Work had severely slowed down how much climbing I was able to do in the past 3 months, but had finally eased off for the last 3 weeks and I was beginning to get back into climbing shape. I was feeling pretty strong going into the weekend and gave Lucas a shout to see if he was keen for Sisyphus, the weather looked good enough and we decided to give it a go.
Being such a long route, one would think getting an early start would have been a smart decision. With that in mind we went to the new Star Trek movie the night before and got to bed around 1:00AM. We got started at 9:18AM, real early with plenty of rest... To go along with our preparation for long routes we knocked back a few sips of water before we left the car, brought one liter of water, a cliff bar each (both had peanuts so Lucas got both...), a micropuff jacket and the bare minimum in climbing gear needed, lightweight or stupid? We knocked off the approach easily enough and were tying in at 10:00, the wind was lapping at us but that didn't hold back our spirits. The first few pitches didn't offer much, a fun enough traverse to open the climb and then we started to get vertical.
We felt a few raindrops during the last section but it didn't look like the sky was going to open, and with the climbing being easy at this point we didn't consider bailing as going up would be less miserable than rapping. We kept moving up nervously looking at the clouds, even spotting a rainbow once well below us over Grassi Lakes, a great view to see, unless you're on the side of a mountain... But the sky never opened up and we topped out on Ha Ling at 4:30PM, 6.5 hours on route. A quick breather at the summit and a short run down the hiking trail had us back to the car at 5:20PM, 8 hours car to car.
Overall a great climb worth doing and nice ticking off something I considered so far away 3 years ago. A lot of people online complained about the bolting but in reality there was maybe 6 bolts I would move, and they weren't even that bad. Was good to be back on a climb with Lucas again and seeing that our systems and transitions are still on point, looking forward to getting on some bigger climbs with him later this summer!