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Free solo climbing (or free soloing) is a form of where the climber (or free soloist) climbs (or alone) and without or any form of protective equipment — they are allowed to use and (or and if ). Free soloing is the most dangerous form of climbing, and, unlike , free soloists climb above safe heights, where a fall can be fatal. Though many climbers have free soloed routes with technical grades that they are very comfortable on, only a tiny group free solo regularly, and at technical grades closer to the limit of their abilities.

The international profiles of some climbers have been significantly increased by their free soloing activities, such as , , and , but others question the ethics of this, and whether the risks that they are undertaking should be encouraged and commercially rewarded. While "free solo" was originally a term in climbing , after the popularity of the 2018 -winning film , added the word to their English dictionary in September 2019.

In addition to free soloing on single-pitch and multi-pitch rock climbing routes — including the even longer big wall climbing that features in the Free Solo film — free soloing is also performed in a wide range of other climbing-types including for example in the discipline of ice climbing and of mixed climbing (which is featured in the 2021 climbing documentary film, ), as well as in setting speed-climbing records on routes (which is featured in the 2023 climbing documentary film, Race to the Summit).


Description
Free solo climbing (which is sometimes just called soloing in the UK, or third-classing in the US), is where the climber uses no (as per all free-climbing), but in addition, uses no form of climbing protection whatsover. The free solo climber may only use their and as they ascend the .

Free solo climbing is a special form of but is different from the main forms of free climbing — and traditional climbing — that use climbing protection for safety. In theory, is also free solo climbing (i.e. it also uses no aid or protection) but is usually not referred to as such except in the case of highball bouldering, where falls can be serious. The most committing forms of free soloing are on multi-pitch — and the even longer big wall — routes, where any retreat is very difficult.

In the term – as distinct from free solo climbing – is used where the climber carries a rope and some aid climbing equipment to overcome difficult sections. In addition, the term is used for any solo climber who uses a rope and a form of self-locking device for continuous climbing protection on the route; this is also not considered as free solo climbing.

(2025). 9781846892622, Quiller Publishing.

Many early 20th-century rock climbers who began to free climb (i.e., avoiding any form of aid), were often practicing free solo climbing (or rope soloing), as the effectiveness of their climbing protection (usually a rope around their waist) was minimal. In the history of rock climbing, the first ascent of by W. P. Haskett Smith in June 1886 – an act that is widely considered to be the start of the sport of rock climbing – was effectively a free solo.

(2021). 9789462394148, Atlantis Press. .
Early leaders of free climbing such as Paul Preuss, were also strongly interested in free solo climbing as being ethically purer. The 1958 ascent by of Goliath, one of the world's first E4 6a routes, was effectively a free solo (with a rope around his waist). By the 1970s, when climbing protection was sufficiently developed to be effective, the discipline of free solo climbing began to stand apart.


Public view
Many climbers praise free soloing, while others have concerns regarding the danger and the message the ascents send to other climbers. Many companies have taken these views into account when working with free soloists. , the nutrition bar company with long ties to climbing, dropped the sponsorship of five climbers in 2014, citing the risks they take and stirring a debate about how much risk should be rewarded.

However, The North Face and have promoted free soloists and helped the free soloing community grow. In addition, , a free soloist who was previously dropped by Clif Bar, was featured in the 2018 documentary , which was met with critical acclaim and won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The director of Free Solo, , talks in the film about the ethics of undertaking the documentary, and the effect that his film team and project could have had on the outcome.

Even in the climbing community, free soloing is controversial. In 2022, when Climbing did a feature on free soloing, they caveated all articles with: "This article is not an endorsement of the practice", and emphasized that in their research amongst climbers, it was only practiced by a very small minority, with many telling Climbing: "I have in the past but not anymore".

In 2022, climbing author and occasional free soloist Jeff Smoot wrote All and Nothing: Inside Free Soloing, which explored through interviews why some rock climbers free solo, including analyzing his own motivations. He described the feeling of self-control over one's fears as a form of addiction that had brought benefits to his life outside of climbing. He also found a wider range of motivations than he expected telling The Seattle Times, "Are free soloists crazy? They may be. Are they crazier than anybody else? I don’t think so, just in a different way".


Notable climbers
While many rock climbers have free soloed routes (single-pitch or big wall/multi-pitch), at climbing grades well below their ability, a very small minority have practiced free soloing regularly, and at grades closer to their overall limits. The most prominent of this smaller group are those who have broken new grade milestones in free solo climbing and gained a significant profile from their soloing:

  • – the most prolific and well-known free soloist of the 21st century, whose 2017 free solo of the route Freerider on became the iconic film, .
  • Hansjörg Auer – the prolific big wall and high-altitude big wall free soloist, whose 2007 free solo of Fish Route on was then the most daring in climbing history.
  • Michael Reardon – prolific free soloist whose 2005 free solo of Romantic Warrior won him National Geographic's "Adventurer of the Year".
  • – one of the strongest rock climbers of the 1990s who set free solo grade milestones in single-pitch free soloing (with Kommunist), and big wall free soloing (with the Brandler-Hasse Direttissima).
  • – the early 1990s and 2000s pioneer of , but who also broke important new free solo grade milestones in the 1990s.
  • Wolfgang Güllich – one of the strongest rock climbers of the late 1980s who set free solo milestones ( Weed Killer), and did the iconic solo of Separate Reality.
  • Catherine Destivelle – a leading female climber of the late 1980s, who made iconic free solos in single-pitch ( El Matador), and big wall ( Bonatti Pillar).
  • – a leading European free soloist of the 1980s, with iconic big wall free solos in the and , as featured in the 1982 climbing film, La Vie au bout des doigts.
  • – prolific free soloist whose 1985 free solo of Revelations jumped several grade milestones in free solo climbing.
  • Peter Croft – a prolific Canadian free soloist of the 1980s, who pioneered big wall free soloing with The Rostrum and Astroman.
  • – first free solo "superstar" and prolific American soloist of the late 1970s/early 1980s, who pioneered big wall soloing ( Nabisco Wall).
In addition, several other free solo practitioners are considered historically notable in free solo climbing and include the following: , , , , , , Jimmy Jewell, John Long, , , , Paul Preuss, and .

Free soloing is less common amongst female rock climbers, however, as well as Catherine Destivelle, the following female climbers are historically notable free solo practitioners: and Brette Harrington, both of whom have free soloed single-pitch and big wall routes.


Evolution of grade milestones

Single-pitch routes
  • 2019 : Relatively unknown Italian climber Alfredo Webber, aged 52, free soloed Panem et Circenses in Arco, Italy, first-ever free solo of an .
  • 2004 : free soloed Kommunist in the Tyrol, Austria; the first-ever free solo at grade .
  • 1993 : free soloed Compilation in Omblèze, France; the first-ever free solo of an graded route.
  • 1987 : Jean-Christophe Lafaille Rêve de gosse, at La Roche-des-Arnauds, France; considered the first-ever free solo at the grade of .
  • 1986 : Wolfgang Güllich free soloed Weed Killer, at Raven Tor, in the , first-ever free solo at ; that same year, Gullich also did the iconic solo of Separate Reality .
  • 1985 : free soloed Revelations, at Raven Tor, , the first-ever free solo at ; considered a feat that was a decade ahead of its time.
  • 1982 : free soloed Baby Apes, at Joshua Tree National Park, probably the first-ever free solo at .
  • 1961 : John Gill free soloed——the first ascent of Thimble, the first-ever redpoint, and thus the first-ever free solo, at .Ament, Pat (2002). Wizards of Rock: A History of Free Climbing in America, Wilderness Press


Big wall, multi-pitch routes
  • 2017 : free soloed via Freerider, first-ever big wall solo at ; becomes Oscar-winning film, ).
  • 2007 : Hansjörg Auer free soloed Fish Route, on , in the , Italy, first-ever big wall solo at (35-pitches).
  • 2005 : Michael Reardon free soloed, , Romantic Warrior in the , USA, first-ever big wall solo at (10-pitches); wins National Geographic "Adventurer of the Year".
  • 2002 : free soloed, the 1,500 ft Hasse-Brandler on the Cima Grande, , first-ever big wall solo at .


Climber fatalities
A number of notable free solo practitioners have died while free soloing:
  • Paul Preuss (3 October 1913; age 27) died in a fall from the attempted first ascent of the North Ridge of the Mandlkogel (in the ) as a free solo.
  • Jimmy Jewell died (31 October 1987; age 34) free soloing the easy route Poor Man's Peuterey (graded UK-Severe) at , taking a short-cut.
  • , died (October 5, 1980; age 25) while free soloing 's North Face in the .
  • died (28 May 1993; age 36) while free soloing the Steck-Salathé Route on in .
  • fell (19 July 2004; age 49) while climbing alone and unroped along the Grand Traverse route on peak in Wyoming.
  • died (5 July 2009; age 52) in a free solo accident at Dike Wall near Mammoth Lakes, California.
  • Michael J. Ybarra died (July 2012; age 45) climbing solo on The Matterhorn Peak in California's Sierra Nevada Mountains.

Climbing magazine reported that a number of prominent free solo practitioners died in related or other extreme sports, including: (died at age 35 while at Yosemite), Michael Reardon (died age 42 while sea cliffs when he was carried out to sea by a rogue wave), (died age 43 while when he crashed at Yosemite), (died age 31 while at ), and (died age 35 in an at ).


Related disciplines
  • : Some leading have set speed climbing records on classic alpine climbing routes – particularly the six great north faces of the Alps – that are done as free solos as using ropes and other protection would take too long. Notable alpine free solo speed climbers include and , whose rivalry was featured in the 2021 film, Race to the Summit.
  • : Some free soloists scale buildings, such as ("The French Spider-Man"), and ("Skyscraperman"), who have scaled dozens of around the world—a sport known as buildering—without any safety equipment.
  • Deep-water soloing (DWS), is a subtype of performed on rock faces overhanging water where in the case of a fall, the climber lands in the water. Deep-water routes can involve falls of , and thus a risk of serious injury. Noted DWS climbers include .
  • FreeBASEing, is a subtype of free solo climbing performed on long multi-pitch big wall routes with a parachute as the sole means of protection. A falling climber opens their parachute to arrest their fall. It was pioneered by .
  • Highball bouldering, is where the boulder exceeds in height, and any fall, even where are used, presents a risk of serious injury. Where highball bouldering ends and free soloing begins is a source of debate.
  • : Some ice climbers are notable for ice free-soloing, as well as mixed free-soloing. As well as the specific risks of free soloing, performing it on ice adds the serious and unpredictable risk of parts of the ice route spontaneously breaking off. Notable ice free-soloists include the late Canadian Marc-André Leclerc, whose free-solo ice-climbing on the Stanley Headwall features in the 2021 film, , the late Austrian mountaineer who fell while free soloing on the , and Swiss mountaineer Dani Arnold.


In film
A number of notable films have been made focused on free solo climbing (both on rock and on ice) including:
  • Race to the Summit, a 2023 documentary film about the rivalry between and in setting solo alpine speed records.
  • , a 2021 documentary film about the late Canadian alpinist Marc-André Leclerc, featuring various free solo ice and alpine ascents.
  • , a 2018 documentary film about 's free solo climb of Freerider on El Capitan.
  • King Lines, a 2007 documentary film about , featuring his free solo climb of the DWS route, Es Pontàs , in .
  • , a 1998 documentary film about rock climbing on gritstone routes in the British , which features free soloing.


See also


Notes

Further reading


External links

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