Date | Time | User | Type | Name | Attribute | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 10th January 2025 | 17:32:03 | remus | - | - | notes | |
Before
Layton Kor was an American rock climber who was active in the 1960s.
[Pat Ament](/climber/1099/pat-ament):
> It mattered to Layton that in my early teens I already had a reputation as a climber, my small, wiry body strong and full of desire. He needed competent companions. Not many could keep up with him. I was determined. In time, I hoped I would be one who could ascend with him almost as an equal. Layton hovered down into the little breathing universe of my face, gazed into my eyes, and with his well-known smile, that small, curved, Clint Eastwood, half-moon line at either corner of his mouth, gave me the famed look of the imp that seemed to say you were at the center of the best days you would ever know. [1]
[John Gill](/climber/721/john-gill):
> I will always remember Layton on his first visit to the Jenny Lake boulders in the Tetons, so many years ago. He wore lightweight climbing boots, probably Kronhoffers, argyle knee socks neatly tucked into corduroy knickers, an alpine sweater, and a stocking cap. I still see him as he stretched across the traverse on Falling Ant Slab, chatting away cheerfully. His enthusiasm and energy were infectious. On another occasion, my wife, Lora, and I were swimming at String Lake when Layton arrived with two doting young women in tow, stripped to his shorts, and swam out to the boulder in the middle of the lake, where we carried on a shouted conversation at a distance. His energy and climbing feats were exceeded only by his charm. [1]
### References
[1] Tributes to Layton Kor, climbing.com April 2013 [https://www.climbing.com/news/tributes-to-layton-kor-1938-2013/](https://www.climbing.com/news/tributes-to-layton-kor-1938-2013/)
[2] [https://www.instagram.com/p/CbPkyqMNjWD/](https://www.instagram.com/p/CbPkyqMNjWD/)
[3] Obituary by Stephen Green, April 2013 [https://alpinist.com/features/obituary-layton-kor-1938-2013/](https://alpinist.com/features/obituary-layton-kor-1938-2013/)
After
Layton Kor was an American rock climber who was active in the 1960s.
[Pat Ament](/climber/1099/pat-ament):
> It mattered to Layton that in my early teens I already had a reputation as a climber, my small, wiry body strong and full of desire. He needed competent companions. Not many could keep up with him. I was determined. In time, I hoped I would be one who could ascend with him almost as an equal. Layton hovered down into the little breathing universe of my face, gazed into my eyes, and with his well-known smile, that small, curved, Clint Eastwood, half-moon line at either corner of his mouth, gave me the famed look of the imp that seemed to say you were at the center of the best days you would ever know. [1]
[John Gill](/climber/721/john-gill):
> I will always remember Layton on his first visit to the Jenny Lake boulders in the Tetons, so many years ago. He wore lightweight climbing boots, probably Kronhoffers, argyle knee socks neatly tucked into corduroy knickers, an alpine sweater, and a stocking cap. I still see him as he stretched across the traverse on Falling Ant Slab, chatting away cheerfully. His enthusiasm and energy were infectious. On another occasion, my wife, Lora, and I were swimming at String Lake when Layton arrived with two doting young women in tow, stripped to his shorts, and swam out to the boulder in the middle of the lake, where we carried on a shouted conversation at a distance. His energy and climbing feats were exceeded only by his charm. [1]
### References
[1] Tributes to Layton Kor, climbing.com April 2013 [https://www.climbing.com/news/tributes-to-layton-kor-1938-2013/](https://www.climbing.com/news/tributes-to-layton-kor-1938-2013/)
[2] [https://www.instagram.com/p/CbPkyqMNjWD/](https://www.instagram.com/p/CbPkyqMNjWD/)
[3] Obituary by Stewart Green, April 2013 [https://alpinist.com/features/obituary-layton-kor-1938-2013/](https://alpinist.com/features/obituary-layton-kor-1938-2013/)
Diff
--- before
+++ after
@@ -14,4 +14,4 @@
[2] [https://www.instagram.com/p/CbPkyqMNjWD/](https://www.instagram.com/p/CbPkyqMNjWD/)
-[3] Obituary by Stephen Green, April 2013 [https://alpinist.com/features/obituary-layton-kor-1938-2013/](https://alpinist.com/features/obituary-layton-kor-1938-2013/)
+[3] Obituary by Stewart Green, April 2013 [https://alpinist.com/features/obituary-layton-kor-1938-2013/](https://alpinist.com/features/obituary-layton-kor-1938-2013/)
|
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2 | 10th January 2025 | 17:32:03 | remus | - | - | notes_pretty | |
Before
<p>Layton Kor was an American rock climber who was active in the 1960s.</p>
<p><a href="/climber/1099/pat-ament">Pat Ament</a>:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>It mattered to Layton that in my early teens I already had a reputation as a climber, my small, wiry body strong and full of desire. He needed competent companions. Not many could keep up with him. I was determined. In time, I hoped I would be one who could ascend with him almost as an equal. Layton hovered down into the little breathing universe of my face, gazed into my eyes, and with his well-known smile, that small, curved, Clint Eastwood, half-moon line at either corner of his mouth, gave me the famed look of the imp that seemed to say you were at the center of the best days you would ever know. [1]</p>
</blockquote>
<p><a href="/climber/721/john-gill">John Gill</a>:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>I will always remember Layton on his first visit to the Jenny Lake boulders in the Tetons, so many years ago. He wore lightweight climbing boots, probably Kronhoffers, argyle knee socks neatly tucked into corduroy knickers, an alpine sweater, and a stocking cap. I still see him as he stretched across the traverse on Falling Ant Slab, chatting away cheerfully. His enthusiasm and energy were infectious. On another occasion, my wife, Lora, and I were swimming at String Lake when Layton arrived with two doting young women in tow, stripped to his shorts, and swam out to the boulder in the middle of the lake, where we carried on a shouted conversation at a distance. His energy and climbing feats were exceeded only by his charm. [1]</p>
</blockquote>
<h3>References</h3>
<p>[1] Tributes to Layton Kor, climbing.com April 2013 <a href="https://www.climbing.com/news/tributes-to-layton-kor-1938-2013/">https://www.climbing.com/news/tributes-to-layton-kor-1938-2013/</a></p>
<p>[2] <a href="https://www.instagram.com/p/CbPkyqMNjWD/">https://www.instagram.com/p/CbPkyqMNjWD/</a></p>
<p>[3] Obituary by Stephen Green, April 2013 <a href="https://alpinist.com/features/obituary-layton-kor-1938-2013/">https://alpinist.com/features/obituary-layton-kor-1938-2013/</a></p>
After
<p>Layton Kor was an American rock climber who was active in the 1960s.</p>
<p><a href="/climber/1099/pat-ament">Pat Ament</a>:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>It mattered to Layton that in my early teens I already had a reputation as a climber, my small, wiry body strong and full of desire. He needed competent companions. Not many could keep up with him. I was determined. In time, I hoped I would be one who could ascend with him almost as an equal. Layton hovered down into the little breathing universe of my face, gazed into my eyes, and with his well-known smile, that small, curved, Clint Eastwood, half-moon line at either corner of his mouth, gave me the famed look of the imp that seemed to say you were at the center of the best days you would ever know. [1]</p>
</blockquote>
<p><a href="/climber/721/john-gill">John Gill</a>:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>I will always remember Layton on his first visit to the Jenny Lake boulders in the Tetons, so many years ago. He wore lightweight climbing boots, probably Kronhoffers, argyle knee socks neatly tucked into corduroy knickers, an alpine sweater, and a stocking cap. I still see him as he stretched across the traverse on Falling Ant Slab, chatting away cheerfully. His enthusiasm and energy were infectious. On another occasion, my wife, Lora, and I were swimming at String Lake when Layton arrived with two doting young women in tow, stripped to his shorts, and swam out to the boulder in the middle of the lake, where we carried on a shouted conversation at a distance. His energy and climbing feats were exceeded only by his charm. [1]</p>
</blockquote>
<h3>References</h3>
<p>[1] Tributes to Layton Kor, climbing.com April 2013 <a href="https://www.climbing.com/news/tributes-to-layton-kor-1938-2013/">https://www.climbing.com/news/tributes-to-layton-kor-1938-2013/</a></p>
<p>[2] <a href="https://www.instagram.com/p/CbPkyqMNjWD/">https://www.instagram.com/p/CbPkyqMNjWD/</a></p>
<p>[3] Obituary by Stewart Green, April 2013 <a href="https://alpinist.com/features/obituary-layton-kor-1938-2013/">https://alpinist.com/features/obituary-layton-kor-1938-2013/</a></p>
|
|||||||
3 | 10th January 2025 | 17:31:47 | remus | - | - | notes_pretty | |
Before
<p>Layton Kor was an American rock climber who was active in the 1960s.</p>
<p><a href="/climber/1099/pat-ament">Pat Ament</a>:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>It mattered to Layton that in my early teens I already had a reputation as a climber, my small, wiry body strong and full of desire. He needed competent companions. Not many could keep up with him. I was determined. In time, I hoped I would be one who could ascend with him almost as an equal. Layton hovered down into the little breathing universe of my face, gazed into my eyes, and with his well-known smile, that small, curved, Clint Eastwood, half-moon line at either corner of his mouth, gave me the famed look of the imp that seemed to say you were at the center of the best days you would ever know. [1]</p>
</blockquote>
<p><a href="/climber/721/john-gill">John Gill</a>:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>I will always remember Layton on his first visit to the Jenny Lake boulders in the Tetons, so many years ago. He wore lightweight climbing boots, probably Kronhoffers, argyle knee socks neatly tucked into corduroy knickers, an alpine sweater, and a stocking cap. I still see him as he stretched across the traverse on Falling Ant Slab, chatting away cheerfully. His enthusiasm and energy were infectious. On another occasion, my wife, Lora, and I were swimming at String Lake when Layton arrived with two doting young women in tow, stripped to his shorts, and swam out to the boulder in the middle of the lake, where we carried on a shouted conversation at a distance. His energy and climbing feats were exceeded only by his charm. [1]</p>
</blockquote>
<h3>References</h3>
<p>[1] Tributes to Layton Kor, climbing.com April 2013 <a href="https://www.climbing.com/news/tributes-to-layton-kor-1938-2013/">https://www.climbing.com/news/tributes-to-layton-kor-1938-2013/</a></p>
<p>[2] <a href="https://www.instagram.com/p/CbPkyqMNjWD/">https://www.instagram.com/p/CbPkyqMNjWD/</a></p>
After
<p>Layton Kor was an American rock climber who was active in the 1960s.</p>
<p><a href="/climber/1099/pat-ament">Pat Ament</a>:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>It mattered to Layton that in my early teens I already had a reputation as a climber, my small, wiry body strong and full of desire. He needed competent companions. Not many could keep up with him. I was determined. In time, I hoped I would be one who could ascend with him almost as an equal. Layton hovered down into the little breathing universe of my face, gazed into my eyes, and with his well-known smile, that small, curved, Clint Eastwood, half-moon line at either corner of his mouth, gave me the famed look of the imp that seemed to say you were at the center of the best days you would ever know. [1]</p>
</blockquote>
<p><a href="/climber/721/john-gill">John Gill</a>:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>I will always remember Layton on his first visit to the Jenny Lake boulders in the Tetons, so many years ago. He wore lightweight climbing boots, probably Kronhoffers, argyle knee socks neatly tucked into corduroy knickers, an alpine sweater, and a stocking cap. I still see him as he stretched across the traverse on Falling Ant Slab, chatting away cheerfully. His enthusiasm and energy were infectious. On another occasion, my wife, Lora, and I were swimming at String Lake when Layton arrived with two doting young women in tow, stripped to his shorts, and swam out to the boulder in the middle of the lake, where we carried on a shouted conversation at a distance. His energy and climbing feats were exceeded only by his charm. [1]</p>
</blockquote>
<h3>References</h3>
<p>[1] Tributes to Layton Kor, climbing.com April 2013 <a href="https://www.climbing.com/news/tributes-to-layton-kor-1938-2013/">https://www.climbing.com/news/tributes-to-layton-kor-1938-2013/</a></p>
<p>[2] <a href="https://www.instagram.com/p/CbPkyqMNjWD/">https://www.instagram.com/p/CbPkyqMNjWD/</a></p>
<p>[3] Obituary by Stephen Green, April 2013 <a href="https://alpinist.com/features/obituary-layton-kor-1938-2013/">https://alpinist.com/features/obituary-layton-kor-1938-2013/</a></p>
|
|||||||
4 | 10th January 2025 | 17:31:47 | remus | - | - | notes | |
Before
Layton Kor was an American rock climber who was active in the 1960s.
[Pat Ament](/climber/1099/pat-ament):
> It mattered to Layton that in my early teens I already had a reputation as a climber, my small, wiry body strong and full of desire. He needed competent companions. Not many could keep up with him. I was determined. In time, I hoped I would be one who could ascend with him almost as an equal. Layton hovered down into the little breathing universe of my face, gazed into my eyes, and with his well-known smile, that small, curved, Clint Eastwood, half-moon line at either corner of his mouth, gave me the famed look of the imp that seemed to say you were at the center of the best days you would ever know. [1]
[John Gill](/climber/721/john-gill):
> I will always remember Layton on his first visit to the Jenny Lake boulders in the Tetons, so many years ago. He wore lightweight climbing boots, probably Kronhoffers, argyle knee socks neatly tucked into corduroy knickers, an alpine sweater, and a stocking cap. I still see him as he stretched across the traverse on Falling Ant Slab, chatting away cheerfully. His enthusiasm and energy were infectious. On another occasion, my wife, Lora, and I were swimming at String Lake when Layton arrived with two doting young women in tow, stripped to his shorts, and swam out to the boulder in the middle of the lake, where we carried on a shouted conversation at a distance. His energy and climbing feats were exceeded only by his charm. [1]
### References
[1] Tributes to Layton Kor, climbing.com April 2013 [https://www.climbing.com/news/tributes-to-layton-kor-1938-2013/](https://www.climbing.com/news/tributes-to-layton-kor-1938-2013/)
[2] [https://www.instagram.com/p/CbPkyqMNjWD/](https://www.instagram.com/p/CbPkyqMNjWD/)
After
Layton Kor was an American rock climber who was active in the 1960s.
[Pat Ament](/climber/1099/pat-ament):
> It mattered to Layton that in my early teens I already had a reputation as a climber, my small, wiry body strong and full of desire. He needed competent companions. Not many could keep up with him. I was determined. In time, I hoped I would be one who could ascend with him almost as an equal. Layton hovered down into the little breathing universe of my face, gazed into my eyes, and with his well-known smile, that small, curved, Clint Eastwood, half-moon line at either corner of his mouth, gave me the famed look of the imp that seemed to say you were at the center of the best days you would ever know. [1]
[John Gill](/climber/721/john-gill):
> I will always remember Layton on his first visit to the Jenny Lake boulders in the Tetons, so many years ago. He wore lightweight climbing boots, probably Kronhoffers, argyle knee socks neatly tucked into corduroy knickers, an alpine sweater, and a stocking cap. I still see him as he stretched across the traverse on Falling Ant Slab, chatting away cheerfully. His enthusiasm and energy were infectious. On another occasion, my wife, Lora, and I were swimming at String Lake when Layton arrived with two doting young women in tow, stripped to his shorts, and swam out to the boulder in the middle of the lake, where we carried on a shouted conversation at a distance. His energy and climbing feats were exceeded only by his charm. [1]
### References
[1] Tributes to Layton Kor, climbing.com April 2013 [https://www.climbing.com/news/tributes-to-layton-kor-1938-2013/](https://www.climbing.com/news/tributes-to-layton-kor-1938-2013/)
[2] [https://www.instagram.com/p/CbPkyqMNjWD/](https://www.instagram.com/p/CbPkyqMNjWD/)
[3] Obituary by Stephen Green, April 2013 [https://alpinist.com/features/obituary-layton-kor-1938-2013/](https://alpinist.com/features/obituary-layton-kor-1938-2013/)
Diff
--- before
+++ after
@@ -12,4 +12,6 @@
[1] Tributes to Layton Kor, climbing.com April 2013 [https://www.climbing.com/news/tributes-to-layton-kor-1938-2013/](https://www.climbing.com/news/tributes-to-layton-kor-1938-2013/)
-[2] [https://www.instagram.com/p/CbPkyqMNjWD/](https://www.instagram.com/p/CbPkyqMNjWD/)
+[2] [https://www.instagram.com/p/CbPkyqMNjWD/](https://www.instagram.com/p/CbPkyqMNjWD/)
+
+[3] Obituary by Stephen Green, April 2013 [https://alpinist.com/features/obituary-layton-kor-1938-2013/](https://alpinist.com/features/obituary-layton-kor-1938-2013/)
|
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5 | 15th December 2024 | 11:03:42 | remus | ascent | Psycho! | ascent_dt_end | |
Before
None
After
1963-01-01
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6 | 15th December 2024 | 11:03:42 | remus | ascent | Psycho! | climb_id | |
Before
None
After
4305
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7 | 15th December 2024 | 11:03:42 | remus | ascent | Psycho! | fa | |
Before
false
After
true
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8 | 15th December 2024 | 11:03:42 | remus | ascent | Psycho! | ascent_style_id | |
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None
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7
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9 | 15th December 2024 | 11:03:42 | remus | ascent | Psycho! | ascent_type_id | |
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None
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5
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10 | 15th December 2024 | 11:03:42 | remus | ascent | Psycho! | ascent_dt_start | |
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1962-01-01
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11 | 15th December 2024 | 11:03:42 | remus | ascent | Psycho! | climber_id | |
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None
After
1208
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12 | 18th March 2022 | 12:22:34 | remus | - | - | - | |
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None
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13 | 4th January 2022 | 20:19:47 | remus | - | - | - | |
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None
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14 | 4th January 2022 | 20:18:36 | remus | - | - | - | |
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15 | 4th January 2022 | 20:16:00 | remus | - | - | - | |
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None
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16 | 4th January 2022 | 20:14:41 | remus | - | - | - | |
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None
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