|
Arco 'Italy' By
Keith Sharples.
Arco,
for all I know, could well be Italian for great rock climbing in
a fantastic setting. Sandwiched between Lake Garda and the Dolomites
in northern Italy, Arco gets much better weather than the ‘Dollis’
to the north and hence it’s a popular wet-weather climbing alternative
for those forced out of the mountains. That said, there’s a long-standing
tradition of hard rock climbing at Arco. So much so that Arco took
to competition climbing like a duck takes to water. Annually, since
1986, Arco has hosted an international climbing competition; the
organisers no doubt spurred on by the local traders keen to attract
yet more tourist business into the area. However, the early competition
days were a tad wayward with routes being created on the ‘competition’
crag and trees being cut down to enable better visibility for spectators
etc.. Since then, thankfully, things have settled down a lot and
such extreme measures have been consigned to the bin.
So
what’s the deal at Arco. Well, within an hour’s drive of the town
there are thirty or so crags ranging from major sport climbing venues
to more traditional crags giving multi-pitch nut/friend-protected
routes. Pigeon-holing individual crags as either sport or traditional
is somewhat misleading as many of the so-called traditional crags
have bolted, or ‘spit’ protected, pitches/routes as well as routes
which rely on nuts/friends etc.. However, sport climbing has become
big at Arco so much so that it now provides the vast majority of
the routes in the area.
Nor was the Arco competition the
only catalyst that initiated the development of sport climbing in
the area. The early eighties saw the local activists keen to climb
shorter, and harder routes, the like of which were being climbed
in other European countries. Local climbing historians would tell
you that Messrs Bassi, Mariacher and Zanolla were responsible for
much of the early development.

|