| Name | Type | # Changes | Last Updated | First Updated | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Gabe Regan's ascent of Velvet Silence | ascent | 28 | 20th October 2025 | 13th October 2025 |
| 2 | Neil Foster's ascent of Ulysses' Bow | ascent | 28 | 22nd September 2025 | 29th August 2025 |
| 3 | https://www.instagram.com/p/DNIgOzIs8zE/ | media | 27 | 11th August 2025 | 11th August 2025 |
| 4 | https://www.instagram.com/p/0aeI3lSEpz/ | media | 24 | 11th August 2025 | 11th August 2025 |
| 5 | https://www.instagram.com/p/0LNWV0yEng/ | media | 24 | 11th August 2025 | 11th August 2025 |
| 6 | https://www.instagram.com/p/BL9H0OSg8Fc/ | media | 24 | 11th August 2025 | 11th August 2025 |
| 7 | https://www.instagram.com/p/gS6wGZSEpx/ | media | 24 | 11th August 2025 | 11th August 2025 |
| 8 | https://www.instagram.com/p/nXtEdRSEmQ/ | media | 24 | 11th August 2025 | 11th August 2025 |
| 9 | https://www.instagram.com/p/t5SK6QyEjK/ | media | 24 | 11th August 2025 | 11th August 2025 |
| Date | Time | User | Type | Name | Attribute | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8941 | 14th October 2025 | 10:20:13 UTC | TdG | ascent | John Hart's ascent of Nettle Wine | climber_id | |
|
Before
None
After
756
|
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| 8942 | 14th October 2025 | 10:20:13 UTC | TdG | ascent | John Hart's ascent of Nettle Wine | climb_id | |
|
Before
None
After
6235
|
|||||||
| 8943 | 14th October 2025 | 10:20:13 UTC | TdG | ascent | John Hart's ascent of Nettle Wine | ascent_style_id | |
|
Before
None
After
1
|
|||||||
| 8944 | 14th October 2025 | 10:19:59 UTC | TdG | climb | Nettle Wine | climb_name | |
|
Before
None
After
Nettle Wine
|
|||||||
| 8945 | 14th October 2025 | 10:19:59 UTC | TdG | climb | Nettle Wine | grade_id | |
|
Before
None
After
58
|
|||||||
| 8946 | 14th October 2025 | 10:19:59 UTC | TdG | climb | Nettle Wine | climb_type | |
|
Before
None
After
3
|
|||||||
| 8947 | 14th October 2025 | 10:19:59 UTC | TdG | climb | Nettle Wine | ukc_url | |
|
Before
None
After
https://www.ukclimbing.com/logbook/crags/cratcliffe_tor-11/nettle_wine-11391
|
|||||||
| 8948 | 14th October 2025 | 10:15:38 UTC | TdG | climber | Richard McHardy | redirect_climber_id | |
|
Before
None
After
2163
|
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| 8949 | 14th October 2025 | 10:14:53 UTC | TdG | ascent | Gabe Regan's ascent of Velvet Silence | notes | |
|
Before
Reported some time after the ascent, the route appeared in a guidebook as [Jonny Woodward](/climber/536/jonny-woodward) was rumoured to have done it.
### References
[1] [https://www.ukclimbing.com/logbook/crags/ramshaw_rocks-106/ramshaw_crack-15691](https://www.ukclimbing.com/logbook/crags/ramshaw_rocks-106/ramshaw_crack-15691)
After
Regan reported the climb some time after the ascent, after [Jonny Woodward](/climber/536/jonny-woodward) told [John Allen](/climber/546/john-allen) he had done it. The claim was later retracted. [1]
Guidebooks give the first ascent date as c.1987, however, [Johnny Dawes](/climber/561/johnny-dawes)'s onsight ascent was in April 1986.
### References
[1] 'Peak Rock', Vertebrate 2013.
Diff
--- before
|
|||||||
| 8950 | 14th October 2025 | 10:14:53 UTC | TdG | ascent | Gabe Regan's ascent of Velvet Silence | notes_pretty | |
|
Before
<p>Reported some time after the ascent, the route appeared in a guidebook as <a href="/climber/536/jonny-woodward">Jonny Woodward</a> was rumoured to have done it. </p>
<h3>References</h3>
<p>[1] <a href="https://www.ukclimbing.com/logbook/crags/ramshaw_rocks-106/ramshaw_crack-15691">https://www.ukclimbing.com/logbook/crags/ramshaw_rocks-106/ramshaw_crack-15691</a></p>
After
<p>Regan reported the climb some time after the ascent, after <a href="/climber/536/jonny-woodward">Jonny Woodward</a> told <a href="/climber/546/john-allen">John Allen</a> he had done it. The claim was later retracted. [1]</p>
<p>Guidebooks give the first ascent date as c.1987, however, <a href="/climber/561/johnny-dawes">Johnny Dawes</a>'s onsight ascent was in April 1986.</p>
<h3>References</h3>
<p>[1] 'Peak Rock', Vertebrate 2013.</p>
|
|||||||
| 8951 | 14th October 2025 | 10:14:25 UTC | TdG | ascent | Joe Brown's ascent of Ramshaw Crack | notes_pretty | |
|
Before
<p>One sling for aid</p>
After
<p>One sling for aid.</p>
<blockquote>
<p>Brown managed to manoeuvre a big stone halfway up the crack from above and used this for aid to place a small chockstone higher in the crack as a runner. Above, it became a major test of crack technique with some desperate climbing round the lip of the roof which Brown overcame free. Despite the 'aid', Ramshaw Crack was probably the hardest gritstone crack of the 1960s.[1]</p>
</blockquote>
<h3>References</h3>
<p>[1] 'Peak Rock', Vertebrate Publishing, 2013</p>
|
|||||||
| 8952 | 14th October 2025 | 10:14:25 UTC | TdG | ascent | Joe Brown's ascent of Ramshaw Crack | notes | |
|
Before
One sling for aid
After
One sling for aid.
>Brown managed to manoeuvre a big stone halfway up the crack from above and used this for aid to place a small chockstone higher in the crack as a runner. Above, it became a major test of crack technique with some desperate climbing round the lip of the roof which Brown overcame free. Despite the 'aid', Ramshaw Crack was probably the hardest gritstone crack of the 1960s.[1]
### References
[1] 'Peak Rock', Vertebrate Publishing, 2013
Diff
--- before
|
|||||||
| 8953 | 14th October 2025 | 10:13:14 UTC | TdG | ascent | Bob Brayshaw's ascent of Daydreamer | notes | |
|
Before
Hard technical climbing for the time.
[Richard McHardy](/climber/3403/richard-mchardy):
>Daydreamer wasn't hard to Brayshaw. There was a pebble and Bob could make a couple of moves up and stand on the pebble. From there, he was so tall, he could reach the ledge halfway up and it wasn't all that hard. I remember watching Gray West doing it in a pair of Kletts. He stood on the pebble and the pebble fell off and so did he. But it was impossibly hard for a normal sized person.[1]
### References
[1] 'Peak Rock', Vertebrate Publishing, 2013
After
Hard technical climbing for the time.
[Alan Richard McHardy](/climber/2163/alan-richard-mchardy):
>Daydreamer wasn't hard to Brayshaw. There was a pebble and Bob could make a couple of moves up and stand on the pebble. From there, he was so tall, he could reach the ledge halfway up and it wasn't all that hard. I remember watching Gray West doing it in a pair of Kletts. He stood on the pebble and the pebble fell off and so did he. But it was impossibly hard for a normal sized person.[1]
### References
[1] 'Peak Rock', Vertebrate Publishing, 2013
Diff
--- before
|
|||||||
| 8954 | 14th October 2025 | 10:13:14 UTC | TdG | ascent | Bob Brayshaw's ascent of Daydreamer | notes_pretty | |
|
Before
<p>Hard technical climbing for the time.</p>
<p><a href="/climber/3403/richard-mchardy">Richard McHardy</a>: </p>
<blockquote>
<p>Daydreamer wasn't hard to Brayshaw. There was a pebble and Bob could make a couple of moves up and stand on the pebble. From there, he was so tall, he could reach the ledge halfway up and it wasn't all that hard. I remember watching Gray West doing it in a pair of Kletts. He stood on the pebble and the pebble fell off and so did he. But it was impossibly hard for a normal sized person.[1]</p>
</blockquote>
<h3>References</h3>
<p>[1] 'Peak Rock', Vertebrate Publishing, 2013</p>
After
<p>Hard technical climbing for the time.</p>
<p><a href="/climber/2163/alan-richard-mchardy">Alan Richard McHardy</a>:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>Daydreamer wasn't hard to Brayshaw. There was a pebble and Bob could make a couple of moves up and stand on the pebble. From there, he was so tall, he could reach the ledge halfway up and it wasn't all that hard. I remember watching Gray West doing it in a pair of Kletts. He stood on the pebble and the pebble fell off and so did he. But it was impossibly hard for a normal sized person.[1]</p>
</blockquote>
<h3>References</h3>
<p>[1] 'Peak Rock', Vertebrate Publishing, 2013</p>
|
|||||||
| 8955 | 14th October 2025 | 10:12:36 UTC | TdG | ascent | Tom Proctor's ascent of Green Death | notes | |
|
Before
Tom nabbed also nabbed the first winter ascent of this very fickle line in the early 1970s.
After
Tom also nabbed the first winter ascent of this very fickle line in the early 1970s.
Diff
--- before
|
|||||||
| 8956 | 14th October 2025 | 10:12:36 UTC | TdG | ascent | Tom Proctor's ascent of Green Death | notes_pretty | |
|
Before
<p>Tom nabbed also nabbed the first winter ascent of this very fickle line in the early 1970s.</p>
After
<p>Tom also nabbed the first winter ascent of this very fickle line in the early 1970s.</p>
|
|||||||
| 8957 | 14th October 2025 | 10:12:19 UTC | TdG | ascent | Tom Proctor's ascent of Green Death | notes_pretty | |
|
Before
<p>The peg was originally very poor. Proctor had failed to top rope the line, so went ground-up, slowly making progress over the course of a day.</p>
<p>He returned to film the climb for a BBC programme.</p>
<p>The route went unrepeated until the mid-70s, when Proctor drilled out the peg placement and cemented it in.</p>
<blockquote>
<p>You did GREEN DEATH E5, was that an epic?</p>
<p>That was a turning point. I realised then that I could climb blank rock, because when you get to it, it's not blank. From below you just look up and don't see the holds, but you've got to literally, get a rope, and go down and have a look. [1]</p>
</blockquote>
<p>[1] The Power of Climbing (1991), David Jones, page 38</p>
After
<p>The peg was originally very poor. Proctor had failed to top rope the line, so went ground-up, slowly making progress over the course of a day.</p>
<p>He returned to repeat the climb for a BBC programme in 1974.</p>
<p>The route went unrepeated by others until the mid-70s, when Proctor drilled out the peg placement and cemented it in.</p>
<blockquote>
<p>You did GREEN DEATH E5, was that an epic?</p>
<p>That was a turning point. I realised then that I could climb blank rock, because when you get to it, it's not blank. From below you just look up and don't see the holds, but you've got to literally, get a rope, and go down and have a look. [1]</p>
</blockquote>
<p>[1] The Power of Climbing (1991), David Jones, page 38</p>
|
|||||||
| 8958 | 14th October 2025 | 10:12:19 UTC | TdG | ascent | Tom Proctor's ascent of Green Death | notes | |
|
Before
The peg was originally very poor. Proctor had failed to top rope the line, so went ground-up, slowly making progress over the course of a day.
He returned to film the climb for a BBC programme.
The route went unrepeated until the mid-70s, when Proctor drilled out the peg placement and cemented it in.
> You did GREEN DEATH E5, was that an epic?
> That was a turning point. I realised then that I could climb blank rock, because when you get to it, it's not blank. From below you just look up and don't see the holds, but you've got to literally, get a rope, and go down and have a look. [1]
[1] The Power of Climbing (1991), David Jones, page 38
After
The peg was originally very poor. Proctor had failed to top rope the line, so went ground-up, slowly making progress over the course of a day.
He returned to repeat the climb for a BBC programme in 1974.
The route went unrepeated by others until the mid-70s, when Proctor drilled out the peg placement and cemented it in.
> You did GREEN DEATH E5, was that an epic?
> That was a turning point. I realised then that I could climb blank rock, because when you get to it, it's not blank. From below you just look up and don't see the holds, but you've got to literally, get a rope, and go down and have a look. [1]
[1] The Power of Climbing (1991), David Jones, page 38
Diff
--- before
|
|||||||
| 8959 | 14th October 2025 | 10:11:46 UTC | TdG | ascent | Tom Proctor's ascent of Green Death | ascent_dt_end | |
|
Before
1971-01-01
After
1980-01-01
|
|||||||
| 8960 | 14th October 2025 | 10:10:52 UTC | TdG | ascent | Tom Proctor's ascent of Green Death | notes_pretty | |
|
Before
<blockquote>
<p>You did GREEN DEATH E5, was that an epic?</p>
<p>That was a turning point. I realised then that I could climb blank rock, because when you get to it, it's not blank. From below you just look up and don't see the holds, but you've got to literally, get a rope, and go down and have a look. [1]</p>
</blockquote>
<p>[1] The Power of Climbing (1991), David Jones, page 38</p>
After
<p>The peg was originally very poor. Proctor had failed to top rope the line, so went ground-up, slowly making progress over the course of a day.</p>
<p>He returned to film the climb for a BBC programme.</p>
<p>The route went unrepeated until the mid-70s, when Proctor drilled out the peg placement and cemented it in.</p>
<blockquote>
<p>You did GREEN DEATH E5, was that an epic?</p>
<p>That was a turning point. I realised then that I could climb blank rock, because when you get to it, it's not blank. From below you just look up and don't see the holds, but you've got to literally, get a rope, and go down and have a look. [1]</p>
</blockquote>
<p>[1] The Power of Climbing (1991), David Jones, page 38</p>
|
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