
Bouldering
in Bishop.
I
first visited Bishop in December 2000 as a result of one of the
wettest autumns I could remember in the UK, it had rained for
fifty continuous days and wintering in California seemed a good
idea. Cheap flights to Los Angeles (£245 from the UK) provided
the means and a gang of poor Armenians provided interest on the
long flight. Transatlantic etiquette had not reached Armenia and
the notion that we were all allocated seats and could not just
sit where we pleased had not registered. They also felt that smoking
in the toilet was acceptable and it wasn't until we arrived at
LA that their luck ran out when they tried to get past the toughest
immigration in the world.
Four
hours after leaving LA, Bishop is reached, if New York is the
town that never sleeps then Bishop has never woken up. With a
population of 4000, a cinema, coffee shops, supermarkets and hot
springs there is enough here to sustain life when not climbing.
It is famous for Owens River Gorge and more recently its bouldering.
This takes place on two main rock types, the sharp pockety volcanic
stuff and the sharp granite stuff. The Happy and Sad Boulders
typifies the former and the Peabody Boulders and Lydia Boulders
the latter.
Before travelling to Bishop from the UK climb every
boulder problem at least three times and you will be getting somewhere
close to the length of the average Bishop problem. Many of them
are high and the high balls would have been filmed for Hard Grit
had they been on this side of the pond.
