
by Toby Dunn
Situated
in a beautiful, lush alpine valley in Eastern Austria, the Chinese
wall is not exactly a well-kept secret; but it is one that seems
to have passed most British climbers by. This crag soars above
the level of being 'just another mediocre European sport crag',
of the perfectly pleasant but at the same time a touch forgettable
sort. A day or few at the Chinese wall will leave you with much
more than the obligatory residual feeling of pumpedness and a
few ticks (hopefully not of the bloodsucking sort!).
The Chinese wall is composed of largely immaculate, dense limestone
that forms an edge somewhere around a kilometre broad, rising
gently up the mountainside. The routes are about as varied as
you could ask for on one crag: short single pitch steep bouldery
cranking sits next to cruisy five and six pitch routes; many of
the routes also follow strong natural features and lines - a pleasure
all too often missed on some sport crags in favour of having straight
lines of bolts. Grades range from UIAA 6 to 10- (F5+ to 8a+) in
the current guidebook, however the number of projects and new
lines indicates possible widening of this bracket, especially
considering the vast length of the some of the pitches!
After the ridiculously idyllic approach walk through meadows and
pine forest, the crag starts with a fairly amenable looking crack
and groove, which turns out to be pretty stiff 8- (one of the
drawbacks of the Chinese Wall is the lack of available topos -
of which more later) and a not ideal warm up, especially for weaklings
such as myself! However, it's a decent route all the same. The
lower 50ft or so of the crag is nicely undercut for most of this
section, providing the aforementioned bouldery power routes, as
well as longer more stamina orientated feasts of pocket hauling,
mainly in the 9's (that's UIAA not F9!). Carving through all this
steepness is the powerful natural corner line that is taken by
the longer outing of Mai Tai (6+, 7-, 6+, 7-), which provides
particularly pleasant slab and corner climbing for getting on
for the full height of the crag. You also get a good wedge of
exposure, as the route traverses out across a slab on the third
pitch, which cuts away ,leaving your feet poised directly above
the dark forest beneath. This route provides a welcome respite
before you get stuck into the pitches beneath it, which blast
out across a 'cellar board steep' wall on large rounded pockets
and flat edges.
The
hardest offering in the current guide is Pistolero at 10-, comparable
in style to the routes at Eldorado in the Frankenjura, though
on slopier, but considerably larger holds. In the considerably
more amenable bracket, there is the superb Madame Butterfly at
8-, which provides a selection of moves certainly not normally
associated with F7aish routes. A not inconsiderable leap off the
ground (especially good for the perpetual wingers, such as myself,
who are considerably shorter than their climbing partner!) lands
you on a big flat edge, from which another hefty slap hits a lovely
great jug with some relief. Powerful, then delicate, moves get
you onto a slab which is duly traversed on perfect pockets to
the point where a groove breaks the bulging rock above. Said bulge
is dispatched with foot orientated sneakiness, or (like everyone
else we saw climb it) by grunting quite a lot and having a back
like a relief map of the Himalayas.