Sunday, January 11, 2015

Two Men Are Making History By Free-Climbing 3000ft Up The Hardest Route In The World

Surprisingly, two men, 30-year-old Kevin Jorgeson and 36-year-old Tommy Caldwell, will rise one of the world's biggest and most troublesome precipice climbing courses on the planet utilizing just their hands and feet.

They are climbing El Capitan, a 3,000-foot-tall stone monument in Yosemite National Park in California. This stone monument has been climbed commonly some time recently, however they are rising the Dawn Wall course, a sheer face of rock considered by numerous to be the longest and hardest free move on the planet.

Jorgeson and Caldwell are moving with ropes, yet these are utilized to shield them from falls, not as climbing supports. The well sharpened sharp hangs on the rock divider have a tendency to cut their fingers, so they use infrequent rest days in their tents, suspending them several feet up as they let their fingers mend.

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Kevin Jorgeson and Tommy Caldwell are climbing a sheer 3,000-foot wall of granite on El Capitan in Yosemite

 




 

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