- Rob Slater
Rob Slater (1960-1995) was an American mountaineer known for his first ascent of the big wall route "Wyoming Sheep Ranch" on
El Capitan . A tireless outdoor recreationalist, Slater built up an impressive climbing resume during his college years and later as he worked as a trader on theChicago Mercantile Exchange . He died on August 13, 1995 while descending from the summit ofK2 .Rob started climbing early, summiting the
Grand Teton at age 13 with mountaineering pioneerPaul Petzoldt [ [http://www.aceeldo.org/images/bro.pdf#search=%22rob%20slater%20climbing%22 Action Committee for Eldorado Newsletter] ] . He attended high school inCheyenne, Wyoming and college at theUniversity of Colorado at Boulder , an institution he chose for its beautiful location beneath theFlatirons and, according to fellow climber John Sherman, its beautiful coedsSherman, John, "Sherman Exposed", 1999, pp. 214-230] . Slater soon demonstrated his nerve in nearbyEldorado Canyon by dispatching the testpiece route "Wide Country" (11a R), still difficult today even though the availability of sticky rubberclimbing shoes and micronuts has reduced the challenge.While in college, Slater began making summer trips to
Yosemite Valley , where he climbed his first big wall route "Zodiac" withTom Cosgriff . During his junior year Slater metRandy Leavitt , who taught Slater how toBASE jump . Attempting a risky jump with Leavitt in theBlack Canyon of the Gunnison , Slater was forced to make a downwind landing on the wrong side of the river, twisting his foot and scrubbing their plans to exit the canyon by climbing one of the walls.Slater was one of the top aid climbers of his day. In 1982 he made the first solo ascent of the "Pacific Ocean Wall", at the time one of the hardest routes on El Capitan. Slater naturally capped his ascent with a BASE jump. In 1984 Slater put up "Wyoming Sheep Ranch" (A5) with
John Barbella [Reid, Don, "Yosemite Climbs: Big Walls", 1996] . Caught by nightfall in the middle of a difficult and overhung pitch, Slater lowered off 40' on hooks, and Barbella had to pull him in 20' to the belay. "Wyoming Sheep Ranch" held title for many years as the most difficult and dangerous aid climb on El Cap, but the inevitable widening of placements and appearance of fixed gear has subsequently reduced the grade to A4 [McNamara, Chris, "Yosemite Big Walls: Supertopos", 2000] .As a specialist in climbs with poor protection, Slater was drawn to the
Fisher Towers nearMoab, Utah , famous for their soft, crumbly rock. Slater was the first and as of 1995 the only climber to summit all of the towers.Slater may be the first person to take a leash-protected fall on a highline
slackline [ [http://forum.slackline.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=11 The Evolution of Slacklining] by Chris Carpenter] . In 1983 he set up a short 22' line under a freeway overpass in Pasadena withScott Balcom and others. The line was 80' above the ground. Even though Slater only had 15 minutes of slacklining practice at the ground level, he was the first in the group to attempt to walk the line.Slater excelled at all types of climbing, having ascended the 3000' ice route "Slipstream" in the
Canadian Rockies as well asK2 without bottled oxygen. Slater perished in a storm on the descent from K2 along with 5 other climbers, including his team member, noted female climberAlison Hargreaves .Bibliography
External links
* [http://www.xs4all.nl/~rmvl/en/alison.html The Last Ascent of Alison Hargreaves] - Originally from Outside Magazine
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