A rock climber's
skill is shown by their choice of handhold and foothold, and their
adhesion to the holds once chosen. Much depends on the ability to
estimate the capability of the rock to support the weight placed on it.
Many loose rocks are quite firm enough to bear a person's weight, but
experience is needed to know which can be trusted, and skill is required
in transferring the weight to them without jerking. On rotten rocks the
rope must be handled with special care, lest it should dislodge loose
stones on to those below. Similar care must be given to handholds and
footholds, for the same reason. When a horizontal traverse has to be
made across very difficult rocks, a dangerous situation may arise unless
at both ends of the traverse there are firm positions. Mutual
assistance on hard rocks takes all manner of forms: two, or even three,
people climbing on one another's shoulders, or using an ice axe
propped up by others for a foothold. The great principle is that of
co-operation, all the members of the party climbing with reference to
the others, and not as independent units; each when moving must know
what the climber in front and the one behind are doing. After bad
weather steep rocks are often found covered with a veneer of ice (verglas), which may even render them inaccessible. Crampons are useful on such occasions.
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