Realization (climb)

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Template:Short descriptionTemplate:Redirects hereTemplate:Infobox climbing route Realization, also called Biographie, is a circa Template:Convert sport climbing route on an overhanging limestone cliff on the southern face of Céüse mountain, near Gap and Sigoyer, in France. After it was first climbed in 2001 by American climber Chris Sharma, it became the first rock climb in the world to have a consensus grade of Template:Climbing grade.Template:Efn It is considered an historic and important route in rock climbing, and one of the most attempted climbs at its grade.[1][2]

History

File:Ceuse001.jpg
Long south-facing cliffs of Céüse, known as the Corniche de Céûse

In 1989, French climber Jean-Christophe Lafaille bolted the entire circa 35 metre pitch, and named it Biographie (he was not able to climb it).[3] Biographie remained a long-standing open project, and in 1996, French climber Template:Ill freed the lower half of the route, added an anchor at his high-point and graded it at Template:Climbing grade.[3] Petit estimated that the remaining unclimbed section was about Template:Climbing grade but had a very difficult Template:Boulder grade boulder problem that he could not overcome.[3] American climber Chris Sharma made over 30 attempts from 1996 to 2000 but could also not overcome the boulder move.[3] In 2001, Sharma skipped the Bouldering World Cup in Gap, and after three days working on the route, on 18 July 2001,[4] successfully free climbed the route, linking up Petit's first section to Lafaille's final bolt.[3][5]

Sharma's first ascent was captured in Josh Lowell's 2002 climbing film, Dosage Volume 1.[2] Witnessing his ascent was a 10-year old Template:Ill, who was out hiking with her father.[6]

Sharma did not assign a grade to the climb.[7][5] however he did name it Realization.[3][8] The naming was a source of controversy as in France climbing routes are named by the person who first bolted the route, while in the U.S. (and the U.K.), they are named by the first person to successfully free climb the route.[3] Sharma would later clarify:[3][9] Template:Quote

Though only aged 20, Sharma considered retiring after completing the ascent, but found new inspiration in extreme deep-water soloing routes in Mallorca.[10] It took almost three years until the second ascent was made by French climber, Sylvain Millet, who also refused to grade it given his lack of experience of other equivalent reference climbs, however, he noted that the failure of other strong climbers to repeat the route (e.g. Patxi Usobiaga, and Dave Graham), implied that 9a+ was the likely grade.[11]

On 24 September 2017, American climber Margo Hayes became the first female climber to climb the route.[12][13] On 5 August 2020, German climber Alexander Megos created Bibliographie, a Template:Climbing grade route, a few metres to the right of Realization/Biographie.[14]

Route

The route starts with an immediate hard "four-move boulder problem", which partially broke in 2010, potentially rendering the lower section even more difficult (it has been compared to the notable bouldering problem, Necessarily Evil). Sustained 5.13 climbing after the initial bouldering problem leads to the main rest, a large right-facing flake. After this pause, a series of "super-resistant two and three-finger pocket moves", with cross-throughs, underclings, and high-steps lead to Arnaud Petit's old anchor (now since removed),[2] which is almost halfway.[5]

To the anchor, the route is considered Template:Climbing grade, although some have suggested an upgrade to Template:Climbing grade due to the initial bottom boulder breaking. There is a small rest at the old anchor, then sustained resistance climbing leads to a slightly better rest just below the finishing crux. This final crux is 12 moves, described as "a bunch of foot movement, and some very fickle pockets and crimps". Its difficulty is amplified by the amount of hard climbing undertaken to reach it. Above this crux is a small rest, and 5.11 climbing for 50 feet leads to the final anchor at around the circa 35-meter mark".[2]

Legacy

Realization was the first route to carry a consensus Template:Climbing grade grade, and Climbing called it a "technical revolution" in rock climbing.[10] The quality and sustained difficulty of Realization means it is still considered an important rite-of-passage for the world's best rock climbers, whose repeat ascents of the "legendary" route, are covered by the climbing media.[7][15][16] Outside magazine called it "the benchmark for the grade",[2] and it has become one of the most attempted and repeated routes at the grade at Template:Climbing grade.[17] In 2014, National Geographic called it, "one of the most famous sport-climbing routes in the world".[1] PlanetMountain included Realization on its list of important climbs in the evolution of free climbing (1918–2013).[18]

In 2012, when Adam Ondra attempted to flash the route (i.e. complete on the first attempt) he said: "It had always been my long-term crazy dream to flash this route".[7] In 2014, when American climber Jonathan Siegrist made the eighth ascent of the route and told Outside magazine: "I can remember the first time that I saw the route — it is truly magnificent. I was shocked to see that such a bold and impressive, seemingly perfect line exists. Add to that, the historic significance of this climb, not to mention its unique and brilliant holds and movement — it really is a proud route".[2] On repeating the route in 2014, German climber Alexander Megos said: "I wanted to climb this route because it is the world’s first 9a+ and definitely one of the most famous routes worldwide! But it’s not just the history behind the route, also the route itself is one of the best ones I ever climbed!".[1] In 2016, remembering his own 2015 repeat of the route, Italian climber Stefano Ghisolfi called it, "..perhaps the most famous cutting-edge route in the world".[19]

Subsequent first 9a+ contendors

Many years after the ascent of Realization, other earlier sport climbs have been revisited as potential first-ever 9a+ routes:

Ascents

Realization, or Biographie, has been ascended by:[4][16] Template:Div col

Template:Div col end

First female free ascents (FFFA):

Filmography

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  • Jonathan Siegrist's 8th ascent: Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
  • Margo Hayes' FFFA: Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
  • Seb Bouin's 19th ascent: Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".

See also

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Notes

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References

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Further reading

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External links

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