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Brain vs Fingers… Come on Fingers!

Hitting your head against a wall is pretty much a common occurrence when writing. Or at least it is for me.

Over the weekend I’ve been writing one of the editorial pieces for the first issue of The Circuit. It starts great and goes strong for about 600 words then it just… So I’m stuck at an impasse where I know where I want the piece to go but struggling with the tone of the closing paragraphs. It was all in my head but by the time my typing caught up…

I find when I’m writing this is my biggest bugbear. My mind is in one gear, flying along, churning out dialogue while my poor fingers struggle to keep up. By the time my fingers paw their way to the end of a sentence my mind is already paragraphs ahead, a distance that becomes insurmountable as the words fade before they hit the page.

I often work around this by keeping what you could almost call a back up memory. A corner of my mind that stays on a loop and holds the concepts of what I’m writing in check while my fingers plod along at a far more pedestrian pace. I would say this works for me four times out of five. Unfortunately the piece I recently started writing was a number five. The one where my envisaged content fades as my fingers drop to the keys and I’m left frustrated and dissatisfied with the limitations of the written word and the speed with which it frees itself from my mind.

Of course it’s not just working on the magazine where the limitations placed on the written word frustrates me. We now live in a world where short bursts of communication via text, email and facebook are replacing conversation with its tonalities, nuances and inflections. The written word has enormous potential but try squeezing that potential into a 160 character tweet or a text message and its limitations become abundantly clear. Littering conversations with emoticons to convey underlying emotion is now such a common action it’s all I can do to keep them out of my blog and magazine writing. Indeed how long till you see an interview with an athlete or a news piece that is closed with a 😦 or :)?

Are we training ourselves out of writing emotively through our sound bite culture? To me it seems like this might be the case and it saddens me greatly.

I’m trying to convey an emotion, a longing, a driving passion for climbing in the piece I’m writing for the magazine at the moment but the words have escaped me… Running down the hallways of my mind they are nestled in the dark corners, taunting, whispering, just out of grasp. But I will get them. If not today then tomorrow or the day after! I will wrestle my subconscious into submission and do everything in my power not to finish the article with a 🙂

So what’s coming up for the magazine this week? Well I’ve now completed two of the four main editorial pieces and the third is 90% written (the piece described above). This weekend I’ll be heading out to the Grampians again, this time in the company of Australian World Cup boulderer James Kassay, his girlfriend Claire and her sister Amy.

James Kassay rainy day bouldering at the Kindergarten. The Grampians

Claire Langmore on the classic sandbag Palm Beach V4-7

Amy Langmore on Y2K extended at the Trenches in Sydney

Hopefully we can catch the Team America crew as I’m looking to complete at least a couple of interviews after last weekend’s rain out had me ducking back to Melbourne to wring myself out.

Brownie and Hot Chocolate at Mt Zero Olives.. The best rain day option

Brownie and Hot Chocolate at Mt Zero Olives.. The best rain day option

So lots more photos after the weekend to make up for the dearth of photographs from the weekend.
I’ve also locked in the page count and content list for the first issue which is starting to look great. Seeing how much there is still to do is like standing at the base of a mountain but when I look at how much content is completed already I know we are well on track.

Last weekend on the way to the Grampians modern technology came to my aid and I was able to watch our European correspondent Natalie’s first comp climb back from the carpark of a supermarket in the middle of nowhere basically (a wee town called Ararat, search it on google maps if you’re curious). Nat climbed great before running out of steam high on the climb. This weekend we’ll be watching again from the warmth of the Log Cabins at Mt Zero in the Grampians and again we are wishing her the best of luck!

Watching the European Champs from the comfort of my car on the other side of the world.

Watching the European Champs from the comfort of my car on the other side of the world.

This weekend’s World Cup in Briançon will also be the scene of Climbers Against Cancer’s second major donation in the fight against cancer so tune in to watch CAC founder and all round inspiration John Ellison handing over the huge novelty check right before the Men’s finals.
The World Cup will be streamed live at http://www.ifsc-climbing.org/ 🙂

We’re A Business!

The last couple of days have been properly big here at The Circuit. Coming off a huge weekend in the Grampians I settled in to work from Melbourne with lots on the to do list.

I’ve had the chance to go over the initial transcripts for the Slovenians feature where we speak to the legendary Klemen Becan and his fiery young countryman Jernej Kruder. These two climbers are chalk and cheese and the interplay between them displays both their personalities and their love of climbing. Combined with the already transcribed Mina Markovic interview this gives us a great section of the magazine focusing of the Slovenian powerhouses and the culture that has produced so many World class climbers.

Photo & Video Sharing by SmugMug

Photo & Video Sharing by SmugMug

I’ve also spent time on the Chris Webb Parsons interview, which at nearly 30 minutes has some absolute gold but does need some refinement. Bringing it down to 5 pages (give or take) is going to prove a real challenge! I still need to interview Tom Farrell on his return to Australia and James Kassay when I get the chance (he lasted a day in Melbourne before fleeing to the crisp winter climbing conditions in the Grampians!)

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In other happenings The Circuit has passed a major milestone this week with confirmation that The Circuit Climbing Media is now a listed business in Australia. This will encompass the operations of both The Circuit World Cup and Performance Climbing Magazine and eddiefowkephotography.com which is the commercial platform for my photography work. Registering as a business may be a formality but it was an important one and I’d been waiting almost a month for the registration to come through. Needless to say I was chuffed to get it.

Business registration

The other cool undertaking this week was the production of The Circuit promotional stickers to spread the word. These are looking great and I can’t wait to get my hands on the finished product!

The Circuit Sticker

Moving forward it looks like poor weather in the Grampians this weekend which means I’ll be holed up in my tent crossing my fingers and hoping the rock dries out. On Saturday there’s a track work day to restore the tracks to some of the Southern Grampians areas as bush fires did massive damage to the area earlier this year. If you’re going to be there come say hi, I’ll be there in a blue CAC tee doing my best to repair the damage.

Lastly, the European Championships are on this weekend in Chamonix, check out the time and stream at http://www.ifsc-climbing.org/index.php/news/latest-news/item/321-european-championship-2013-lead-speed-chamonix and be sure to support The Circuit’s European correspondent Natalie Berry as she steps up to represent Great Britain in the Women’s open lead competition on Friday. (I don’t know what time she climbs but will update this when/if I find out)

I’ll be sitting in my tent on Friday night (Australian time), in the rain, surrounded by Roo’s and watching the stream on my laptop. What a world we live in…

Camping

Roo

The ball is rolling!

So behind the scenes I’ve been working flat tack on The Circuit over the last week.

With my Web designer Dan Mackay, we’ve been forging towards having a working website that will fairly represent The Circuit and keep people excited about the high quality content we’ve got landing soon.
With Nina Gallo, a talented writer out of Sydney we’ve been throwing around ideas on interview structure and how best to format them once transcribed from audio to the written word. And behind it all I have been liaising with some of the athletes I still want to interview making sure that we can get the pieces on them written in a timely manner.

Oh, and I’ve been planning a trip to the Grampians (leaving tomorrow) where I will be spending my weekends climbing and photographing some of the world’s best boulderers before heading into Melbourne for the weeks to maintain my day job as a Quality Assessor. So not really hectic at all…

Business cards and stationary landing in the office.

Business cards and stationary landing in the office.

In my spare time (what spare time?) I’ve been working on the layout and looking at the current and anticipated content to ensure that the finished magazine has a cohesive feel. And photo editing. And climbing. And running. And Jetting to New Zealand to visit my sick Father…

I’m happy to report that the magazine is coming together nicely. All the elements are syncing and the test pages I’ve created are getting a great initial response from viewers. This is great as pouring your heart and soul into a project sometimes leaves you a bit blinkered and honest feedback really helps maintain perspective.

I have locked in the themes for the first two issues of the magazine.

Issue one deals with the origins and evolution of the sport and the way it’s changed the lives of the climbers out there chasing their dreams. Through insightful interviews with some of the greats behind the sport like Udo Newmann who co-authored Performance Rock Climbing 20 years ago and currently manages the German Bouldering World Cup team, and Jacky Godoffe, the master of the Bleausards, ex-competitor and current World Cup route setter we can see how the sport has evolved from the early competitions on chipped routes on natural rock through to the colourful, spectator friendly sport it is today.

Jacky Godoffe bouldering in the forest of Fontainebleau

Jacky Godoffe bouldering in the forest of Fontainebleau

Through interviews with some of the best climbers on The Circuit we also get the athlete’s perspective and their personal stories of where they came from and why climbing means so much to them.

Mina Markovic topping out in Log Dragomer

Mix this with some great photos, editorial articles and comp reports. Stir gently and what you’re left with is the first issue of The Circuit. Issue two also has a theme locked in but more about that in a later post.

A couple of notes to finish off this post. As I said in an earlier post my European correspondent Natalie is currently on a huge adventure travelling France, competing in the Lead comps and filming for an upcoming climbing movie. Well she now has a blog as well at http://natalieberry.wordpress.com/ make sure you check it out to follow her adventures.

John from CAC and Natalie our European correspondent repping CAC in Innsbruck

John from CAC and Natalie our European correspondent repping CAC in Innsbruck

Lastly thanks for the support you’ve shown through the blog and the new facebook page https://www.facebook.com/TheCircuitClimbingMagazine

Please keep spreading the word, The Circuit is coming!

Ideas and Ideals… Reality is calling

So what happened in Europe that made me expand my horizons? What was it that made me realise that this idea had room for growth, room to become something bigger and more exciting than a little self-published project?

Well the first thing that struck me on my arrival into Europe was the sheer scale of the climbing culture. Spending Easter weekend in the forest of Fontainebleau opened my eyes to the huge number of people getting out on the rock in Europe. I was lucky enough to meet my friend Nalle at the end of my first day on French soil and tagged along with him and the Black Diamond crew who were in town for a weekend clean up initiative.

To get their message across they were heading to reasonably sized areas and meeting the climbers in the carparks, explaining the environmental issues climbing was facing and promoting conservation of the climbing areas. The guys assured me we weren’t in the busiest areas and that the numbers were down due to the unusually cold Easter but the crowds blew me away regardless. Climbing was big, much bigger than I could imagine coming from the global backwater of New Zealand (via Australia).

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Reinforcing this was the second weekend I spent in France. Heading south to the beautiful town of Millau in the French Pyrenees for the first round of the 2013 IFSC Bouldering World Cup circuit to be held on European soil for the year I was blown away by the scale of the event, the level of interest and once again the crowds. Although again I was assured by those in the know that the crowd was small compared to what could be expected once we got to some of the later rounds.

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Photo & Video Sharing by SmugMug
The second thing that struck me was the attention the idea got from climbers and those involved in the sport. Straight off the bat there was interest in the idea and people wanted to know when the magazine would be out, where they could get a copy etc. This made me realise that my original idea of doing a couple of hundred units would be like a drop in the ocean.

People wanted to know the same things I wanted to know and there was the opportunity to use the platform of a magazine to share with that information, the photos and the memories with those people.

So the idea grew. A low run, high quality print run to share with the world. A coffee table quality publication that people could refer back to in the future, to capture that moment in time and keep as a memento of where the climbing world was in 2013 and beyond.

And this brings me to the last question that people have been asking. Why print? Why in this digital age am I wanting to go to print instead of online? Well the answer to that is simple enough but starts with a question. How often do you go to a climbing gym and there’s a pile of old climbing magazines there to keep climbers psyched between burns… How many of you (and I hope there’s a few) remember the legendary Heinz Zak book Rockstars? A book that still sits by the bouldering wall at my local gym. To me magazines can be more than a disposable medium, more than just a collection of pretty photos and good writing.

To me digital magazines are the most disposable of all, and although there will possibly be a digital edition of The Circuit following the print edition this is purely for the convenience of readers. The Circuit will be a print magazine and my dream is that it will sit on the shelves of climbers for many years to come, and that will never come to pass it is simply a file on the internet or a hard drive somewhere. I hope that one day maybe a climber will be picking up a copy of The Circuit to get that extra bit of motivation mid-session and wondering what ever happened to those old climbers from 2013…

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Photo & Video Sharing by SmugMug

Coming next: Who are we? Building a team to realise the dream.

Genesis

As a photographer I love capturing the moment, freezing an image in time that will forever more remind the subject of that point in history, the colour and the shape, indeed the emotion of the moment.

As a climbing photographer nothing makes me happier than seeing people psyched on my work, capturing them at the peak of their grace and strength and sharing that moment with the world.

So in many ways seeking out the best climbers in the world is a natural and logical extension of my passion. A chance to capture the grace and strength on the world stage, to convey the emotion and the intensity of these world class athletes.

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This season, armed with a dream, a camera and nearly boundless enthusiasm I hopped on a plane for the long journey to Europe to shoot the worlds best boulderers at the European rounds of the IFSC Bouldering World Cup circuit. My dream was simple (or so I thought at the time). Take great photos of the athletes, get some interviews, come home and self-publish a magazine through Blurb, Lulu or similar.

Of course nothing is ever that simple. As the idea gained momentum it started to evolve, interest grew and the amount of content grew to match the interest. Before I knew it the idea had grown into an annual or biannual publication to be sold online and the content had expanded beyond just interviews with comp climbers to include interviews with some of the worlds great outdoor climbers and the people behind the sport, coaches, routesetters etc.

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Photo & Video Sharing by SmugMug

Now here we are. The wheels are rolling and I’ve decided to chronicle the birth of the magazine through this blog. Here you will get to ride along through the trials and tribulations, meet the contributors and generally see the magazine come together.

I hope you enjoy.