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
9481 9th October 2025 08:39:34 UTC TdG climber Jérôme Jean-Charles notes
Before
None
After
Bleausard bouldering pioneer. Chipped and climbed the first 7B in the forest [Le Carnage](/climb/2518/le-carnage) in 1977. >Yet, although a new milestone had been reached, the driving force of the practice at that time remained the spirit of play. Serious training for specific routes was out of the question. Climbers were above all technicians, and physical power was not among their priorities. Jérôme Jean-Charles, for example, was obsessed with finding difficult moves involving clever body positioning and delicate balance rather than sheer strength. He preferred to see bouldering as “a succession of resting positions, so that this activity would never become the domain of gymnasts.” [1, Translation by ChatGPT] ### References [1] Godoffe, J. 'Blocs en Stock: Le Cuvier', 1993
Diff
--- before

+++ after

@@ -1 +1,7 @@

-
+Bleausard bouldering pioneer. Chipped and climbed the first 7B in the forest [Le Carnage](/climb/2518/le-carnage) in 1977.
+
+>Yet, although a new milestone had been reached, the driving force of the practice at that time remained the spirit of play. Serious training for specific routes was out of the question. Climbers were above all technicians, and physical power was not among their priorities. Jérôme Jean-Charles, for example, was obsessed with finding difficult moves involving clever body positioning and delicate balance rather than sheer strength. He preferred to see bouldering as “a succession of resting positions, so that this activity would never become the domain of gymnasts.” [1, Translation by ChatGPT]
+
+### References
+
+[1] Godoffe, J. 'Blocs en Stock: Le Cuvier', 1993
9482 9th October 2025 08:35:12 UTC TdG climber Thierry Bienvenu notes
Before
Bleausard and developer of Cuvier. >In the early 1970s, there were still few regular climbers at Bleau. […] Rather than seeking out other boulders or new areas, they preferred to search for new, inevitably harder or more far-fetched methods on the existing blocs. Thierry Bienvenu achieved some truly exceptional feats in a humorous spirit: for instance, climbing La Défroquée (white 6) one-handed! Try it yourself, and you’ll see. Or the delirious circuit linkups, such as the famous day when Thierry completed the red circuit thirteen and a half times in succession – nearly 600 problems in six hours; another time, he ran the same circuit in 18 minutes, a record that still stood twenty years later. [1, Translation by ChatGPT] Having seemingly exhausted Cuvier's potential he chipped [Le Carnage](/climb/2518/le-carnage) (7B+), along with [Jérôme Jean-Charles](/climber/1599/jérôme-jean-charles): > red to white circuits, everything seemed so easy that their motivation for those problems was starting to fade. So they set out in search of a major new line that would mark a new step forward. They didn’t have to look long, nor far: right before their eyes, the [L'Abattoir](/climb/5610/l'abattoir) boulder revealed a smooth bulge on its right side that quickly imposed itself as the coveted line. However, as it was almost devoid of holds, they had to imagine unusual movements and carve accordingly. A few weeks later, in the winter of 1977, [Le Carnage](/climb/2518/le-carnage) (white 6t) was born. Soon after, other major lines such as Rhume Folle (white 9t) and Angle Incarné (white 4b) followed. [1, Translation by ChatGPT] ### References [1] Godoffe, J. 'Blocs en stock: Le Cuvier', 1993.
After
Bleausard and developer of Cuvier. >In the early 1970s, there were still few regular climbers at Bleau. […] Rather than seeking out other boulders or new areas, they preferred to search for new, inevitably harder or more far-fetched methods on the existing blocs. Thierry Bienvenu achieved some truly exceptional feats in a humorous spirit: for instance, climbing La Défroquée (white 6) one-handed! Try it yourself, and you’ll see. Or the delirious circuit linkups, such as the famous day when Thierry completed the red circuit thirteen and a half times in succession – nearly 600 problems in six hours; another time, he ran the same circuit in 18 minutes, a record that still stood twenty years later. [1, Translation by ChatGPT] Having seemingly exhausted Cuvier's potential he chipped [Le Carnage](/climb/2518/le-carnage) (7B+), along with [Jérôme Jean-Charles](/climber/1599/jérôme-jean-charles): >From red to white circuits, everything seemed so easy that their motivation for those problems was starting to fade. So they set out in search of a major new line that would mark a new step forward. They didn’t have to look long, nor far: right before their eyes, the [L'Abattoir](/climb/5610/l'abattoir) boulder revealed a smooth bulge on its right side that quickly imposed itself as the coveted line. However, as it was almost devoid of holds, they had to imagine unusual movements and carve accordingly. A few weeks later, in the winter of 1977, [Le Carnage](/climb/2518/le-carnage) (white 6t) was born. Soon after, other major lines such as Rhume Folle (white 9t) and Angle Incarné (white 4b) followed. [1, Translation by ChatGPT] ### References [1] Godoffe, J. 'Blocs en stock: Le Cuvier', 1993.
Diff
--- before

+++ after

@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@


Having seemingly exhausted Cuvier's potential he chipped [Le Carnage](/climb/2518/le-carnage) (7B+), along with [Jérôme Jean-Charles](/climber/1599/jérôme-jean-charles):

-> red to white circuits, everything seemed so easy that their motivation for those problems was starting to fade. So they set out in search of a major new line that would mark a new step forward. They didn’t have to look long, nor far: right before their eyes, the [L'Abattoir](/climb/5610/l'abattoir) boulder revealed a smooth bulge on its right side that quickly imposed itself as the coveted line. However, as it was almost devoid of holds, they had to imagine unusual movements and carve accordingly. A few weeks later, in the winter of 1977, [Le Carnage](/climb/2518/le-carnage) (white 6t) was born. Soon after, other major lines such as Rhume Folle (white 9t) and Angle Incarné (white 4b) followed. [1, Translation by ChatGPT]
+>From red to white circuits, everything seemed so easy that their motivation for those problems was starting to fade. So they set out in search of a major new line that would mark a new step forward. They didn’t have to look long, nor far: right before their eyes, the [L'Abattoir](/climb/5610/l'abattoir) boulder revealed a smooth bulge on its right side that quickly imposed itself as the coveted line. However, as it was almost devoid of holds, they had to imagine unusual movements and carve accordingly. A few weeks later, in the winter of 1977, [Le Carnage](/climb/2518/le-carnage) (white 6t) was born. Soon after, other major lines such as Rhume Folle (white 9t) and Angle Incarné (white 4b) followed. [1, Translation by ChatGPT]

### References

9483 9th October 2025 08:35:12 UTC TdG climber Thierry Bienvenu notes_pretty
Before
<p>Bleausard and developer of Cuvier. </p> <blockquote> <p>In the early 1970s, there were still few regular climbers at Bleau. […] Rather than seeking out other boulders or new areas, they preferred to search for new, inevitably harder or more far-fetched methods on the existing blocs. Thierry Bienvenu achieved some truly exceptional feats in a humorous spirit: for instance, climbing La Défroquée (white 6) one-handed! Try it yourself, and you’ll see. Or the delirious circuit linkups, such as the famous day when Thierry completed the red circuit thirteen and a half times in succession – nearly 600 problems in six hours; another time, he ran the same circuit in 18 minutes, a record that still stood twenty years later. [1, Translation by ChatGPT]</p> </blockquote> <p>Having seemingly exhausted Cuvier's potential he chipped <a href="/climb/2518/le-carnage">Le Carnage</a> (7B+), along with <a href="/climber/1599/jérôme-jean-charles">Jérôme Jean-Charles</a>:</p> <blockquote> <p>red to white circuits, everything seemed so easy that their motivation for those problems was starting to fade. So they set out in search of a major new line that would mark a new step forward. They didn’t have to look long, nor far: right before their eyes, the <a href="/climb/5610/l'abattoir">L'Abattoir</a> boulder revealed a smooth bulge on its right side that quickly imposed itself as the coveted line. However, as it was almost devoid of holds, they had to imagine unusual movements and carve accordingly. A few weeks later, in the winter of 1977, <a href="/climb/2518/le-carnage">Le Carnage</a> (white 6t) was born. Soon after, other major lines such as Rhume Folle (white 9t) and Angle Incarné (white 4b) followed. [1, Translation by ChatGPT]</p> </blockquote> <h3>References</h3> <p>[1] Godoffe, J. 'Blocs en stock: Le Cuvier', 1993.</p>
After
<p>Bleausard and developer of Cuvier. </p> <blockquote> <p>In the early 1970s, there were still few regular climbers at Bleau. […] Rather than seeking out other boulders or new areas, they preferred to search for new, inevitably harder or more far-fetched methods on the existing blocs. Thierry Bienvenu achieved some truly exceptional feats in a humorous spirit: for instance, climbing La Défroquée (white 6) one-handed! Try it yourself, and you’ll see. Or the delirious circuit linkups, such as the famous day when Thierry completed the red circuit thirteen and a half times in succession – nearly 600 problems in six hours; another time, he ran the same circuit in 18 minutes, a record that still stood twenty years later. [1, Translation by ChatGPT]</p> </blockquote> <p>Having seemingly exhausted Cuvier's potential he chipped <a href="/climb/2518/le-carnage">Le Carnage</a> (7B+), along with <a href="/climber/1599/jérôme-jean-charles">Jérôme Jean-Charles</a>:</p> <blockquote> <p>From red to white circuits, everything seemed so easy that their motivation for those problems was starting to fade. So they set out in search of a major new line that would mark a new step forward. They didn’t have to look long, nor far: right before their eyes, the <a href="/climb/5610/l'abattoir">L'Abattoir</a> boulder revealed a smooth bulge on its right side that quickly imposed itself as the coveted line. However, as it was almost devoid of holds, they had to imagine unusual movements and carve accordingly. A few weeks later, in the winter of 1977, <a href="/climb/2518/le-carnage">Le Carnage</a> (white 6t) was born. Soon after, other major lines such as Rhume Folle (white 9t) and Angle Incarné (white 4b) followed. [1, Translation by ChatGPT]</p> </blockquote> <h3>References</h3> <p>[1] Godoffe, J. 'Blocs en stock: Le Cuvier', 1993.</p>
9484 9th October 2025 08:34:39 UTC TdG climber Thierry Bienvenu notes
Before
None
After
Bleausard and developer of Cuvier. >In the early 1970s, there were still few regular climbers at Bleau. […] Rather than seeking out other boulders or new areas, they preferred to search for new, inevitably harder or more far-fetched methods on the existing blocs. Thierry Bienvenu achieved some truly exceptional feats in a humorous spirit: for instance, climbing La Défroquée (white 6) one-handed! Try it yourself, and you’ll see. Or the delirious circuit linkups, such as the famous day when Thierry completed the red circuit thirteen and a half times in succession – nearly 600 problems in six hours; another time, he ran the same circuit in 18 minutes, a record that still stood twenty years later. [1, Translation by ChatGPT] Having seemingly exhausted Cuvier's potential he chipped [Le Carnage](/climb/2518/le-carnage) (7B+), along with [Jérôme Jean-Charles](/climber/1599/jérôme-jean-charles): > red to white circuits, everything seemed so easy that their motivation for those problems was starting to fade. So they set out in search of a major new line that would mark a new step forward. They didn’t have to look long, nor far: right before their eyes, the [L'Abattoir](/climb/5610/l'abattoir) boulder revealed a smooth bulge on its right side that quickly imposed itself as the coveted line. However, as it was almost devoid of holds, they had to imagine unusual movements and carve accordingly. A few weeks later, in the winter of 1977, [Le Carnage](/climb/2518/le-carnage) (white 6t) was born. Soon after, other major lines such as Rhume Folle (white 9t) and Angle Incarné (white 4b) followed. [1, Translation by ChatGPT] ### References [1] Godoffe, J. 'Blocs en stock: Le Cuvier', 1993.
Diff
--- before

+++ after

@@ -1 +1,11 @@

-
+Bleausard and developer of Cuvier.
+
+>In the early 1970s, there were still few regular climbers at Bleau. […] Rather than seeking out other boulders or new areas, they preferred to search for new, inevitably harder or more far-fetched methods on the existing blocs. Thierry Bienvenu achieved some truly exceptional feats in a humorous spirit: for instance, climbing La Défroquée (white 6) one-handed! Try it yourself, and you’ll see. Or the delirious circuit linkups, such as the famous day when Thierry completed the red circuit thirteen and a half times in succession – nearly 600 problems in six hours; another time, he ran the same circuit in 18 minutes, a record that still stood twenty years later. [1, Translation by ChatGPT]
+
+Having seemingly exhausted Cuvier's potential he chipped [Le Carnage](/climb/2518/le-carnage) (7B+), along with [Jérôme Jean-Charles](/climber/1599/jérôme-jean-charles):
+
+> red to white circuits, everything seemed so easy that their motivation for those problems was starting to fade. So they set out in search of a major new line that would mark a new step forward. They didn’t have to look long, nor far: right before their eyes, the [L'Abattoir](/climb/5610/l'abattoir) boulder revealed a smooth bulge on its right side that quickly imposed itself as the coveted line. However, as it was almost devoid of holds, they had to imagine unusual movements and carve accordingly. A few weeks later, in the winter of 1977, [Le Carnage](/climb/2518/le-carnage) (white 6t) was born. Soon after, other major lines such as Rhume Folle (white 9t) and Angle Incarné (white 4b) followed. [1, Translation by ChatGPT]
+
+### References
+
+[1] Godoffe, J. 'Blocs en stock: Le Cuvier', 1993.
9485 9th October 2025 08:34:39 UTC TdG climber Thierry Bienvenu notes_pretty
Before
None
After
<p>Bleausard and developer of Cuvier. </p> <blockquote> <p>In the early 1970s, there were still few regular climbers at Bleau. […] Rather than seeking out other boulders or new areas, they preferred to search for new, inevitably harder or more far-fetched methods on the existing blocs. Thierry Bienvenu achieved some truly exceptional feats in a humorous spirit: for instance, climbing La Défroquée (white 6) one-handed! Try it yourself, and you’ll see. Or the delirious circuit linkups, such as the famous day when Thierry completed the red circuit thirteen and a half times in succession – nearly 600 problems in six hours; another time, he ran the same circuit in 18 minutes, a record that still stood twenty years later. [1, Translation by ChatGPT]</p> </blockquote> <p>Having seemingly exhausted Cuvier's potential he chipped <a href="/climb/2518/le-carnage">Le Carnage</a> (7B+), along with <a href="/climber/1599/jérôme-jean-charles">Jérôme Jean-Charles</a>:</p> <blockquote> <p>red to white circuits, everything seemed so easy that their motivation for those problems was starting to fade. So they set out in search of a major new line that would mark a new step forward. They didn’t have to look long, nor far: right before their eyes, the <a href="/climb/5610/l'abattoir">L'Abattoir</a> boulder revealed a smooth bulge on its right side that quickly imposed itself as the coveted line. However, as it was almost devoid of holds, they had to imagine unusual movements and carve accordingly. A few weeks later, in the winter of 1977, <a href="/climb/2518/le-carnage">Le Carnage</a> (white 6t) was born. Soon after, other major lines such as Rhume Folle (white 9t) and Angle Incarné (white 4b) followed. [1, Translation by ChatGPT]</p> </blockquote> <h3>References</h3> <p>[1] Godoffe, J. 'Blocs en stock: Le Cuvier', 1993.</p>
9486 9th October 2025 08:23:42 UTC TdG climber Thierry Bienvenu country_name
Before
None
After
France
9487 9th October 2025 08:23:42 UTC TdG climber Thierry Bienvenu country_membership
Before
None
After
french
9488 9th October 2025 08:23:42 UTC TdG climber Thierry Bienvenu country_flag
Before
None
After
🇫🇷
9489 9th October 2025 08:23:42 UTC TdG climber Thierry Bienvenu nationality
Before
None
After
FR
9490 9th October 2025 08:23:42 UTC TdG climber Thierry Bienvenu gender
Before
None
After
false
9491 9th October 2025 08:23:42 UTC TdG climber Thierry Bienvenu climber_name
Before
None
After
Thierry Bienvenu
9492 9th October 2025 08:23:42 UTC TdG climber Thierry Bienvenu country_id
Before
None
After
14
9493 9th October 2025 08:21:28 UTC TdG ascent Bertrand Couzy's ascent of Le Carnage notes
Before
None
After
### References [1] Godoffe, J. 'Blocs en stock: Le Cuvier', 1993
Diff
--- before

+++ after

@@ -1 +1,3 @@

-
+### References
+
+[1] Godoffe, J. 'Blocs en stock: Le Cuvier', 1993
9494 9th October 2025 08:21:28 UTC TdG ascent Bertrand Couzy's ascent of Le Carnage notes_pretty
Before
None
After
<h3>References</h3> <p>[1] Godoffe, J. 'Blocs en stock: Le Cuvier', 1993</p>
9495 9th October 2025 08:19:49 UTC TdG ascent Bertrand Couzy's ascent of Le Carnage Ascent #
Before
None
After
2
9496 9th October 2025 08:19:49 UTC TdG ascent Bertrand Couzy's ascent of Le Carnage climber_id
Before
None
After
3370
9497 9th October 2025 08:19:49 UTC TdG ascent Bertrand Couzy's ascent of Le Carnage ascent_dt_start
Before
None
After
1979-01-01
9498 9th October 2025 08:19:49 UTC TdG ascent Bertrand Couzy's ascent of Le Carnage ascent_dt_end
Before
None
After
1980-01-01
9499 9th October 2025 08:19:49 UTC TdG ascent Bertrand Couzy's ascent of Le Carnage climb_id
Before
None
After
2518
9500 9th October 2025 08:19:49 UTC TdG ascent Bertrand Couzy's ascent of Le Carnage ascent_style_id
Before
None
After
1

< Page 475 >