| Milton
hosts 6th Annual Climbing Competition |
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March 8, 2004
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The student-run Milton Outdoor Club (MOC) in conjunction
with the Milton Academy Outdoor Program hosted the 6th annual MOC
indoor climbing competition on Sunday, February 29. Twenty students,
representing schools in Massachusetts, Connecticut and New Hampshire,
competed.
During the two-hour morning qualifying round, climbers ascended
as many marked routes as possible. Each route carried a score; a
fall during a climb (hanging suspended from the wall, anchored by
a belayer) or use of a non-marked handhold, earned no points. Climbers
with the highest scores after round one qualified for the finals
in the afternoon.
Milton is fortunate to have two Nicros Climbing walls in the gym,
one on either side as you enter. The darker wall, the more difficult
one to climb, is called an ArtWall because it is meant to look and
feel like real rock. The ArtWall is molded from real cliffs near
the Nicros’s headquarters; it looks and feels a realistic
because of the "natural features". The second wall, which
is white, was constructed on a timber frame from plywood and cement.
Both walls have modular hand and footholds, which can be moved.
“Because you can move holds around the wall, you can essentially
have an infinite number of hand and foot hold configurations, explains
Matt Bingham, Milton’s outdoor program director. “We
recently “renovated” the walls by removing all the holds
from the white wall and then hired the Rhode Island Rock Gym to
set new routes; the white wall is now 100 percent different from
what it was the week before the competition.”
Routes, or paths up the side of the wall, are marked by different
colored pieces of tape. The starting hold is marked with a V. Each
route has a point value; these ratings correspond with the Yosemite
Decimal System which rates rock climbs in America. The system starts
with 5.0 as the easiest and 5.15 as the hardest; the best Milton
students can climb about 5.10 or 5.11.
During the finals round, all the climbers are put into “isolation”
so they cannot watch the previous climber. Each climber ascends
the marked route; the highest climber wins. In the beginner group,
Jon Brestoff (I) and Thalia Beaty (Dana Hall) tied for first and
Jesse Drummond (I) placed second. In the intermediate category,
John Dennison (II) and Meredith Carpenter (Nobles) tied for first
and Hunter Stone (I) took second place. In the advanced group Tom
Myers (I) finished first with Colin Flaherty (II) a close second
and Alex Seitz (I) in third.
This year the top three place winners in each category took home
prizes. The prizes were donated to the Milton Outdoor Club by various
sponsors including Black Diamond, The Boston Rock Gym, Wilderness
House, and EMS. Prizes this year included a climbing harness, several
chalk-bags, and gift certificates. Other "prizes" are
raffled during the competition.
For more information on the Outdoor Program, visit www.milton.edu/outdoorprogram.

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