You know the scenario - starting up a route on a sea cliff, the rock is a bit slabby but pretty blank and there’s the 19th annual limpet summer convention going on (clearly they don’t do social distancing). So you cheekily step on one while your belayer isn’t looking (gently tap it first of course to make sure full suction is activated).
Do you still get the onsight?
Is it animal cruelty?
Will the ethics police come after you?
There's a short story by G.J.F. Dutton (one of the Doctor stories) where the Doctor makes his way up a smooth, wet slab using a chalk bag full of limpets.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Complete-Doctor-Stories-Ridiculous-Mountains/dp/18...
I tried it, they come off and the one that just crushed under my foot upset me somewhat.
> Do you still get the onsight?
No
> Is it animal cruelty?
Yes
> Will the ethics police come after you?
Yes. You knew this all along and were just hoping some ethically sloppy UKCers would salve what little conscience you have.
Aid; back around
What if you use one as protection? Several limpets i've come across would take a skyhook; especially with some gratuitous use of duct tape or bluetac?
This thread actually is pretty relevant to me, as I recently went to the beach-side bouldering at Ogmore, only to discover every route appears to almost entirely depend upon standing on limpets.
I am pretty sure that Chasing Shade (E5 6b) at The Castle in Pembroke is hard boarding on impossible if the limpets aren't in the right place for the start.
Alan
> I tried it, they come off and the one that just crushed under my foot upset me somewhat.
"It seems a shame to play them such a trick".
I'm pretty sure I had to do that to start Separate Reality on Lundy. I assume the shingle had shifted since the route was put up. Never occurred to me it would taint the ascent.
May be different for a three move boulder problem, but a route ?
Grades for points of aid
L+ : limpet assisted
B+ : barnacle assisted
A- : anemone impaired
I certainly would not stand on a limpet mine!!!
I was being only half serious but as you say sometimes they make all the difference. Should you have a ‘limpets essential’ symbol in the next Pembroke guide book?
If the FA used a crucial limpet which has since moved on or died (no idea how long they live for), can you claim a different grade? What if a limpet blocks a gear slot?
Saw this in a log for Sacre Coeur at Blackchurch: “Limpets don’t make reliable foot placements nor good nut placements in cracks.” We need more of this kind of wisdom in guide book intro pages.
Of course it's animal cruelty, You're being very shellfish.
> I was being only half serious but as you say sometimes they make all the difference. Should you have a ‘limpets essential’ symbol in the next Pembroke guide book?
Ha, we had Larry the Limpet featuring in the two RF books - see attached!
On Chasing Shade (E5 6b) it is a blank scoop and the limpets can make all the difference. I bouldered it out once but chickened out of the rest of the route. Judging by the limited ascents and negative comments, it doesn't look to be a classic despite being very impressive from below. I do remember using limpets on some other Pembroke starts though and, to revert to the original question, I would regard that as completely fair on a sea cliff route. It seldom gives you more than a move or two anyway since they only stick around below the tide line.
> I was being only half serious but as you say sometimes they make all the difference. Should you have a ‘limpets essential’ symbol in the next Pembroke guide book?
> If the FA used a crucial limpet which has since moved on or died (no idea how long they live for), can you claim a different grade? What if a limpet blocks a gear slot?
Apparently limpets have a home spot they always go back to - so death rather than moving is the thing that'll shift them.
I've found they don't come off if you are careful with them. I did a problem at Oxwich where you had to tap them all in order, and then climb it within 15 seconds - as if you tap them they hold on really tight, and then gradually relax.
In reply to
We tried to eat some on Pabbay - nice flavour, but very tough - I reckon you could make a good soup if you put them into a blender
You overcooked them. Lightly boil until the flesh just starts to come away from the shell and they're done.
> Of course it's animal cruelty, You're being very shellfish.
Only justified if you're climbing at your limpets.
No way, what, like birds? How would they even know?!
How did you get them off the rock?
> How did you get them off the rock?
Best way is an unannounced sideways whack with a rock. If they sense you coming they clamp down. At night they hang off the rocks somewhat in the cool damp air and rats will go down the beach and flick them off with their front teeth before carrying them back up to the top of the beach to eat them. They also dig sandeels out the sand to eat them, the clever devils.
> No way, what, like birds? How would they even know?!
Easy, glue a tag onto them and watch them. The shells get worn down to make an exact fit to the rock thus retaining the water inside and stopping them from drying out.
Need bigger mussels
> Easy, glue a tag onto them and watch them. The shells get worn down to make an exact fit to the rock thus retaining the water inside and stopping them from drying out.
That's fascinating. How far do they ever move away from their "home"?
I mean how would the limpets know to go back to the same place?
Limpet watching, now there’s a fun activity (aka belaying me).
This is quite incredible...
I look forward to UKC in 2085 after rising sea levels bring about fierce debate as to the true grade of Three Limpet Slab at Froggatt.
Never mind standing on a limpet, what about standing on a pony? Was at Low Man today and there were three of them horsing around below the crag. If you’d fallen off you’d have ended up on horseback.
Do limpets not just snap off, then, when you weight them? That's pretty impressive...
* Mind slowly ticking... *
What about placing limpets on mountain crags? Is that kosher?
As suggested above, if you gently tap them first, they pretty much glue themselves on. Not sure I’ve ever actually stepped on one but suspect they would hold most of the time.
As regards your second question, as far as I know all seafood is not kosher (fish is generally kosher but not sure it would be helpful as a foothold).
> What about placing limpets on mountain crags? Is that kosher?
As long as you carry them in a jar of oxygenated seawater and your second hangs around for hours to remove them in as stress-free a way as possible then I can't see any problems whatsoever.
Isn't Stepping on a Limpet already a Dawes route?
> As long as you carry them in a jar of oxygenated seawater and your second hangs around for hours to remove them in as stress-free a way as possible then I can't see any problems whatsoever.
My seconds do like to moan about well-placed nuts, but I've never seen their feelings on the matter as particularly relevant, so that sounds like a cracking plan!
Hm... I might also get the second to carry the oxygenated limpet tank up the hill...
> As regards your second question, as far as I know all seafood is not kosher (fish is generally kosher but not sure it would be helpful as a foothold).
Damn...! The Torah just won't let a guy live! How'm I meant to up my grade now? This is going to require some careful rethinking of the theological basis of my climbing ethics...
Just so you know (even if you didn't want to 😁), to be kosher fish needs to have both fins and (visible to the eye) scales so most "normal" fish are ok. Funnily enough, any fish that has scales also has fins - necessary knowledge to be able to buy a piece of fish without knowing the species.
Shark - nope, shellfish - nope, lobster/crab - nope, limpets - definitely not, swordfish - nope, sturgeon - nope, no caviar for me.
Halal requirements are similar.
Like pegs. "Limpet sometimes in situ"