Steve Roper
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Camp 4: Recollections of a Yosemite Rockclimber
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published
1994
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12 editions
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Sierra High Route: Traversing Timberline Country
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published
1982
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5 editions
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Fifty Classic Climbs of North America
by
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published
1979
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4 editions
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Fifty Classic Climbs of North America
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published
1982
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Ordeal by Piton: Writings from the Golden Age of Yosemite Climbing
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published
2003
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2 editions
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The Climber's Guide to the High Sierra (A Sierra Club Totebook)
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published
1995
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3 editions
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Climber's Guide to Yosemite Valley
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published
1964
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5 editions
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The Best of Ascent: Twenty-Five Years of the Mountaineering Experience
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published
1993
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Above All: Mount Whitney and California's Highest Peaks
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published
2008
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2 editions
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Campo 4: Recuerdos de un escalador de Yosemite
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“I find that rockclimbing is the finest, most healthiest sport in the whole world. It is much healthier than most; look at baseball, where 10,000 sit on their ass to watch a handful of players. —John Salathé, 1974”
― Camp 4: Recollections of a Yosemite Rockclimber
― Camp 4: Recollections of a Yosemite Rockclimber
“It is hardly surprising that the initial stage of most mountain journeys involves laborious uphill hiking. Coming at a time when the typical hiker is out of shape, unacclimated, and transporting the heaviest load of the entire trip, the seemingly endless hillsides can elicit rumblings from even the hardiest backpackers. The first section of the High
Route qualifies as a splendid example of such unremitting travel, for the hiker must toil up 6,000 feet to the first major pass, a disheartening prospect.
Weathered dead pine at timberline
Optimistic hikers who seek the brighter side of unpleasant situations, however, will quickly discover mitigating factors on this interminable slope. The well-manicured trail zigzags up the north wall of Kings Canyon with such a gentle gradient that the traveler can slip into a rhythmic pace where the miles pass far more quickly than would be possible on a steeper, rockier path. Thus freed from scrutinizing the terrain immediately ahead, the hiker can better appreciate the two striking formations on the opposite side of the canyon. Directly across the way towers the enormous facade of Grand Sentinel, rising 3,500 feet above the meadows lining the valley floor. Several miles to the east lies the sculpted oddity known as the Sphinx, a delicate pinnacle capping a sweeping apron of granite. These two landmarks, visible for much of the ascent to the Monarch Divide, offer travelers a convenient means of gauging their progress; for instance, when one is finally level with the top of the Sphinx, the upward journey is two-thirds complete.
Hikers able to identify common Sierra trees”
― Sierra High Route: Traversing Timberline Country
Route qualifies as a splendid example of such unremitting travel, for the hiker must toil up 6,000 feet to the first major pass, a disheartening prospect.
Weathered dead pine at timberline
Optimistic hikers who seek the brighter side of unpleasant situations, however, will quickly discover mitigating factors on this interminable slope. The well-manicured trail zigzags up the north wall of Kings Canyon with such a gentle gradient that the traveler can slip into a rhythmic pace where the miles pass far more quickly than would be possible on a steeper, rockier path. Thus freed from scrutinizing the terrain immediately ahead, the hiker can better appreciate the two striking formations on the opposite side of the canyon. Directly across the way towers the enormous facade of Grand Sentinel, rising 3,500 feet above the meadows lining the valley floor. Several miles to the east lies the sculpted oddity known as the Sphinx, a delicate pinnacle capping a sweeping apron of granite. These two landmarks, visible for much of the ascent to the Monarch Divide, offer travelers a convenient means of gauging their progress; for instance, when one is finally level with the top of the Sphinx, the upward journey is two-thirds complete.
Hikers able to identify common Sierra trees”
― Sierra High Route: Traversing Timberline Country
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