TdG

Badges

100 Contributions1,000 Contributions10,000 Contributions10 Posts100 Posts

Contributions

Posts

1 Day

16

7 Days

121

4 Weeks

2108

All Time

20158

Current Streak

6

Longest Streak

26

Top Contributions

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

Recent Contributions

Date Time User Type Name Attribute
9401 9th October 2025 20:36:19 UTC TdG ascent Neil Bentley's ascent of The New Statesman ascent_dt_start
Before
None
After
1997-01-01
9402 9th October 2025 20:36:19 UTC TdG ascent Neil Bentley's ascent of The New Statesman ascent_dt_end
Before
None
After
1998-01-01
9403 9th October 2025 20:35:08 UTC TdG ascent Kevin Jorgeson's ascent of The New Statesman climber_id
Before
None
After
709
9404 9th October 2025 20:35:08 UTC TdG ascent Kevin Jorgeson's ascent of The New Statesman climb_id
Before
None
After
652
9405 9th October 2025 20:35:08 UTC TdG ascent Kevin Jorgeson's ascent of The New Statesman ascent_style_id
Before
None
After
1
9406 9th October 2025 20:35:08 UTC TdG ascent Kevin Jorgeson's ascent of The New Statesman notes
Before
None
After
### References [1] [https://www.ukclimbing.com/news/2008/10/new_statesman_and_ulysses_-_visiting_americans-45389](https://www.ukclimbing.com/news/2008/10/new_statesman_and_ulysses_-_visiting_americans-45389)
Diff
--- before

+++ after

@@ -1 +1,3 @@

-
+### References
+
+[1] [https://www.ukclimbing.com/news/2008/10/new_statesman_and_ulysses_-_visiting_americans-45389](https://www.ukclimbing.com/news/2008/10/new_statesman_and_ulysses_-_visiting_americans-45389)
9407 9th October 2025 20:35:08 UTC TdG ascent Kevin Jorgeson's ascent of The New Statesman notes_pretty
Before
None
After
<h3>References</h3> <p>[1] <a href="https://www.ukclimbing.com/news/2008/10/new_statesman_and_ulysses_-_visiting_americans-45389">https://www.ukclimbing.com/news/2008/10/new_statesman_and_ulysses_-_visiting_americans-45389</a></p>
9408 9th October 2025 20:35:08 UTC TdG ascent Kevin Jorgeson's ascent of The New Statesman ascent_type_id
Before
None
After
1
9409 9th October 2025 20:35:08 UTC TdG ascent Kevin Jorgeson's ascent of The New Statesman ascent_dt_start
Before
None
After
2008-10-01
9410 9th October 2025 20:35:08 UTC TdG ascent Kevin Jorgeson's ascent of The New Statesman ascent_dt_end
Before
None
After
2008-11-01
9411 9th October 2025 20:31:31 UTC TdG climb The New Statesman notes_pretty
Before
<p><a href="/climber/154/john-dunne">John Dunne</a>:</p> <blockquote> <p>It is undoubtedly one of the best route on grit, in terms of the line, the position and of course climbing. [1]</p> </blockquote> <h3>References</h3> <p>[1] Yorkshire Gritstone Volume 2, 2014. Page 63.</p>
After
<p><a href="/climber/154/john-dunne">John Dunne</a>:</p> <blockquote> <p>It is undoubtedly one of the best routes on grit, in terms of the line, the position and of course climbing. [1]</p> </blockquote> <h3>References</h3> <p>[1] Yorkshire Gritstone Volume 2, 2014. Page 63.</p>
9412 9th October 2025 20:31:31 UTC TdG climb The New Statesman notes
Before
[John Dunne](/climber/154/john-dunne): > It is undoubtedly one of the best route on grit, in terms of the line, the position and of course climbing. [1] ### References [1] Yorkshire Gritstone Volume 2, 2014. Page 63.
After
[John Dunne](/climber/154/john-dunne): > It is undoubtedly one of the best routes on grit, in terms of the line, the position and of course climbing. [1] ### References [1] Yorkshire Gritstone Volume 2, 2014. Page 63.
Diff
--- before

+++ after

@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@

[John Dunne](/climber/154/john-dunne):

-> It is undoubtedly one of the best route on grit, in terms of the line, the position and of course climbing. [1]
+> It is undoubtedly one of the best routes on grit, in terms of the line, the position and of course climbing. [1]

### References

9413 9th October 2025 20:30:32 UTC TdG climb Meshuga notes
Before
The prow at Black Rocks is one of the most impressive and uncompromising features on gritstone and for decades was regarded as a Last Great Problem. Attention in the late ‘80s and early ‘90s focused on the prow’s left arête, with climbing said to be around 8b. Whilst top-roping [Seb Grieve](/climber/547/seb-grieve) on the line, [Quentin Fisher](/climber/475/quentin-fisher) suggested trying to link to a line of better holds on the right arête. With a bit of beta refinement from Dave Jones, the line of Meshuga was revealed and Seb made his ascent in 1997. It was perhaps the boldest route on gritstone at the time, comprising unpredictable 7c climbing, a long way above a terrible landing. [1] Despite its boldness, it has become one of the most repeated E9s. The left arête remains unclimbed. The name comes from the Yiddish word for Insane. ### References [1] ‘Peak Rock’, Vertebrate Publishing, 2013.
After
The prow at Black Rocks is one of the most impressive and uncompromising features on gritstone and for decades was regarded as a Last Great Problem. Attention in the late ‘80s and early ‘90s focused on the prow’s left arête, with climbing said to be around 8b. Whilst top-roping [Seb Grieve](/climber/547/seb-grieve) on the line, [Quentin Fisher](/climber/475/quentin-fisher) suggested trying to link to a line of better holds on the right arête. With a bit of beta refinement from [Dave Jones](/climber/2812/dave-jones), the line of Meshuga was unlocked and Seb made his ascent in 1997. It was perhaps the boldest route on gritstone at the time, comprising unpredictable 7c climbing, a long way above a terrible landing. [1] Despite its boldness, it has become one of the most repeated E9s. The left arête remains unclimbed. The name comes from the Yiddish word for Insane. ### References [1] ‘Peak Rock’, Vertebrate Publishing, 2013.
Diff
--- before

+++ after

@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@

The prow at Black Rocks is one of the most impressive and uncompromising features on gritstone and for decades was regarded as a Last Great Problem. Attention in the late ‘80s and early ‘90s focused on the prow’s left arête, with climbing said to be around 8b.

-Whilst top-roping [Seb Grieve](/climber/547/seb-grieve) on the line, [Quentin Fisher](/climber/475/quentin-fisher) suggested trying to link to a line of better holds on the right arête. With a bit of beta refinement from Dave Jones, the line of Meshuga was revealed and Seb made his ascent in 1997. It was perhaps the boldest route on gritstone at the time, comprising unpredictable 7c climbing, a long way above a terrible landing. [1]
+Whilst top-roping [Seb Grieve](/climber/547/seb-grieve) on the line, [Quentin Fisher](/climber/475/quentin-fisher) suggested trying to link to a line of better holds on the right arête. With a bit of beta refinement from [Dave Jones](/climber/2812/dave-jones), the line of Meshuga was unlocked and Seb made his ascent in 1997. It was perhaps the boldest route on gritstone at the time, comprising unpredictable 7c climbing, a long way above a terrible landing. [1]

Despite its boldness, it has become one of the most repeated E9s.

9414 9th October 2025 20:30:32 UTC TdG climb Meshuga notes_pretty
Before
<p>The prow at Black Rocks is one of the most impressive and uncompromising features on gritstone and for decades was regarded as a Last Great Problem. Attention in the late ‘80s and early ‘90s focused on the prow’s left arête, with climbing said to be around 8b. </p> <p>Whilst top-roping <a href="/climber/547/seb-grieve">Seb Grieve</a> on the line, <a href="/climber/475/quentin-fisher">Quentin Fisher</a> suggested trying to link to a line of better holds on the right arête. With a bit of beta refinement from Dave Jones, the line of Meshuga was revealed and Seb made his ascent in 1997. It was perhaps the boldest route on gritstone at the time, comprising unpredictable 7c climbing, a long way above a terrible landing. [1]</p> <p>Despite its boldness, it has become one of the most repeated E9s.</p> <p>The left arête remains unclimbed. </p> <p>The name comes from the Yiddish word for Insane.</p> <h3>References</h3> <p>[1] ‘Peak Rock’, Vertebrate Publishing, 2013. </p>
After
<p>The prow at Black Rocks is one of the most impressive and uncompromising features on gritstone and for decades was regarded as a Last Great Problem. Attention in the late ‘80s and early ‘90s focused on the prow’s left arête, with climbing said to be around 8b. </p> <p>Whilst top-roping <a href="/climber/547/seb-grieve">Seb Grieve</a> on the line, <a href="/climber/475/quentin-fisher">Quentin Fisher</a> suggested trying to link to a line of better holds on the right arête. With a bit of beta refinement from <a href="/climber/2812/dave-jones">Dave Jones</a>, the line of Meshuga was unlocked and Seb made his ascent in 1997. It was perhaps the boldest route on gritstone at the time, comprising unpredictable 7c climbing, a long way above a terrible landing. [1]</p> <p>Despite its boldness, it has become one of the most repeated E9s.</p> <p>The left arête remains unclimbed. </p> <p>The name comes from the Yiddish word for Insane.</p> <h3>References</h3> <p>[1] ‘Peak Rock’, Vertebrate Publishing, 2013. </p>
9415 9th October 2025 20:21:51 UTC TdG ascent Tim Emmett's ascent of Meshuga ascent_dt_start
Before
2001-10-14
After
2001-09-14
9416 9th October 2025 20:19:57 UTC TdG climb Meshuga notes
Before
The name comes from the Yiddish word for Insane.
After
The prow at Black Rocks is one of the most impressive and uncompromising features on gritstone and for decades was regarded as a Last Great Problem. Attention in the late ‘80s and early ‘90s focused on the prow’s left arête, with climbing said to be around 8b. Whilst top-roping [Seb Grieve](/climber/547/seb-grieve) on the line, [Quentin Fisher](/climber/475/quentin-fisher) suggested trying to link to a line of better holds on the right arête. With a bit of beta refinement from Dave Jones, the line of Meshuga was revealed and Seb made his ascent in 1997. It was perhaps the boldest route on gritstone at the time, comprising unpredictable 7c climbing, a long way above a terrible landing. [1] Despite its boldness, it has become one of the most repeated E9s. The left arête remains unclimbed. The name comes from the Yiddish word for Insane. ### References [1] ‘Peak Rock’, Vertebrate Publishing, 2013.
Diff
--- before

+++ after

@@ -1 +1,13 @@

-The name comes from the Yiddish word for Insane.
+The prow at Black Rocks is one of the most impressive and uncompromising features on gritstone and for decades was regarded as a Last Great Problem. Attention in the late ‘80s and early ‘90s focused on the prow’s left arête, with climbing said to be around 8b.
+
+Whilst top-roping [Seb Grieve](/climber/547/seb-grieve) on the line, [Quentin Fisher](/climber/475/quentin-fisher) suggested trying to link to a line of better holds on the right arête. With a bit of beta refinement from Dave Jones, the line of Meshuga was revealed and Seb made his ascent in 1997. It was perhaps the boldest route on gritstone at the time, comprising unpredictable 7c climbing, a long way above a terrible landing. [1]
+
+Despite its boldness, it has become one of the most repeated E9s.
+
+The left arête remains unclimbed.
+
+The name comes from the Yiddish word for Insane.
+
+### References
+
+[1] ‘Peak Rock’, Vertebrate Publishing, 2013.
9417 9th October 2025 20:19:57 UTC TdG climb Meshuga notes_pretty
Before
<p>The name comes from the Yiddish word for Insane.</p>
After
<p>The prow at Black Rocks is one of the most impressive and uncompromising features on gritstone and for decades was regarded as a Last Great Problem. Attention in the late ‘80s and early ‘90s focused on the prow’s left arête, with climbing said to be around 8b. </p> <p>Whilst top-roping <a href="/climber/547/seb-grieve">Seb Grieve</a> on the line, <a href="/climber/475/quentin-fisher">Quentin Fisher</a> suggested trying to link to a line of better holds on the right arête. With a bit of beta refinement from Dave Jones, the line of Meshuga was revealed and Seb made his ascent in 1997. It was perhaps the boldest route on gritstone at the time, comprising unpredictable 7c climbing, a long way above a terrible landing. [1]</p> <p>Despite its boldness, it has become one of the most repeated E9s.</p> <p>The left arête remains unclimbed. </p> <p>The name comes from the Yiddish word for Insane.</p> <h3>References</h3> <p>[1] ‘Peak Rock’, Vertebrate Publishing, 2013. </p>
9418 9th October 2025 18:09:53 UTC TdG climber Dougie Hall Height
Before
None
After
162.5
9419 9th October 2025 16:51:19 UTC TdG ascent Gérome Pouvreau's ascent of Rhapsody notes_pretty
Before
<p>No falls.</p> <h3>References</h3> <p>[1] <a href="https://www.planetmountain.com/en/news/climbing/extreme-trad-climbing-in-scotland-gerome-pouvreau-and-florence-pinet-repeat-rhapsody-and-requiem.html">https://www.planetmountain.com/en/news/climbing/extreme-trad-climbing-in-scotland-gerome-pouvreau-and-florence-pinet-repeat-rhapsody-and-requiem.html</a></p> <p>[2] <a href="https://www.ukclimbing.com/news/2018/10/florence_pinet_and_gerome_pouvreau_in_the_uk-71744">https://www.ukclimbing.com/news/2018/10/florence_pinet_and_gerome_pouvreau_in_the_uk-71744</a></p>
After
<p>The first no-falls ascent.</p> <h3>References</h3> <p>[1] <a href="https://www.planetmountain.com/en/news/climbing/extreme-trad-climbing-in-scotland-gerome-pouvreau-and-florence-pinet-repeat-rhapsody-and-requiem.html">https://www.planetmountain.com/en/news/climbing/extreme-trad-climbing-in-scotland-gerome-pouvreau-and-florence-pinet-repeat-rhapsody-and-requiem.html</a></p> <p>[2] <a href="https://www.ukclimbing.com/news/2018/10/florence_pinet_and_gerome_pouvreau_in_the_uk-71744">https://www.ukclimbing.com/news/2018/10/florence_pinet_and_gerome_pouvreau_in_the_uk-71744</a></p>
9420 9th October 2025 16:51:19 UTC TdG ascent Gérome Pouvreau's ascent of Rhapsody notes
Before
No falls. ### References [1] [https://www.planetmountain.com/en/news/climbing/extreme-trad-climbing-in-scotland-gerome-pouvreau-and-florence-pinet-repeat-rhapsody-and-requiem.html](https://www.planetmountain.com/en/news/climbing/extreme-trad-climbing-in-scotland-gerome-pouvreau-and-florence-pinet-repeat-rhapsody-and-requiem.html) [2] [https://www.ukclimbing.com/news/2018/10/florence_pinet_and_gerome_pouvreau_in_the_uk-71744](https://www.ukclimbing.com/news/2018/10/florence_pinet_and_gerome_pouvreau_in_the_uk-71744)
After
The first no-falls ascent. ### References [1] [https://www.planetmountain.com/en/news/climbing/extreme-trad-climbing-in-scotland-gerome-pouvreau-and-florence-pinet-repeat-rhapsody-and-requiem.html](https://www.planetmountain.com/en/news/climbing/extreme-trad-climbing-in-scotland-gerome-pouvreau-and-florence-pinet-repeat-rhapsody-and-requiem.html) [2] [https://www.ukclimbing.com/news/2018/10/florence_pinet_and_gerome_pouvreau_in_the_uk-71744](https://www.ukclimbing.com/news/2018/10/florence_pinet_and_gerome_pouvreau_in_the_uk-71744)
Diff
--- before

+++ after

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@

-No falls.
+The first no-falls ascent.

### References

< Page 471 >