Business Standard

Between a rock and a good place

As sport climbing makes its debut at the 2020 Summer Olympics, it was only a matter of time till bouldering found its place in the sun, enthusiast­s of the subculture tell Nikita Puri

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It’s a little after 9 pm, and Praveen CM has just wrapped up for the day after demonstrat­ing how to climb a 20s to rey building. His “students” are about 50 commandos of the National Security Guard. Pr ave en ,32, is neither am an in uniform nor is he an evacuation expert by profession. “They( the command os) were using poles to scale buildings, or helicopter­s for a top down approach. This training is to help them be better climbers in case of emergencie­s ,” he explains. Pr ave en has also worked with the Kolka ta Police on similar lines.

When five school boys were trapped without food and water on anear-in accessible precipice in Karnataka’s Savandurga, one of the largest monoliths in Asia, it was Pr ave en who went down to rescue the boys as the police and emergency services personnel stood by. One of India’s best known climbers, Bengaluru-based Praveen is a 16- time national bouldering champion.

As port that involves climbing small rock formations— or boulders— without a harness or rope, bouldering in India is a growing sub culture for adventure enthusiast­s. Come2020, when sport climbing makes its debut at the Summer Olympics in Tokyo, bouldering will officially be part of the big league. Sport climbing essentiall­y involves three discipline­s: bouldering, lead and speed.

While bouldering opens itself to some “freestyle moves” by virtue of its design, lead involves measuring the distance athletes have climbed on a vertical wall while being secured to a rope. Athletes are timed for speed in the latter .( Pr ave en is proficient in all three discipline­s .)

Alittle before dawn breaks over the city of Bengal urud ur inga weekend, Prabhu Mallikarju nan and his friend are in T ur a hall i Forest, about 20 ki lo metres outside the city. They stand ca sing boulders: the goal is to identify the spot which best shows the sun rising over the city’ s high-rises.

Mallikarju nan has made several such trips before and he greets boulders like old friends. It is his friend’ s first time bouldering. While Mallikarju nan climb sup gracefully, swinging himself like a pendulum at times, his friend’ s attempt sat negotiatin­g a route up causes concern among those out on long morning walks. After five attempts of what appear to be him violent ly throwing his body against the boulder, Mallikarj una n’ s friend manages to find a foot hold and hoist himself and his bruised knees up. Bouldering seems to demand upper body strength.

“But really, it isn’ t just about upper body strength. Bouldering requires a lot of technique ,” Vik as Jerry tells me. A bouldering enthusiast in his 20s, Jerry doubles as an instructor to climbers who come looking for challenges in H amp i’ s boulder-strewnland scape. For the past six years, Jerry has also provided climbers with gear (chalk, shoes, crashpad) from the Tom and Jerry Climbing Shop in Ham pi village made famous by temple ruins dating to erstwhile empires. Jerry is also one of the three protagonis­ts of Bouldering: Life on the Rocks, a short documentar­y by Pr an av Jain.

The film is part of a series by 101India, a platform for stories which aren’t seen in mainstream media, says Cyrus Oshidar, managing director and chief creative officer. Considerin­g that India “has plenty to offer in terms of terrain and accessibil­ity,” says Oshidar, “any publicity will encourage the sport.”

The film follows Jerry, Adarsh Singh and Sandeep Maity (the latter two both bouldering champions) as they retrace the steps of British climber Pil Lockey, who mapped the boulders around Chhatru, a village in Himachal Pradesh, about 18 years ago.

The film’ s director Jain, who is also a bouldering enthusiast and a musician, says one can go sport climbing in any of the many gyms that now have 30-35 feet of vertical walls .“But the feel of rock when you go boulder in gin nature is unmatchabl­e. Part of bouldering’ sc harm is the connection to the outdoors,” hesays.

The sport isn’t free of risks: Lockey, the bouldering legend in Ch hat ru, for instance, was once trapped after heavy snowfall. Jain’ s documentar­y shows a few local dhaba owners who vivid ly remember Lockey’s or deal, and how the Briton survived for seven days on a diet of one and a half kilograms of sattu( roasted and ground pulses) he had picked up from them earlier.

There’ s also the possibilit­y of an awkward fall. Pr ave en has had his fair share of injuries, including dislocatio­ns and fractures. Till recently, his parents had doubts about their son’ s chosen career path. (“So yes, you climb a boulder. Is there any future in this?” they’d say.)

But, enthusiast­s swear, the sport can be highly addictive .“Right from your mind and your eyes to the tips of your toes, climbing is as port which uses every part of your body ,” he adds .“Every climb is like a new experience, and bouldering is something that constantly push es your limits .”

Marked by graceful and swift movements characteri­stic of athletes, sport climbing is as much athletic discipline as it is an art .“Pr ave en almost makes it look effortless. It is almost like a dance on the wall (or a boulder),” says Jyothy Karat, a photograph­er from Ben ga lu ru .“It is a very intense activity which strengthen­s your back and core muscles. It is fun and doesn’ t seem like exercise.”

A lot has changed over the last decade: when Mumbai’s Siddhi Manerikar went for her first sport climbing competitio­n in 2011, “no one even knew what bouldering was, including my parents,” she recalls. The 21-year-old lead and boulder champion, a commerce student in her final year, represente­d India at the World Cup tournament organised by the Internatio­nal Federation of Sport Climbing in Mumbai last year.

With the opening up of walls for sport climbing in many gyms, the various discipline­s of climbing are steadily building a loyal following .“We used to have largely foreign tourists who would come for boulder in gin Ham pi, but I’ ve seen a lot of Indians coming for it over the last three years or so,” says Jerry.

“I have seen about 500 Indian sin the last two years itself. At least 50 of them have become serious about bouldering .” Besides the many championsh­ips that different cities host, two brand new bouldering festivals, the Suru Festival in Lad akh, and H amp i’ s Bold and Boulder will also rope in interest, hope sport climbers.

Unlike in most other discipline­s, sport climbing athletes like Man erika rand Pr ave en follow no special diet, but perhaps as the sport continues to evolve, diet guidelines to build muscle will likely come along, they feel.

Even as here covers from a shoulder injury, Pr ave en now has his sights set on Olympics 2020.“The sport is really picking up, and this isn’ t just because it will now be a part of the Olympics. Now there are climbing walls everywhere ,” he says. Every climb, big or small, is a conquest,” hesays. “There’ s joy as you challenge gravity and find your footing.”

India doesn’ t have a team for the 2020 games yet, but dream sofa medal in sport climbing rest on shoulders such as his.

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