Scared on Ship Rock

Scared on Ship Rock

Page Type Page Type: Trip Report
Date Date Climbed/Hiked: Nov 27, 2010

Trouble Before We Arrive

The trip started smoothly enough. Franky scooped me up at McCarran International and we made our way east into Arizona and stopped for the night west of Flagstaff. We were a little concerned with how cold it was (8 degrees F at 7000 feet) but knew that there was a slight warming trend predicted for Saturday before the weather went to hell again. We decided heading northeast through the Navajo Reservation would be a more interesting drive than staying on I-40 to get to New Mexico, so we turned off at Flagstaff, grabbed some groceries, and made our way onto the Reservation.

Taking the scenic route almost ended up costing us the trip. Little did we know that our first encounter with the Navajo Tribal Police would be 100 miles from Ship Rock. As Franky was coming down a hill at a rate of speed greater than or equal to the speed limit, an SUV headed in the opposite direction swung a U-turn and sped up to pull us over. Franky, ever the dirtbag, began pleading with the officer to not give him the speeding ticket he couldn’t afford. The cop had Frank step out of the vehicle and patted him down.
Ship Rock from the North


“I live in my truck, I don’t have money to pay a ticket!” Franky insisted.
Ship Rock from the East
“Then why do you have an Illinois registration and a California driver’s license?” the officer retorted.

Franky launched into an elaborate story that he was borrowing his dad’s truck to drive back to Illinois in order to look for a job. He was apparently dropping me off in Boulder. I could hear the officer behind the car reciting seemingly the entire Schedule I Controlled Substances List and asking if Franky had any of each in the car. When Franky said no, he told Franky he had smelled weed and asked to search the truck, with which Franky told him he didn’t feel comfortable.
Ship Rock from the South


I’m glad he didn’t ask me where we were going because I didn’t know Franky had created this story until after they had me get out of the car and asked me which drugs I was carrying on me. He then brought out a dog to sniff the car. I assumed he’d have a German Shepherd in the car, but he pulled out a mangy mutt that I’m pretty sure he picked up that morning from the plethora of strays roaming the Reservation. The officer explained that if the dog pointed, it would constitute probable cause to search the vehicle. He trotted the dog for one lap around the car, and the dog didn’t seem to react in the slightest. When he finally got the dog all the way around the car, he jerked the dog’s leash tightly and the dog lurched up. Apparently this was his probable cause, and I’m pretty sure we had our rights under the 4th Amendment violated.
Ship Rock


As Franky and I stood and watched the officer, then the mutt, and then another officer who pulled over to join the party rifle through the car, I asked him if he thought he had any weed in the car. “I’m not sure, maybe.” Even hearing this, I wasn’t too worried about things until I realized the contraband that I had been carrying.

“Damn it!” I said. “I left the articles we printed out about climbing Ship Rock on the seat! And they’ll see our rack in the back!” Climbing has been outlawed on Spider Rock and the Totem Pole since 1962 and the entire Navajo Reservation following an accident on Ship Rock in 1970. Many clandestine ascents have occurred over the years, but there was nothing clandestine about our efforts so far.
Ship Rock Alpenglow


Franky was sure we’d end up in Navajo-Pound-Me-In-The-Ass prison for drugs, and I was sure we’d end up there for having climbing gear and information on Ship Rock. As it turned out, we were sent along on our merry way, unscathed. We voiced our concerns about the legality of the search to an Arizona State Trooper that pulled over to join the fun, he went and talked to the Navajo officers, and they let us go before they could find the weed the first cop was 100% sure he had smelled. We left a little leery of the police presence and got to Ship Rock just before the sun went down. Our little hour plus detour to the side of the highway had cost us any chance as reconnoitering the route. We saw a fantastic sunset, cooked some dinner, and tucked into our sleeping bags in the back of the truck for a long, cold night.

Climbing Ship Rock

We awoke to very cold temperatures outside and frost all over the inside of the truck. We decided that 800 fill down was more appealing than the arctic air outside and hunkered down until the sun hit the truck. This was barely enough to convince us to get up, eat a little breakfast, and start walking. We heated up pretty quickly as we climbed the talus to the base of the route. It starts with a very bouldery move from a pile of stacked blocks to a gear placement after the tricky climbing is done (of course). Some more scrambling led us to the base of the black bowl that we figured would be an easy section of the route.
First Pitch
Topp Memorial

Plaques in memoriam of fallen climbers are not my favorite way to inspire confidence before a climb, and Bernard E. Topp’s didn’t make me feel any better about the shattered wall of black basalt that lay ahead. I got a few bad pieces of gear in, put screamers on all of them, and still wasn’t very happy about this section of the climb. Franky wasn’t happy either when I nearly domed him with a baseball sized piece of basalt.
Franky
More Franky

“Sorry, the rope knocked that off!” I said in an effort to calm him down. He said some choice things about my routefinding ability before I found a couple of fixed pins and then followed these to a bolt anchor at the top of the steep section.
Snowy Traverse
Summit

From here we unroped and scrambled through the loose stuff to a flat spot where we restacked the ropes and simulclimbed up to what we think was Sierra Col. This section was covered in snow and was slippery in rock shoes. From the col we had a nice view of what we were pretty sure was the summit, as well as Longs Couloir, which we would follow for the descent. We traversed over to what we were pretty sure was Colorado Col and Franky led up a face of kitty litter to the top of the rappel gully.

I went first off of less than inspiring bolts (at least there were three of them!) and at the end of the 60m ropes found myself above an abyss on an ice covered slab. “Damn, I wish I had stopped and rapped off the single bolt above,” I told myself, but there was an overhanging chockstone that would be a lot of trouble to go back up and try to deal with to get to that anchor. Instead, I downclimbed to a single bolt on the face, clipped it, and told Franky to make two rappels to get to me. He did, and as we pulled the ropes on the rappel we didn’t need to mention what we both knew: we were committed to finishing the route, as the only reasonable chance of escape at this point was the rap route that allegedly began from the summit.
Col Belay

Awful Anchor

The Rappel

From here we began a couple of pitches of wild traversing. I am very impressed that David Brower did this in 1939, well before the advent of sticky rubber climbing shoes. Just finding this traverse was a masterpiece of routefinding and, combined with the rappel, was the key to the route. The ancient bolts on these pitches were less than ideal, and we were once again happy to have brought so many Screamers along.
Mega-Gnar Traverse


What we found after the traversing was rather horrifying. The pitches that were supposed to be 4th and easy 5th class slab climbing were swathed in a thin coat of snow. Knowing we were committed to the route at this point, I led up the first pitch of this heinousness. It was rather low angle, but slippery as all hell and above a giant cliff. A slip here would probably send me over the abyss. I moved slowly and when I was well past the halfway mark on the rope, decided it was high time to find an anchor, as this was not the place to be simulclimbing with no gear between us. “Frank…” I said, ready to call for him to tag up the hand drill and bolt kit we had brought along. But then I saw a white sling sticking out of the snow, and, like buried treasure, found a solid two bolt anchor attached to it.
Snowy BS
Franky  bout to sh*t himself

Franky had the unfortunate pleasure of leading the next pitch. Even belaying him, I was probably as scared as I’ve ever been climbing. It felt like I was feeding out a few feet of rope every 5 minutes, and as Frank neared the end of the rope I yelled “30 feet…20 feet…10 feet…5 feet!” Once again, this was NOT simulclimbing territory. Franky yelled down and asked me if I could simul 20 feet.

“Do you have any gear in?” I asked.

“No.”

“Then no!” I yelled back. I would have had to make a snow covered traverse across the steepest section of slab, and this was not a risk I was willing to take. “Drop the blue rope!” I yelled, and I tied both ropes together to belay him on one 120m half rope.

During this marathon pitch, I saw an 80s model black pickup truck hauling across the desert, kicking up a dust cloud and heading straight for us. I’m not sure if it was my pounding heartbeat, or just the truck smashing along the bumpy road, but I swear I heard the beating of a drum as it came closer.

[doom-doom][doom-doom][doom-doom][doom-doom]

I decided Franky had enough to worry about with what he was doing so I didn’t mention what I had seen and maybe heard. There are tales of smashed windows, slashed tires, and looted gear from past climbers of Ship Rock. At this point I didn’t care, all I wanted was to not have to catch a 700 foot slab slide off a cliff and for Franky to build an anchor and bring me up so we could finish this thing. Though this opinion was an easy one for me to take, seeing as it was Franky’s car, I’m pretty sure at this point he would have agreed with me. The shadow of Ship Rock was also creeping away from us across the desert floor 1500 feet below, a cruel reminder of the cold night that was about to befall us.

And then I heard those magical words: “Off belay!”

Franky took the rope up extra tight on me, and I was forced to climb up where I would have rather climbed down a bit to get into the lower angle section of the slab. I hoped he had a good anchor as I stepped across the slab, made a few moves, and then…

SNAP!

I began sliding down the snow after snapping a foothold. I went a long way on the single 120m half rope, and I briefly wondered if I had pulled Franky from his perch above as I hurtled toward the cliff below. The rope came taught with me maybe 20-30 feet further down from where I had started, my knuckles bloody, my shoes soaking wet, and me freezing cold. At least I knew I had a solid belay from above.

Apparently Franky wanted to make things more exciting for the both of us, because he missed this bomber three piece anchor less than one rope length above where he had started.
Apparently this anchor wasn t worth clipping


When I finally got up to him, he was drained, and I don’t blame him. He told me what I had already suspected: that this was the scariest pitch he’d ever climbed. Apparently I hadn’t even weighted his anchor with my fall, as he had a good stance. I can only imagine the fate we'd have met if I pulled him off his stance and down the slab.

One more 100 foot section of this heinous slab led to a short crack with probably the first solid gear placements I’d made all day. Atop this crack was the notch between the north and south summits, and I was greeted by the warm rays of the sun’s finale.
Franky Maxin  and Relaxin

Above us lay the crux of the route (in dry conditions), the Horn Pitch. A couple of bolts and a couple of pins protected crumbly face climbing with unbelievable exposure down the West Face. Once again I placed Screamers on everything, and even then I’m not sure any of these relics would have held a fall.
Horn Pitch

Franky led yet another photogenic traversing pitch and stopped just below the summit, leaving the glory pitch for me. I decided to find the rap anchors in the fading twilight before summiting, and after doing so belayed Frank to the top as the sky blazed red, the already-set sun illuminating the high clouds to the west. We had hoped to find the summit register, but it was nowhere to be found. It is allegedly elaborate and strewn with the names of quite the cast of climbers.
Traverse to Summit Block


Descent

The first four double rope rappels from the summit led to Longs Couloir. Within the first 50 feet I found a precariously perched VCR sized block, pulled up the ropes, and trundled it. Apparently Franky hadn’t heard my warning and screamed “Mike, are you OK?!?!!” from above. I told him not to worry and that I was just cleaning up the rap route for us. We touched down in the gully and made our way down, rapping every now and again and trundling whatever posed even the tiniest threat to us in the gully. At this point there was no way anyone within miles of the west side of Ship Rock wouldn’t know we were there, and with our headlamps already tipping them off, we figured a little extra noise wouldn’t increase the chances of our getting arrested. Trundling is also really fun, but everyone already knows that.

A little wandering in the desert led us to the completely intact car. Despite the late hour, we had already decided getting out of there that night was a good idea. We couldn’t be bothered to cook, so we stopped for some Burger King before heading back into Arizona.

Continually scary from start to finish, this route is poorly protected on poor rock. I don’t recommend climbing it if there is any snow in the upper bowl. There is nothing safe about climbing Ship Rock. Having said all of this, this is one of the most rewarding experiences I have ever had, and would wholeheartedly recommend this climb to anyone willing to take on the challenges it affords. Thanks again to Franky for climbing it with me!
Ship Rock Sunset 1/5
Ship Rock Sunset 2/5
Ship Rock Sunset 3/5
Ship Rock Sunset 4/5
Ship Rock Sunset 5/5


Comments

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Viewing: 41-60 of 66
John Duffield

John Duffield - Dec 6, 2010 1:43 pm - Voted 10/10

A Good Read

But wouldn't the Indians of 100 years ago have been the first to say that the concept of man owning a section of the earth would've been meaningless? I also fail to see how climbing this in any way violates its "sacredness". The earth is here for millions of years, man but a passing phase.

Of course it isn't the first time this particular controversy with this rock has occurred on this site.

The self righteousness above seems to outdo that on the forums. Though it's counterbalanced by the spray. Whatever. A great TR all things considered. Gets you, hooks you and I sure didn't put it down to be finished later. The photos are excellent as well.

I myself have intruded into private land and recently because what was there was was too excellent to pass up on. Like you, I didn't alter it in anyway, so I'm good with it. Unlike you, lol, I was careful not to plaster it on the internet. But whatever. For me not to judge.


A-Lex

A-Lex - Dec 6, 2010 2:28 pm - Hasn't voted

Re: A Good Read

“But wouldn’t the Indians of 100 years ago have been the first to say that the concept of man owning a section of the earth would’ve been meaningless?”

Probably. But I am pretty sure that most peaceful inter-tribal affairs were likely political and respectful. If a neighboring tribe wanted to take an animal from their land, harvest medicinal plants, or cross sacred ground, I suspect it would have been favorable to ask permission first.

I assume the tribe doesn’t feel they own the land but feel that to pay respect to sacred things (such as Ship Rock) they offer it by staying off of it. To ask permission would have been respectful of the tribe’s reverence to the rock.

In this day and age though – who knows? I have not personally been on the Navajo Nation and don’t pretend to know their policies for sure. I just assume - everything upfront, and be respectful - first and foremost!

Liba Kopeckova

Liba Kopeckova - Dec 6, 2010 3:17 pm - Voted 1/10

wow - an adventure and disrespect

Well written story, a great accomplishment, but I was thinking throughout the story where is this leading to? Are we encouraging breaking rules, and showing more disrespect to Native Americans? I really enjoyed reading all the comments...
I lived in New Mexico for 15 years, and if you guys were so set up on climbing their secret rock, you should have gained their trust, and they would allow it.

A-Lex

A-Lex - Dec 6, 2010 4:44 pm - Hasn't voted

Re: Curious

Yeah I was looking for this. Wanted to see what type of land it was. Indian land is not usually as simple as "privately owned." If it is indeed Navajo Trust land, then that means the federal government (US) holds the title but the beneficiary is the Navajo Nation (not an individual). Where did you find that Frank? I would be curious to see any maps you've found defining personal trust/navajo trust/etc. boundaries.

Liba Kopeckova

Liba Kopeckova - Dec 6, 2010 9:12 pm - Voted 1/10

Re: .

I am sorry for commenting on this one - but I am a foreigner who never took English, and this site is very international. We should be tolerant of some spelling/grammar errors. Or, perhaps we should be publishing in different languages?

m_dquist

m_dquist - Dec 6, 2010 4:38 pm - Hasn't voted

My Thoughts On All This

To be honest, I don't really care what you guys think about my having climbed Ship Rock. That wasn't the point of my post. I'm not trying to impress any of you by "spraying" or "bragging", I'll likely never meet any of you. I simply posted a story for you to read and think what you will of and in doing so, I've given all of the naysayers a forum to voice their opinions, dissenting or otherwise. I thoroughly enjoyed the experience and felt like sharing it. My only hope is that you all have been entertained.

I find the argument that I should have climbed it and not posted this amusing. What makes that any better? Climbing Ship Rock is against the law, posting an account of it (or writing up anything, for that matter) is not. Why not be honest about our ascent? There are plenty of other records on the internet of people climbing Ship Rock despite the ban, and these climbers and any others who did not document their ascents are all guilty of the exact same crime.

As far as upsetting the locals, and thereby tightening the access restrictions, I highly doubt that Summitpost is where they are looking to see if anyone climbed Ship Rock. Our headlamps were plainly visible while descending, yet there was no party there to arrest us at the base. If you guys think that Ship Rock doesn't get climbed frequently you are kidding yourselves, and I highly doubt that the posting of this trip report will have any bearing on the ban on climbing on the Navajolands. Ship Rock sees many ascents a year. The local authorities have to know this is the case, yet there is no signage of the ban whatsoever, and seemingly no enforcement.

I feel worse about bolting than I do about trespassing, but it seemed reasonable to me to place the bolts we did, given the nature of the existing rap route. I know this is a slippery slope, but if someone doesn't like there being a bolted rap route, they can go chop the entire thing, forcing future climbers to descend the same way the first ascentionists did.

I am a little disappointed about the report being taken down from the front page, but that is no more my decision to make than it is anyone else's decision where I decide to climb. Whoever was moderating caved to the pressure of a few people who didn't like it, but there were plenty of responses of approval. The trip was front page material before everyone saw it, and has not changed since then. Smells like censorship to me. Should we have a code of morality for material submitted to Summitpost? I guess that can be the next topic for debate....

A-Lex

A-Lex - Dec 6, 2010 4:56 pm - Hasn't voted

Re: My Thoughts On All This

I appreciate your response here. I have certainly been entertained even if I disagree with your decision to climb the route. The report was well written, exciting and displayed great pictures.

Yeah I agree - climb it but don't post? Right! Climbers would still be guilty of what I disagree with. I appreciate you guys being honest about it. It certainly created a discussion very pertinent to climbing.

And yes putting this back up on the front page helps insure raising the awareness of such issues. I would support it going back on the front page.

CSUMarmot

CSUMarmot - Dec 6, 2010 5:51 pm - Hasn't voted

Re: My Thoughts On All This

the reason why you shouldn't post something like this on SP is out of respect for the Navajos and to save you own respect in the process
It doesn't change the fact that you climbed it or not, but think of it as an unwritten rule

Jason Halladay

Jason Halladay - Dec 6, 2010 6:11 pm - Voted 1/10

Re: My Thoughts On All This

Re: climbing the formation but not posting a TR about it...
I think that's the high road to take if you're going to climb the formation. No need to spray about your ascent and diminish the adventure of future climbers by posting too much information. As many have noted, including yourself, this formation continues to see ascents each year. Its long, important history amongst climbers coupled with its amazing prominence make it an obvious objective for climbers.

Due to the access stickiness and poor rock quality, it should be regarded as a "post-doctorate" adventure climb. By that I mean to say it should be climbed by very experienced climbers and should be somewhat difficult to get information on the climbing route. This helps keep those that really shouldn't be up there from going up there and getting into trouble. Perhaps consider posting a photo or two of the route (but not an entire report) if you want to advertise the fact that you've been up there. Then those that are strongly considering climbing the formation can get in touch with you privately for more information.

I view the posting of this report as a bit reckless. Not only does it potentially jeopardize the "gray area access" that has allowed for the many discreet ascents that take place, it likely attracts the attention of climbers that would be out of their league on the formation. All it is going to take is one more major accident (I cringed when I read about your slip in the bowl) on the formation and the unofficial, lightly-regulated access that climbers currently exploit will be gone.

I understand the desire to take photos and write about the experience of climbing this formation. I do it for all of my best climbing experiences. This climb is an awesome experience and most likely one of better highlights of one's climbing experience. But climbing this formation includes a certain responsibility. Posting a trip report like this on such a high profile site is an abuse of that responsibility. Please swallow your pride about your accomplishment and consider removing the report and holding on to it to share with your closest climbing friends. It'll be a lot more special that way and will allow others going to climb this formation a bigger sense of adventure.

noahs213

noahs213 - Dec 6, 2010 6:18 pm - Voted 10/10

Re: My Thoughts On All This

Here is why a TR probably should not be written on this.

It would give a ton of information and perhaps inspire so many other people to climb it on a climb that is quite dangerous. Navajo's consider it Taboo if someone dies on it which is why they "closed" it. The thing has seen just about 350 ascents since it was closed and it's pretty amazing no accidents have happened.

Jason:
Good point. I can see where your coming from. I'd HATE to see Ship Rock getting climbed every week. Accident waiting to happen and if an accident happened, that would not be good at all.

Best to stay clear.

Jason Halladay

Jason Halladay - Dec 6, 2010 6:26 pm - Voted 1/10

Re: My Thoughts On All This

I want to add that I realize my comment could be construed as elitist or condescending but that's not my attitude about this. I simply have a strong belief regarding the responsibility of climbing this formation and what that responsibility entails.
So before you write off my comment, please really consider what I'm getting at and think about it for a moment. I mean no personal disrespect.

Jason Halladay

Jason Halladay - Dec 6, 2010 6:33 pm - Voted 1/10

Re: My Thoughts On All This

Thank you, Noah, for not posting a report about your climb. To be honest, based on your previous reports, I fully expected you to write a report and would have commented on it in the same way I have on this one. And it's not "jealously" like you suggest. Nor is it that the climbing community is looking to "shoot you down". See my comment above.
I'm looking at the bigger, "climbing community picture" and believe that reports like this on major sites can result in only bad things for the climbing community.

And while I don't doubt that the few Navajo's [sic] you have talked to think it's awesome, I'm willing to wager that you'd find the majority of Navajos would not be so stoked to hear about your climb of the formation.

CSUMarmot

CSUMarmot - Dec 6, 2010 6:44 pm - Hasn't voted

Re: My Thoughts On All This

For whatever reason, it is better not to write about an off-limits destination, so you definitely saved yourself the trouble

A-Lex

A-Lex - Dec 6, 2010 7:55 pm - Hasn't voted

Re: My Thoughts On All This

I still disagree with you guys about not posting this.

"the reason why you shouldn't post something like this on SP is out of respect for the Navajos and to save you own respect in the process"

I think they already showed disrespect to the Navajo population by climbing the sacred rock.

"I do agree a report can result in spreading the information out there and getting other people to climb it which I hate to see."

You say you hate to see others climb it - yet you yourself have climbed it? Really?

The point of it being posted is that people can see that not everyone agrees with an ascent of this formation and form their own opinion based on a large forum of other climber's opinions.

If they hear it around the campfire I would assume the desire to climb would likely be high. And the opposition to the climber's opinions about whether or not to climb it would not likely be around. Yet since this forum reaches many people, a better representation of climber population feelings on the matter can help any aspiring ascensionist make a more informed decision.

CSUMarmot

CSUMarmot - Dec 6, 2010 10:04 pm - Hasn't voted

Re: The Chief

A 1/10 vote is weighed more then a 10/10 vote (marginally) because the point is to not F up and piss everybody off. And the score of 0% is as it is because enough valuable contributors have down voted it 1/10, not because SP is censoring it

chugach mtn boy

chugach mtn boy - Dec 7, 2010 12:29 am - Hasn't voted

Re: The Chief

"...when you are using a nickname that seems a little bit on the racial side..."
LOL. Um, Mike, you don't know what a "chief" is in the Navy, do you?

Dave Daly

Dave Daly - Dec 7, 2010 11:43 am - Voted 10/10

Piss Off

Nice job guys on gettin this done! Still on my "tick list" to do.

Want permission? I'll talk to my ex-wife's uncle (owns the property to the south that butts up to Shiprock). He chuckles at all this sneeky business. Sez he'll take a 6 pack of beer for any "troubles". HA!

McCannster

McCannster - Dec 7, 2010 12:33 pm - Voted 10/10

Re: Piss Off

That's kinda what I figured how most of the locals feel about this whole thing. "Crazy white people..."

PellucidWombat

PellucidWombat - Jan 4, 2011 10:12 pm - Voted 10/10

Re: Piss Off

While I personally disapprove of Mike's decision to climb the rock without at least attempting to ask permission or ascertain from the Navajos how the community is likely to feel (rather than whatever bureaucrat made the restriction), I think the community's attacks are way over the top.

First, there is already a TR of a climb on Ship Rock put up last year, but no one took offense then. It still enjoys a moderately high rating and no voice of disapproval. Maybe it's a community shame/embarrassment thing since this report made TROTW and had more public prominence? Some members seem to show this as their motive - climb it illegally and don't tell anyone, rather than making your own moral choice and standing by it. Mike shows integrity by doing this.

Second, I think a lot of the SP community was ignoring some of the finer points: e.g. the lack of signs at the site, lack of much local enforcement, reports from others that when 'caught' they were actually treated well, the frequency that it is still illegally climbed and the facts other brought up that make the closure sound more like a liability fear that locals don't care about than a sacred concern (as someone pointed out is more so on other rocks in the area). I'm really curious what the Navajo as a community really think, since I strongly suspect that the outrage might be overblown and misplaced.

There are plenty of Californians I know who flaunt the Big Sheep closure (now defunct!) or climb illegally on buildings or trespass on private land to climb peaks because personally they see some of these selectively illegal activities as morally OK and therefore fine to break those rules. The same might apply here. Just saying.

And putting words into these guys' mouths? How about a reasonable and rational discussion?! I didn't pick up any more of an attitude of dominating the rock, spraying about their accomplishments, or brush with the law than I do from many other reports on this site that have received high ratings and no condemnation.

Frankly I'd give the report a 5/10 for my disapproval of Mike's decision, but as a statement I'm adding 5 points back for my disapproval of others being so quick to judge.

Todd Gordon - Dec 7, 2010 12:39 pm - Hasn't voted

Please

Respect the Navajo by sharing what you have with them;....your time, your thoughts, your food, your care, your ride, your house, your energy.....hell;...take a Navajo out climbing with you ..(I did many times....) The do -not -climb ban on the Res means nothing to most Navajos;...they are unaware of this law, and it does not play out in there day to day lives.....Go to the reservation and see for yourself just what is actually and truly going on there;....you will find some awesome people, make some cool new funky friends, have some great adventures, and climb some rad shit.....but go find out yourself as these lads did....and as I myself did when I moved there and lived there for 2 years of my life.....it's not what you read on the internet;...that is for sure........you will be surprised that the Navajo are cool, sharing, kind people with a good sense of humor, a wild spirit of adventure, a wicked desire to get booze, and alot of free time on their hands.......(just like most of my climbing friends here in California...come to think of it...).......surely nothing to be afraid of, ashamed of, bow down to, run away from......

Viewing: 41-60 of 66

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