TACO TUESDAY Thanks for . % H AJnD TACOS Making Us #1! 1 Beef or ChicKet\ Campus Location - 510 E. Broadway €26900 be a SPORT ^LLENGE do a SPORT AIKIDO BADMINTON BASEBALL BOWLING ' CLIMBING CREW CRICKET CYCLING DANCE EOUESTRIAN FENCING ICE HOCKEY I JUGGLING KARATE I llJ KAYAKING LACROSSE RANGER CHALLENGE RUGBY - RUNNING I SAILING SKIING til J SKYDIVING SNOW BOARDING SOCCER SURFING SYNCHRONIZED SKATING TABLE TENNIS TAE KWON DO TRIATHLON ULTIMATE VOLLEYBALL WATER POLO WUSHU 40 Team Sports Instruction & Coaching Competitive & Noncompetitive for info 346-3733 or... stop by our office in EMU Breezeway Check out www.dailyemerald.com I ODE online edition i Adam Jones Emerald The basalt columns on the flank of Skinner’s Butte offer local rock climbers a nearby outdoor ‘crux’ when the weather permits. CLIMBING in CMDIT Rock climbers of all ages and skill levels have been flocking to Skinner Butte’s basalt column climbing wall By Jillian Daley for the Emerald Get ready to grip cliff. Spring term, the University is offering a series of climbing classes, including Rock Climbing 101, offered through the Outdoor Program , and Introduc tion to Lead Climbing, which is of fered through Outdoor Pursuits. The Outdoor Program, which operates out of the Student Recre ation Center, is putting together the 101 class, a Saturday clinic that will meet at the basalt columns at Skinner Butte. It costs $3 for four hours of technique instruction and an additional $3 for shoes, harness es and blades, according to Emily Simonis, an exercise and move ment science major. Michael Strong, the coordinator of Outdoor Pursuits (an EMU-based student cooperative), cautioned that Introduction to Lead Climbing, which will also be held at Skinner Butte, “is not a beginning class.” Crag climbing takes place 10 or fewer feet above the ground, and there is no need for ropes. Lead climbing is more advanced. Work ing in tandem, two climbers make their way up a mountain. The lead climber, as the name suggests, goes first, securing the rope every few feet by attaching it to the cliff face with metal “anchors.” Strong encourages only experi enced climbers to register, and to register soon, because there are only a few spots available. “We limit enrollment,” Strong said. “We keep it down because it is a special class with a little more in volvement with instructors, so we end up having 10 and no more than 12 students.” It may appear easy to climb the basalt columns at Skinner Butte, but there’s a reason why only ad vanced rock climbers should regis ter for this particular class. Strong explained that the class focuses on lead climbing, which “takes longer and requires practice to develop the skill.” This makes it far more diffi cult than “your basic crag climb ing,” he said. The climbing classes may fill up quickly, as Strong said the sport’s popularity is growing. Roger Baily a local rock climbing expert for Eugene City Parks, said the number of people climbing has increased, especially among youth. “Young people are getting into climbing at an early age, like eight or nine or 10,” he said. Baily has seen a variety of people using the Skinner Butte columns, especially in the summer. “One hundred people go through climbing instruction (through the city’s programs) through the sum mer months,” Baily said. Amateurs, professionals and clubs all visit the columns because of their versatility as both a begin ning and an advanced area for those who love to climb, he said. But Baily said climbers should remember the delicacy of nature when visiting the butte. “The columns are in a natural state, and rock’s natural state is a state of deterioration,” he said. Communication is also an impor tant factor in safe rock climbing, he said. In lead climbing, the two part ners have to communicate effective ly to carefully direct their ascent. Baily said the average climber is “someone who sets goals and tries to work toward them and is willing to fail. Sometimes you fall ten times.” Climbing also takes some one who is “willing to show some vulnerability in front of (his or her) peers,” he said. Despite a need for compliance with safety protocol and sterling communication skills, climbing’s popularity continues to increase, Baily said. Perry Smith , an employee of The Crux, an indoor rock climbing gym, said rock climbing “is going to be come my life. I love doing it.” Jillian Daley is a freelance reporter for the Oregon Daily Emerald.