The fin is on! I’ve been working on the board intermittently over the last couple of weeks. I was putting off getting to the fin but I bit the bullet and put it on yesterday as I’m pretty much just down to the last hot coat application on the dings. My personal assessment: not the best looking fin repair but it’ll work! I had had to patch some glass on the fin when it was off the board but I didn’t clean it up super well. I figured that any exposed weave would just get soaked when I glassed it on to the board but there’s a fair amount of dusty looking parts. That being said, only I will notice. And the board looks like it’s been through hell anyway so not a huge problem if the fin has a weird look too. My only serious concern is whether I have enough glass to keep it on when I’m riding. I applied fin rope - prob about 25-30 strange of 6oz - and two full pieces of 6oz cloth on either side with a proper amount of tail to glass to the board. The fin ain’t going anyw...
Found a few drops of my poor lost mojo today at Woodson with JT, Russell and Chris. The pilot light has been reignited. Set list: Rockwork Orange, Out of Sight, Unnamed 5.8 Corner, Some random 11-something, Undertow*, Mother Superior*, Baby Robbins and Robbins Crack. Rockwork Orange, 10a 📷RH Send train pulling out of the station
Work's been mental so lording has been slow but I managed to get some time off and finagled a trip to Red Rock in Nevada. I've been struggling with the mental aspects of climbing lately so I planned a very mellow itinerary that featured long routes but 0 stress to remind myself a) that I actually do like climbing and b) WHY I like it. Our 'menu' was Birdland 5.7+ and Solar Slab 5.6, two classic trade routes that usually guarantee a conga line. With little ambition to push the limits, Trevor and I were down to wait around if we needed to and just have a nice relaxing adventure in the sun. So we headed out towards Vegas on Thursday night after I wrapped work and got as far as Primm, NV. Not much to say about Primm other than: "bleak". It used to be known as State Line, was established around a gas station - since replaced by cardboard casinos - and exists solely to cater to gamblers, jonesing so hard for a game that they can't wait to get to Vegas which i...
Comments
Post a Comment