Hubble (climbing Route)
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''Hubble'' is a short bolted sport climb at the limestone Raven Tor crag in Dovedale, in the Peak District in Derbyshire, England. When ''Hubble'' was first redpointed by English climber Ben Moon on 14 June 1990, it became the first-ever climb in the world to have a consensus climbing grade of ; and the highest grade in the English system at E9 7b.


History

Hubble was an
aid climbing Aid climbing is a style of climbing in which standing on or pulling oneself up via devices attached to fixed or placed protection is used to make upward progress. The term contrasts with free climbing in which progress is made without using artifi ...
practice route that used
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to pass the first two bolts, which English climbers Ben Moon and Jerry Moffatt started working on in 1989. Moon and Moffatt had returned from a summer in France establishing some of the hardest
sport climbing Sport climbing (or Bolted climbing) is a form of rock climbing that relies on permanent anchors (or bolts), permanently fixed into the rock for climber protection, in which a rope that is attached to the climber is clipped into the anchors to ...
routes in the world on the limestone walls of
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, including ''Agincourt'' and ''Maginot Line'', both at ; they wanted to set these new grade standards at home. Moon rebuilt the individual moves of ''Hubble'' in his basement and practiced them with Moffatt, in particular using a new device called a "Moon Board", which was not dissimilar to Wolfgang Gullich's new campus board training device. Moon spent eight straight days completing the first redpoint of the route, which he did on 14 June 1990, on one of the rare occasions when the route was completely dry. Moon later said, "The year before, I had already redpointed a couple of 8c's in France. I already knew that ''Hubble'' was more difficult than all my hardest lines like ''Agincourt'' or ''Maginot Line''. That’s why I rated it E9/7b. It was the first route in Great Britain that was given a 7b as technical difficulty". Moon also said that Moffatt had come close to redpointing it earlier, but lost interest when Moon completed it. ''Hubble'' is widely regarded as the world's first consensus climbing route.


First 9a

Climbers have speculated whether ''Hubble'' was actually the world's first-ever sport climb at grade , instead of Wolfgang Güllich's 1991 ascent of
Action Directe ''Action Directe'' (; AD, "direct action") was a French far-left militant group which committed a series of assassinations and violent attacks in France between 1979 and 1987. Members of Action directe considered themselves libertarian commu ...
, which is considered the first – and is still the "benchmark" – for the grade. German Alex Megos is one of the few, with British climber Buster Martin, who have climbed ''Hubble'' and ''Action Directe''; he felt ''Hubble'' was very short and probably an in the right conditions (i.e. fully dry), although Megos caveated himself by noting that grading is not an exact science, and is subject to the climber's own style and preferences. Czech climber Adam Ondra had a brief attempt at ''Hubble'' when conditions were not perfect (the route is usually damp) and said: "Personally, I would like to see the impressive ''Action Directe'' as the first 9a, nevertheless, when I consider it objectively, the first one is in fact ''Hubble'', that’s a pity because it’s quite short and slimy". The short nature of the route had led some, including Moon himself, to describe ''Hubble'' as "bouldering on a rope", and speculated that the short 4-move crux makes ''Hubble'' really a bouldering problem with a circa bouldering grade. Ondra himself said, "Maybe it would be more accurate to label the route as an bouldering problem; that would make it the first 8B+ in the world – 10 years before the one that we consider to be the first today ndra is referring to the bouldering route, ', by Fred Nicole from 2000">Fred_Nicole.html" ;"title="ndra is referring to the bouldering route, ', by Fred Nicole">ndra is referring to the bouldering route, ', by kneebar rest at the crux is considered to have also likely softened ''Hubbles grade to a more conventional .


Route

''Hubble'' is described as starting from a big flake, after which most climbers reach for a large pinch hold. Shorter climbers can use an intermediate hold and a foothold to get the pinch. From the pinch, the climber reaches right to an undercut, moves their feet above a lip in a high step while bringing the left hand into a two-finger pocket undercut. Then comes the circa bouldering crux move, for which the climber slaps right for a slopey crimp, then to a large pinch, and then an undercut crimp. There is another high step to bring the feet above another lip and slap for a rough crimp. This is the 4-move bouldering crux section of the route, after which is a section to finish. More recent ascents of ''Hubble'' (e.g Matthew Wright and Buster Martin in 2020), have seen some climbers use a kneebar short rest – a modern sport climbing technique – at the crux section that can soften the difficulty slightly, although still maintaining the route at a consensus level.


Ascents

''Hubble'' has been ascended by: * 1st. Ben Moon, 14 June 1990 * 2nd. Malcolm Smith, 1992 * 3rd. John Gaskins, 1994 * 4th. Richard Simpson (disputed), 2005 * 5th. Steve Dunning, 2009 * 6th. Steve McClure">Malcolm Smith (climber)">Malcolm Smith, 1992 * 3rd. John Gaskins, 1994 * 4th. Richard Simpson (disputed), 2005 * 5th. Steve Dunning, 2009 * 6th. Steve McClure, 2009 * 7th. Alexander Megos, 31 May 2016 * 8th. William Bosi, 2016 * 9th. Pete Dawson, 2019 * 10th. Mathew Wright, 2 October 2020 * 11th. Buster Martin, 13 October 2020 * 12th. Toby Roberts, 28 October 2021


Filmography

* Sean McColl's 2014 inspection: * Alex Megos's 2016 ascent:


See also

*
History of rock climbing In the history of rock climbing, the three main sub-disciplines: bouldering, single-pitch climbing, and big wall (or multi-pitch) climbing can trace their origins to late 19th-century Europe. Bouldering started in Fontainebleau, and was advance ...
*
List of grade milestones in rock climbing In rock climbing, a first free ascent (FFA) is the first redpoint, onsight or flash of a single-pitch, multi-pitch (or big wall), or boulder climbing route that did not involve using aid equipment to help progression or resting; the ascent ...
*'' Silence'', first climb in the world with a potential grade of *'' La Dura Dura'', second climb in the world with a consensus grade of *''
Jumbo Love ''Jumbo Love'' is a long sport climbing route on remote limestone cliffs on Clark Mountain in the Mojave Desert. Bolted by American climber Randy Leavitt in the 1990s, he invited Chris Sharma to attempt it in 2007. When Sharma completed th ...
'', first climb in the world with a consensus grade of *'' Realization/Biographie'', first climb in the world with a consensus grade of *''
Action Directe ''Action Directe'' (; AD, "direct action") was a French far-left militant group which committed a series of assassinations and violent attacks in France between 1979 and 1987. Members of Action directe considered themselves libertarian commu ...
'', first climb in the world with a consensus grade of


References


Further reading

*{{cite book , url=https://shop.thebmc.co.uk/product/peak-limestone-north/ , title=Peak Limestone North , publisher= British Mountaineering Council , isbn=9780903908382 , first=Niall , last=Grimes , accessdate=31 December 2021


External links


Alex Megos Formula: Gravity (featuring Alex on Hubble, 8c+)
(2016, episode 3), Red Bull Climbing routes 1990s in sport climbing Climbing areas of England Mountains and hills of the Peak District