning my next trip back to China to travel deeper into the beautiful and in terms of climbing, unexplored country. 

 

 

Sep 13 | Matt Segal: From Crimea With Love

From Dusk til Dawn
It never ceases to amaze me how brutal jet lag can me. It’s three in the afternoon and you feel like someone has slipped you a powerful sleeping pill! Finally though, after a week here in Crimea, the Jet lag is starting to wear off. Crimea is where the southern most peninsula of the Ukraine meets with the Black Sea, and the entire cost line is flanked with huge and gorgeous limestone cliffs. Currently we are deep in the toil, fear, and unknown of establishing two new free routes on these impressive orange, gray and white streaked walls!


IMG_5568I first heard of the climbing in Crimea over a year ago, while I was in Kyrgyzstan, climbing granite walls in the Ak Su Valley. Here, I met two Ukrainian climbers who could barely speak English. Through the universal language of pantomime, hand motions and facial expressions they introduced me to the idea of limestone in Crimea. When I returned home, I began to research the region and stumbled across a few very impressive photos of the Crimean Big Walls. Soon I was enchanted by dreams of exotic Crimean climbing adventure. In Kyrgyzstan we climbed perfect granite splitters which can be a pretty linear form of climbing. Limestone offers some of the most dynamic and intricate movement climbing has to offer and the truth is I was getting a little bored of “splitter” crack climbing.

IMG_9307Before I knew it, my dreams were turning into reality and I was researching and planning the expedition. I realized Russian climbers have been traveling to Crimea for years but mostly to establish aid climbs. Having climbed on many limestone walls I knew there had to be potential for first free ascents. My psych grew more and more with every new photo I found, there seemed to be an endless supply of limestone walls. But with the psyche, there was a bit of fear, as I realized that hardly anyone in Crimea speaks English. Pantomime had helped me find out about this place but I feared it wasn’t enough to navigate the complex terrain, and have a successful expedition…..we needed a contact.


IMG_5579I pulled together a team of climbers including Cedar Wright, Emily Harrington and climber/photographer Cory Richards to join me. We all put our heads together and found as much information on the area as possible. After months of effort Cedar finally made contact with a local Ukrainian climber named Sergey who has been a life-saver.  We landed in Simferopol the capital of Crimea and lucky for us Sergey was there to meet us. Crimea is one of the hardest places any of us have ever traveled. The rumors were true. No one speaks English! Without Sergey we probably wouldn’t be able to get to the base of the walls let alone order food.

Old boltsNot wasting any time, Sergey pointed us in the right direction and we all divided and rappelled down three different walls to scope for first ascents. In the end we decided to focus on two routes. I teamed up with Emily and Cory on this crazy feature called Parus or “the sail” and Cedar attacked the Kuba-Kaya wall with Sergey. We all spent three days cleaning and bolting our lines and are getting ready for attempts.

Both of our lines are quite difficult, approaching the limits of what we can do, so we are quite nervous! Emily, Cedar and I know that it is going to take all the hardwork and motivation we have to successfully free these beautiful new routes. With three weeks here, we hope this is only the beginning!

 

Cedar working on his new line
Cedar working on his new line


 

Jul 18 | Outdoor Nation NY Delegate Report - Yoon Kim

Even in the thickest of concrete jungles, dedicated explorers will find ways to enjoy the great outdoors.  Fountains turn into a place to splash your toes, city walls get climbed, and parks turn into campgrounds.  That’s exactly what a group of roughly fifty young delegates from around the country did at the Outdoor Nation Summit in New York City.

Jumping in Washington Square Fountain

Outdoor Nation is a non-profit that encourages young people to go outdoors.  But they aren’t just any advocacy group; they’ve taken a really wise approach on how to go about their evangelizing.  They understand that young people don’t want to be told to go outside, but want to go outside with other young people.  So instead of taking a traditional approach to advocacy, they fund outdoor related startup projects led by young people.  Everyone loves startups led by young people.

In this sense, Outdoor Nation is like an angel investor but they don’t take ownership of the projects.  Instead, they want the younger generations to lead their own movement to get their friends outside.  Funding goes toward projects like organizing trips, service projects, or other activities aimed at actually, going outside.

Matt SegalThe North Face climber Matt Segal

During the New York Summit, about fifty Millennials broke up into teams, brainstormed projects, created marketing strategies, then pitched projects to Outdoor Nation.  The funded teams will take that money and hopefully, convince their peers to go outdoors.

Rise and Shine in Central Park

But really, it’s about more than just getting young people outdoors.  Going outside is just the first step; any outdoor enthusiast knows that going outdoors does something to people; it changes the way they look at life and the world around them.  And this is the end goal for Outdoor Nation.

After a day of being trapped by concrete walls, we took a photo in Washintgon Square Fountain then headed to Central Park and set up camp.  All fifty of us crashed in tents and even brought along a familiar face to the North Face, Mary Anne Potts, Producer for National Geographic Adventure.

The great outdoors is the single most abundant resource that we have, whether it’s in the heart of the city, or the foothills of the Tetons. It’s available to everyone because it is so vast, beautiful and free. And despite being stuck in one of the most urban places on the planet, we found a way to explore the outdoors.

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Go outside, take someone with you. Have you taken the #RoleModels pledge? Commit to taking someone outside this summer on Facebook and enter to win great gear from The North Face. 

Jan 13 | Nepal 1: Getting there......

Well, Matt, Cedar, and I departed for Nepal this past Tuesday around 10:30 am.  Or that was the plan, rather. Upon arriving at the airport we found out that our flight to Newark was cancelled due to the giant snowstorm on the East Coast.  The woman behind the Continental counter told us that the chances of us leaving for Nepal that day were was slim to none, and that it might even be a few days before we could get out.  If we left too late in the week, we would miss our chance to visit the sport climbing area we had planned on going to before the first session of the Khumbu Climbing School began next week.  We persisted to ask more questions, but she continued to tell us that there were no other options for that day.  However, I've learned that traveling via air requires a certain kind of determination, and that no matter what anyone tells you, there is always another option, and we didn't back down.  After about 3 hours of dealing, we were finally put on standby for a flight out of Denver to Germany that night, followed by 3 more flights that took us to Jordan, India, and finally Kathmandu.  The woman said we had a good shot of making the first flight, so we went to the airport bar and waited it out.  

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Our bags: 7 total, 50+ lbs each.  

 

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Waiting at the Denver airport (Cedar Wright photo)

 

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Cedar's a creative genius.  Some people can't seem to appreciate that. 

 

Miraculously, we got on the first flight to Germany, and proceeded to make all our next flights without hassle, with the exception of a 3 hour fog delay in Delhi.  We made it to Kathmandu at noon on Thursday, nearly 48 hours after we arrived at the airport in Denver.  Aside from being completely exhausted from traveling, the only downside was that none of our bags made it to Kathmandu, and we are now without our clothing and climbing gear. Thankfully, I brought a change of clothes and my down jacket in my carry-on.  Unfortunately, our sport climbing trip is on hold until we can track down our luggage, but Kathmandu is not a bad place to have to hang out.  Yesterday we tried to stave off sleep as long as possible and went to visit "Swayambhunath," also known as the Monkey Temple, a Buddhist temple in the city that is home to many holy monkeys who live on its grounds.  We wandered around, took some photos, and climbed the 365 steps to the main temple platform just in time for sunset.  The views were glorious and powerful.  

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Today is a new day full of more exploring and learning.  Matt Segal posted an update on his site and I wrote another version on my site as well. Stay tuned.  

NEPAL_2011_SNIPPET from Cedar Wright on Vimeo.

Namaste,

~ Emily

 

May 01 | USA Climbing 2010

SCS-2010 The North Face® is a proud sponsor of USA Climbing, which produces the Sport Climbing Series (SCS) and the American Bouldering Series (ABS).   These competitions, which span the range from local comps to the national level, allow the next generation of greats to demonstrate their climbing skills in a competition forum. The North Face® Athletes Daniel Woods, Emily Harrington, Lisa Rands, and Matt Segal have all gotten their start through USA Climbing. Be sure to track all the action of the season! 

Go to, http://www.usaclimbing.net/home.cfm to check-out the results and rankings pages, then check the schedule for a comp near you!

Sep 26 | MALLORCA PSICOBLOG 6 "DEEP BLUE"

Hey Guys. This is Alex writing a little intro for Cedar’s newest masterpiece. He’s slaved hard the entire night to bring you this newest dispatch, which focuses on Matt Segal sending everything. The rest of us are basically on vacation while Matt crushes and Cedar shoots. The weather has improved and everything is going great here. Only a few more days left, so I guess we’re going to motivate and try to finish a couple more routes . Hope everything is going well for everyone!

Sep 08 | Mallorca Psicoblog One: "Testing the Waters."

Wooohooo!! Welome to Mallorca Psicoblogs!!! I've been in Mallorca for over twenty four hours now and had my first taste of Deep Water Soloing. I have to say I LOVE IT!!! I started out my experience with a thirty foot whipper into the ocean!! Stay tuned for more dispatches with North Face rockstars Emily Harrington, Alex Honnold, Matt Segal, James Pearson who arrive soon!!!

Sep 07 | Mallorca Psichoblog!!!

So...I'm headed to Mallorca to meet our Team Athletes Alex Honnold, Emily Harrington, James Pearson, and Matt Segal. Mallorca is a small island off the coast of Spain, where we will explore the island's unique potential for a style of climbing called "Deep Water Solo" or "Psicobloc." If you aren't familiar with D.W.S, it is not for the faint of heart, and entails climbing the wild orange limestone cliffs which surround Mallorca's coastline... without a rope!! Failing on a climb means a spectacular and horrifying plunge into the swirling sea, followed by an adrenaline surging swim for safety!!! Tim Kemple and I will be filming the nail biting mayhem and I'll be posting short video dispatches from the field....so stay tuned for the Psicobloc Psicoblog!!! Cheers Cedar Wright

MALLORCA

Mar 27 | The North Face 2009 Summit Series Road Trip - a Celebration of Climbing

A Journey of exploration - The North Face are proud to introduce the 2009 Summit Series Road Trip - a unique spring festival of climbing. The first event of it's kind, this 40 day road trip will combine expert performance from the world's best athletes on famous rock climbs throughout Europe with 'approach' days bring climbing into the local communities.

The Summit Series Road Trip will be hosted by The North Face athletes James Pearson and Gaz Parry.  Beginning on 1st April 2009 with a Climbing Festival at the Castle Climbing Wall in London, UK it will then cover a distance of over 11000 km, ending on May 10th in MelloBlocco, Italy.  In each country there will be a mixture of challenging climbing, slideshows, master classes, demonstrations along with press and store appearances; with 20 ‘summit’ days in classic venues climbing 20 of the best Fr8a routes in Europe, and 20 ‘approach’ days talking to young climbers, the public and the press. 

The motivation of the road trip is to inspire and to encourage - to enable people to ‘discover’ climbing through listening to, talking with and learning from some of the best climbers in the world.  Involving local schools and climbing groups the aim is to influence young people in particular - encouraging them to live the philosophy behind The North Face - to ‘never stop exploring’.

This will be a unique opportunity to meet, to listen to and to climb with two outstanding and inspirational athletes.  They will be joined in different locations by some of the world’s most renowned and respected climbers and alpinists including Cedar Wright, Daniel Woods, Matt Segal, Simone Moro, Emilio Previtali and Hervé Barmasse.

For James, “Thinking about the road trip fills me with both joy and dread.  There will be some amazing moments; we will meet incredible people, we will visit stunning places and we will do some challenging climbs.  But there will also be some epic times, in particular the long drives through the night with far too little sleep.  One thing is for sure, it will be an experience I will never forget ….”.

The North Face extends an open invitation to be a part of the journey.  Seize the challenge and join James and his companions at some point along the Summit Series Road Trip; it will be an experience to never forget.

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