Gripped

Notes from the top

- Chris van Leuven is a regular contributo­r to Gripped.

ropeless on the Nose, and female climbers Ashima Shiraishi and Beth Rodden. There are also kayakers making enormous waterfall drops, bow hunting scenes, skiing, snowboardi­ng and seaside running. Additional­ly, there’s a chapter dedicated to T.V. star Bear Grylls for the series Rich covered for the Discovery Chanel. Many of these are his friends, people he’s formed a bond with for life. “There is nothing I enjoy more than sitting around the campfire and weaving the yarns,” Rich told me while wolfing down a burrito. “That’s the origin of the book – the older you get in the adventure world, that Rolodex of stories gets bigger and bigger.” As a soft cover title of just under 300 pages (us$29.95), it was made so readers can take the book in their pack when traveling, on the subway, or to the beach. The polished images – “I consider myself a perfection­ist,” he says – supporting the 56 essays in the book often include Rich hanging from a static line with his camera facing the subject. Chapter names include “The Image That Launched My Career,” “Creative Secrets,” “Seeing and Skiing,” “Beckey,” and “Lines in the Sand (And Snow).” Rich, raised as a gymnast with Olympic aspiration­s, discovered climbing at age 13. His world changed overnight. Going into the sport, he was already fiercely strong from years of training in gymnastics – he could do 35 pull-ups – making him an instant success on the rock. So enthralled by the sport, and after his first taste of outdoor climbing, he immediatel­y started taking photos of climbers and scenes he’d encounter at the crags; meanwhile, gymnastics faded into the background. “Maybe being a gymnast lacked the ‘cool’ factor of being a star quarterbac­k,” he wrote. “But it gave me body awareness, a high strength-to-weight ratio, and mental discipline. It also taught me how to suffer. At an elite level, gymnastics is hard, and it hurts badly, every day. “In the early days, I remember counting out my savings of $3,000 to last me six months on the road. When I ran out of money, I’d just keep traveling. That’s the beauty of being young and falling in love with climbing and photograph­y.” He’d often hike up the East Ledges of El Cap in the middle of the night, and then rappel into place at sunrise to get shots of stars Chris McNamara or Tommy Caldwell (and a laundry list of others). During the filming of Dawn Wall, which took place in the dead of winter, and often at night, he’d hang in place for hours as he trembled in the cold and as his legs fell asleep. But as soon as it was go time, he’d snap into motion. Today, “It’s still the pace of go-going, with everything getting crazier. But the style of projects has changed. There are fewer nights that its 2 a.m. where I’m driving to El Cap. Now it’s a group of five flying to Switzerlan­d. But those trips to El Cap were training and have made these internatio­nal trips easier,” he says. Now 43, Rich lives in South Lake Tahoe, Calif. with his wife, daughter and family dog, where he runs his photo and film agency Novis Select. He’s one four partners. There he manages a staff of 15 employees as they produce work for everyone from Google to the Discovery Channel, to Apple and to Amazon. “It’s just fun,” he says. “I still love the adventure style project where you’re sleep deprived, hungry, scared and covered in sweat.”

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