Saturday 29 August 2015

Winter escape 2015

Winter having hit Natimuk sometime in April this year, I had been counting down to our winter trip for about 6 weeks by the time we finally drove out of town. On the way north, we stopped to visit friends and family and everyone seemed to have sick children so courtesy of these harbingers of plagues, by the time we got to Frog, we both had horrible colds. What a start. It seemed like colds had hit the whole country simultaneously as people from Melbourne, Hobart, Nati and beyond converged on Frog with their own strain of virus, on top of half of Qld, so I was expecting it to morph into a superbug any moment.


Keep Left, 24
So much for the plan of a bit of mileage to get into the groove then hitting a few routes I had been saving for a brave day for about 15 years now. Instead, everything felt desperate. Normally, I disagree with the popular view that the grades are stiff at Frog, but as I dragged by sorry snuffly self up Infinity, it had never felt so hard. Ok, so this might be what is feel like for the masses. By the end of the week I had given up on getting any form anytime soon and decided to scope out some potential projects on a nice friendly top rope. Fat Mattress conveniently got us above Keep Left which turned out to be very cool, highly body tensiony thin layaways in a sharp groove up an arete that widened to a flared offwidth and remained desperate to the end. The gear would be pretty thin down low, so I was happy I hadn't tried it ground up. Then Blood Sweat and Tears set us up for a rope on Future Tense, which is pretty stunning climbing, although to be perfectly honest, probably isn't 26, maybe because it's now standardly done with out the poorly protected and rather contrived start. The odd poor lock and flared handjam intermingled with a lot of technical layaways to a goey finish of crimpers and gastons.


I started to feel a tad better and decided we really should give the big gear a workout. I had borrowed some extra 5s and 6s (thank you Andrew and Callum!) for the occasion and wandered up Castor and Pollox. Castor really involves no offwidthing, but is super nice climbing, and remarkably for Frog, good rock the whole way. Well, it would if it had an anchor on the ledge where the really climbing finishes instead of having to scramble up to Theory ledge. Pollox on the other hand, involves some serious earning of every millimetre. The initial flary crack went from fat hands to fat fists, not exactly a cruise for my small hands, then proceeded through steep ground of 4 and 5 camalot sized. I was in there and grunting. But it was great. Again, the rock was perfect but it might be one of the harder 20s at Frog.


Continuing with the theme, we moved onto Lord of the Flies the next day. This has to be the most underrated route I have ever done. All versions of the guide described it as a long worthless wide groove, but whoever started this rumour must have just been putting people off actually climbing it, because it was great. It's a stonker of a line to look at. The initial finger crack was beautiful locks, like an easier version of Yankee. From the stance above it, I pulled up the rack of big gear ready for this “long, worthless wide groove”. Armed with 4 3s, 4 4s, 4 5s and 3 6s, I launched up a steep hand to fist crack then into the groove. The rock continued to be as good as Frog ever gets, and the walls decorated with just enough face holds for it to be funky 3 dimensional bridging up until the last 2m, where some good old fashioned thrutching brings you to the tree you have been eyeing off for 20m wondering if it was actually getting any closer at all. 40m of sustained, varied climbing on good rock and it has a real anchor at the top. No idea why it has been disparaged all these years. You maybe don't need all that big gear … you could get away with out any 6s, but take all the 4s and 5s you can get your hands on.


Lord of the Flies and the rack Douglas took out of it.

Douglas had this brainwave to do Sabrasucker, then finish up Grandma's Tonic to Theory Ledge in order to get to Southern Comfort, another obscure route neither of us had done before. Grandma's Tonic deserves all the disparaging it gets. After a loose vegetated traverse, Douglas got to thrutch up a manky, filthy groove and arrived at the belay tree happy to be alive. Southern Comfort however turned out to be impeccable locking up a clean corner that was sadly all too short. If the route continued as for the first 10m, it would be another 3 star route. Sadly, the 10m of filthy Frog top out knocks off 2 of those stars. Another candidate for an anchor below the choss.


Finally by our last day, the dregs of the cold had passed and we cruised up Devil's and Conquistador in a manner more to be expected before flying out to Darwin for a 2 week walk in Kakadu. My lovely friend Kylie asked me to write a little something about it, so if you have more time to kill, you can find what turned out to be a not-so-little something here: http://outdoorsyodyssey.blogspot.com.au/2015/08/kakadu.html


A little taste of Kakadu

After nearly a week to recuperate hanging out in Darwin with Natasha and Dave, drinking coffee, champagne and eating tropical fruit, we returned to Brisbane motivated for another quick trip out to Frog to send Future Tense before heading further north. Coming from 30 degrees everyday, Frog seemed a little cold, and I was rugged up in my thermals and jacket whilst a bunch of Tasmanians ran around shirtless. Future Tense was still glorious, was quickly dispatched then I rewarded myself with a top rope on Badfinger. I know, toproping an offwidth is a strange reward … but it was right next door and easy to throw a rope on. I was rather put off leading it by the story of Dave Jones nearly shredding through his rope on the sharp edge of the crack when he came off it years ago. The Antarctic Vortex was just reaching Qld at this point and the Main Range had been covered in black clouds all day that were ominously creeping towards us. An unusual mix of laybacking with knee bars got me to the stance between fat sections and a chance to see the wider world again for a moment. Armageddon looked like it was just about to hit us. A wall of black was only 100m away and wild winds were increasing by the second. I buried myself back in the crack again and at the top was quite relieved that Douglas still wanted a lash at it so I didn't have to face the pendulum over to the anchor in the increasingly atmospheric conditions.


We headed north trying to outrun the Vortex. We failed. Coolum reached a whole of 19 and after 2 days of climbing in all day shade in sub 20 temperatures, we kept running. We weren't so inspired by Coolum anyway. Not at all because we could barely get up the 24s …. It is potentially funky, interesting climbing, but consistently horrible rock. It is either sharp or dusty and friable or slopey and with the friction of a bar of soap. Just as I as I was about to remark that it was also one of the ugliest locations I have climbed in for a while, some local youngsters turned up to do a photo shoot. Not a climbing one, a scantily clad young woman who must have been rather cold. I tactfully shut up.


Lady Musgrave Island
Conditions looked good for a trip out to the reef the next day so we zipped up to 1770 and splurged on the boat out to Lady Musgrave Island. For a touron trip, it was remarkably good and conditions were perfect – the sea flat as a tack, no wind and plenty of sun. You are pretty much left to do your own thing once you get out to the lagoon and we snorkelled for hours with loads of fish, coral, a few turtles and an octopus that got rather pissed off at us and flashed all his range of colours. The island itself is a coral cay covered in pinsonias forming a forest straight out of fantasy novels.


Northwards further and we were convinced Qld was broken. We stopped for the night near Rockhampton and there I was rugged up in my thermals and puffy jacket. Should we go out to Eungella? Nope, too cold, keep running. There's a lot of cattle and cane in Qld and it just seemed endless by the time we finally made it to Townsville but at last, it was actually warm. We set up camp at Alligator Creek, a lovely,  quiet campsite south of Townsville with heaps of shade, a swimming hole and a lot of voracious bush turkeys. Bush turkeys really bring home that dinosaurs didn't actually die out, they just evolved into birds. Had we thought about it clearly, we might not have stayed there as Frederick's Peak is northwest of Townsville. By the time you had driven there and walked up to the cliff, it was 2 hours travel each way.


Local climbers were very helpful and gave us plenty of info on finding the crag and that there was really nowhere safe to camp around the quality outskirts of Townsville. Burnt out wrecks of cars and burnout circles mark the drive into the crag. I had assumed that they were stolen cars, but was later told that one of them was a climber's car, left there while they camped at the cliff and torched in their absence.


The walk in. South Sentinel is the obvious central peak
It's enough of a walk into the crag if you have a high clearance 4wd. More of one with a standard 4wd and really quite a lot of one when you have a little red Mazda 323. We got it as far as we could and hoped it was sufficiently out of the way not to get gutted. It's about an hour with full packs from there to the crag, and most of that road was actually built by the enthusiastic local lads with a chainsaw and jackhammer. They have also carried a shitload of bolting gear up that hill over the years. Chris told us they'd bought 1000 bolts from China last year and were already running low. They really are keen developers. We got a lift in with them one day and left our car way out on the main road. On getting back to Chris's car, we realised our keys were in the pack left at the cliff, so Douglas got a bonus run up the hill. We got dropped off at our car just in time for the police to rock up, someone having reported it being abandoned, so much later and it could have been missing on us anyway.


The python I tried to step on
We'd had a car drama to sort out that first morning, so it was near 1pm when we started walking. Not prime time in the tropics to walk up a big hill. I nearly stepped onto a massive carpet python drinking from a puddle on the path. It didn't move. I guess it knew it was a bloody great big snake and nothing was really going to attack it. We got there in time to run up 2 routes and stashed our packs there. The next day we took the time to look around the crag a little bit more. We were at the South Sentinel, which is the most developed crag there. Citizen Arcane, a grade 27 overhanging crack, looked amazing. We wandered up Primosanity in order to put a top rope on it, and this turned out to be very good in its own right, varied and and funky climbing on solid rock. The top rope didn't turn out to be the best idea. 40 degree over hanging diagonal cracks are rather hard to get a top rope on and then rather hard to actually work from it once you have. The next day we discovered it was much easier ground up. I put my foot in my shoe and nearly squashed a lizard. At least in wasn't a scorpion. It obviously hadn't had a lot of love since the first ascent in 2012, with the start sporting a lot of bracken and dusty crozzly rock, but the top 2/3s were delicious. I gave the bracken a hair cut and a bit of traffic cleaned up the rock so by the time we sent it, it was in great condition. Unfortunately, I don't think the crag gets that much attention and virtually none of that attention goes to trad routes, so it might return to its previous state quite quickly.


Citizen Arcane, 27
It was one of those routes where Douglas and I may as well have been on different climbs. From the knee bar rest at half height, I am virtually completely in the crack and he was virtually completely on the face. But as we both loved it, it must be good either way. Douglas had been demonstrating an amazing ability to send on his warm up this trip, and nearly did so again with Citizen Arcane only to take a 10m whipper of the last move of the crux. I scored the second ascent then moved onto Townsvillians, 25. I think the locals thought I had strange taste in climbs, but they suited me well. Townsvillians starts up a 22 that is given 3 stars and I hated it. It was everything I dislike about some Nowra climbs – polished slopers and crimps a long way apart and the whole thing only 5 m long. However, the moment you left that into Townsvillians, it was awesome. Steep jugs with great knee bars and squishy rests until you cut loose at the lip on double hand jams. Or at least I did.

Cutting loose on double hand jams, just an everyday trick
Then we moved on the The Gommernator, a steep groove that was hard to read, but succumbed to lots of kneebars and 3d weirdness. Sadly, after the 7th bolt, the rock deteriorated, but the first 2/3rds were very very cool. I thought I'd quickly run up Steeling Time as it was not yet midday but got spooked going for the 4rd bolt. With a bit a faffing, I got a long draw on it and cruised to the top. So it was supposed to go easily 2nd attempt, when I managed to get my hand stuck behind my knee bar, nearly rip my fingernail off trying to wiggle it out, then pop for the hold above the lip, get my feet all muddled up and come off. Ok, 3rd shot, really no worries. So up I go again, managed to keep my knee free of my hand, pop for the hold, realised I have the wrong hand on it, swap them around, completely mangle the sequence but think there is no way I am going to do all this again and pull out all stops bellowing and reach the thank god jugs that are nevertheless disconcertingly poorly attached to the cliff. I had some seriously worked back muscles from that one.

Happy Douglas after sending Citizen Arcane,
his first 27 in many years just as he was thinking
he was too old to climb hard anymore

Yum yum double icecreams
All this walking up hill and climbing steep stuff was getting bloody exhausting. Fortunately Townsville has a few nice things to do on rest days. We'd zipped down to the Whitsundays to see my parents and snorkelled with the largest turtles I have ever seen. We ate a lot of ice cream at the Frosty Mango, a tropical fruit farm that makes their own ice cream. Honestly, I really needed 2 double ice creams each rest day to keep up this level of activity. Besides, who can resist mango, black sapote, paw paw, ginger, macadamia, dragonfruit, coconut, sapodilla …We swam in Crystal Creek, Douglas twitched at birds and I read trashy vampire novels. And old friend of Douglas's took us for a boat trip around Magnetic Island. We discovered the Riverway Lagoons, which you would think were part of the river that had been made safe from crocodiles, but they are actually outdoor pools. Still, they were free and surrounded by massive shady trees made for lounging around. As most Townsvillians thought it was way to cold to swim, being the depths of winter now, it was also very quiet. We tried to swim in the Strand rock pool – another amazing piece of free swimming architecture that allows for year round ocean swimming, but it was closed for maintenance. The cafe next to it did have 5 different sorts of cheesecake, so being unable to decide between Cointreau and Pina Colada, I had both.


Boat trip around Maggie with Ewan
After the first week, we'd given up on our pretty campsite at Alligator Creek and moved into the old farts caravan park at Black River. When googling camping on that side of Townsville, we'd been very impressed by the lack of child facilities and emphasis on quiet. Ok, so they did say they were an over 50s park, but we aren't that far off now, surely they'll let us in. When we rock up, they are also a bit worried that we have a tent. They don't normally have tents there. But they were very helpful and we were soon set up in the shadiest spot in the park. Someone asked us where our caravan was and Douglas told them we had a blow up one. Being the only people there without a caravan, we were also the only people using the kitchen and storing stuff in the fridge, so it all worked out very well. And driving to the crag was now a mere 15 minutes.


The local lads had been busy developing a new sector on the North Sentinel, so eventually, we committed to moving our stuff down from the South Sentinel and up to the North. We'd been assured the walk in was much less, but as we trudged up the very steep eroded dirt, it really didn't seem that way. Eventually, we pop out at the Fishbowl, a fairly small but steep cave with a 27 crack out it. We warmed up on a couple of easy routes outside the cave, the first of which, the quantity of rock on the ground reflected the quality of rock on the climb and the next Douglas said took him straight back to the old days at Kangaroo Point. Then we jumped on Calamity Clam, which might actually be a good route, but there's some scaly rock and seepage at the start, then a fingery move into the crack and my fingers are way too old for that shit. Once in the crack, there are some great knee bars but a distressing lack of jams, which is a bit disastrous for a weakling like myself as I tried desperately to climb on face holds. The top 2/3s of the route are actually cool, but it was too late in the trip to devote time to sending it, so we stripped the gear and trudged on down. It was quite a relief to think that we weren't going to slog up that bloody hill again ….


In general, Frederick's Peak is a pretty good crag. We did do a few easier routes, and the climbing was often interesting, but the rock a lot worse. I wouldn't bother going there unless you can climb steep 23+, at which point, there are some great routes. South Sentinel is definitely the better sector, with a lot more climbing and better warm up routes. It's also quite a pretty spot to hang out with lots of big trees overhanging the base of the cliff and plenty of shady stuff to choose from. The North Sentinel might be subject to a little bit of developer's hype. It's not a very pretty spot, with sparse vegetation, and the base of the crag is all scree. There's no shade once the sun comes round, which it starts doing before lunch. The easy routes are less than decidedly average, but if you can climb 27+ steep stuff, the cave does has some cool looking things.


Zombie wallabies of Magnetic Island
We were suffering rather badly from being at the bum end of a long road trip and treated ourselves to 3 rest days and a holiday house on Magnetic Island.On our boat trip earlier, we had stopped at Rocky Bay so Douglas could show off the routes he had put up there in 1999, and as I rack up beneath them now, he's commenting on how he would never have imagined having a girlfriend who wanted to come and repeat these routes. But really, how can I say no when you show me some overhanging granite cracks?


Sussing out Curlew 23
To be perfectly honest, the rock on Maggie is not that great. It's coarse, crumbly and has that weird soapiness that can make sea cliffs really slippery. Still, the actual climbing is great. There'd been some ongoing jokes about how I was going to downgrade all of Douglas's routes, which was not exactly what I was thinking of doing as I battled up Not Without Jase, 20. 90 degree corners that overhang with a ¾ camalot crack in them don't really look like a warm up and it didn't really feel like a warm up. I was about to slip off any moment for most of the route. I topped out pumped out of my brains and suggesting that might be me done for the day. Maybe we would be upgrading all of Douglas's routes …




After recuperating in the shade and downing a few coffee lollies for inspiration, I racked up again for Curlew, 23. Douglas had done the first ascent onsight, so the pressure was on to keep up. This wall is rather steep too, and after placing a high wire, I pulled on then stepped back off again to psych myself up a bit more. Committed this time, I motored up with sufficient decent locks and the odd hand jam to get me up to where the 22 zips off right. I was pretty pumped again, but the 22 finished up one of those horrible slab things, so onward up the crack was the only option. I roared and bellowed and managed to pull off a sharp layaway, the grit under my feet stayed attached to the rock and finding a good lock gave me enough encouragement to make another move to the final horizontal. Suddenly, none of my gear wanted to go in the crack. I threw in the red, the grey and finally the yellow alien, but each time I had left the preceding one overcammed in the best spot for the next size down, so eventually I clipped them all, warned Douglas they might all pop and reached left. Oh, the delights of soapy granite! Just what I want, a round, slippery lump. I desperately reach further and the horizontal narrows enough to get a jam in so I launch onto that, swing my feet around to the ramp coming in and pull up to a jug and a squishy rest where I can procrastinate for a moment, knowing the action is all over but not want to mess up the easier finish. I didn't really feel like downgrading that one after that almighty battle either.


Brudl 27
On the opposite side of the boulder is Brudl, 27. Fingers to off fingers and steeper still. I'm feeling completely trashed already, so we popped a nice top rope on it and proceed to have completely different experiences of the route. It starts up a thin crack which peters out, leaving you to move right onto another crack. The angle relents slightly towards the top but offers some dreadful looking off fingers. Douglas struggled up the top crack whilst I struggle on the initial crack and reaching across to the second one. But it is awesome and surely it will feel better the next day when I am not torched.


Snorkelling in Florence Bay






Surfing the net in bed the next morning, I discover a gelati bar in Arcardia. That's it, we have 15 minutes to the next bus to get me to gelati. They also turn out to do awesome pizzas and then full of coffee, pizza and custard gelati, we went for a snorkel in Geoffrey Bay. This was the best snorkelling we did on the island, with great coral cover and a few giant clams thrown in.


The rattly fingers section of Brudl
Hoping we were sufficiently refuelled, we headed back down to Brudl. We rapped gear into it and attempted to warm up on a few boulders and a dogging lap of the route. Then I psych up for a real go at it. I was channelling my inner Sharma, pulling of the first big move with a grunt, then setting up a hand jam in the horizontal from which I dynoed, screaming, to the what we were euphemistically calling the jug at the start of the second crack. The Sharma must have been powerful in me that day as I caught the jug, swung my feet around, clipped and thought I was back in more comfortable territory in the crack. Except off fingers locks don't feel that great when you are already pumped rather than pulling on off the rope. I put my left up, stepped up, stepped down, retreated to the jug, shook out. Put the left in again, gritted my teeth and pulled up, got the next rattly lock, wiggled and wiggled but couldn't get it to feel good enough to release my left hand. Retreat to the jug. Try right hand up first. Retreat. Eventually, I try and channel Sharma again, but maybe he's not so useful on cracks as the second lock blows and my power scream becomes falling scream. I was caned. I could barely pull on from the rope. How had the crack suddenly become so hard? Then I realise I was stepping up to early, and I could pretend I was actually taller for a moment and stretch out with my feet on the horizontal break. Then I only had to pull on one ring lock with dodgy feet, before some good locks and a thin hand. From there, I had it down fairly solidly and topped out without further dramas.


Douglas made short work of the start before cursing the rattly fingers. After going up and down innumerate times, he still didn't feel like he had a sequence. By now the route was coming into the sun, so we retired for a swim. Rocky Bay is the nudist beach on Maggie. What that mostly means is aging, portly men with full body tans perambulating solo around the beach. I would imagine they were getting some exercise, but they aren't really moving enough for that. Occasionally they paddle in the water, but fall short of actually swimming. I'm not sure what they made of the odd people climbing on the rocks. People are rumoured to peek with binoculars from the lookout above, but there wasn't much action worth peeking at.


Then we settled in for some Scrabble to while away the hours before the sun went off the route. Sadly, no amount of Scrabble seemed to be rejuvenating my forearms. Douglas had another go, not really trying and casually said “take” on a low piece so he could work out a more efficient clipping stance. Then he got back on, waltzed through the dyno, set his fingers in the crack and just pottered on up as if it had never bothered him. He climbed over the top then asked had he really just done that with the one sit? We supposed to head back to the mainland the next day and deliberated whether we should change plans to give the route another shot. Douglas thought there was also further important gelati and pizza to be had. We gave in, left the gear in and extended our stay.


Our final day on the island saw me still strangely tired. Common sense would suggest that 3 months of hard climbing will do that to you, but I remain infuriated by my body's inability to keep up with my desires. I got on the route and it felt terribly hard again. I sat around and grumbled about how I was too tired to climb anything anymore and we should just start going home. Douglas got on and battled through the off fingers until I thought he was going to make it. He was shaking, panting and making all the right noises when suddenly he was off the very last move to the best jam on the route.


Still grumpy about being tired, I tied in again. The first big move to a two knuckle flat top felt dicey as, but in the spirit of not really caring, I tried to keep holding it long enough to execute the hand swap into the shallow horizontal jam that I dynoed off. Then I was set up for the dyno and still on, so I thought I may as well jump for it. With another almighty scream, I reached the jug but only just. For a millisecond, there was the subconscious debate between trying to hold it or giving up and trying to hold won. Somehow, I held it and set up for the locks. The second ring lock felt terrible, but I wrenched into it further and reached up for the good lock. Then my hand just didn't want to find the thin hand jam above it. After wiggling it in twice failed to find the sweet spot, I had to just go with what I had and cranked on. The good jam appeared and I almost breathed a sigh of relief, except I was too pumped to feel secure on the final face hold. I tried to shake on the jam, but nothing was coming back, so with another wail I threw myself for the jam over the lip which provided a better position from which to procrastinate about not falling off the exit before committing to it and finding myself squatting on the top slab in disbelief. It took me half an hour to recover enough to feel excited about sending.


Douglas goes for it again and makes it through the worst locks. He's much more comfortable above gear than I am and has skipped a piece so I'm watching closely as he starts to wobble. From my poor vantage point under such a steep route, I see his arse start to fall away from the cliff and I step down and brace myself against flying up in the air but no weight comes on the rope. In the milliseconds it takes to process this, I look up again in horror expecting to see him falling to the ground when the rope starts tugging upwards. He's grabbed the gear and is desperately trying to pull up and clip. He sits on the rope and I attempt to put my heart back in my chest after my microtrauma. Being the proud first ascentionist, Douglas was quite happy to call that a day and we stripped the gear, went for a swim and made a bee line for gelati. And champagne. And fish burgers.


Eye of the Tiger Direct, 20
One final thing we had to do before leaving Townsville was a nostalgic trip to Mt Stuart for Douglas. We had a lazy morning and hit the crag at 1pm just as it comes into the shade. As it also had a howling gale, I was rather wishing we had got there in the sun. We wandered up a couple of cracks at the Playground. The rock leaves a little to be desired, although the climbing was quite fun. Sort of like doing 1 star moderates at Frog. and I was rapidly quite excited about doing a few more. I have a problem. Just one more day before we really have to go home … We head back to camp debating if we have time. Eventually, common sense prevails. We are still trashed, Douglas's fingers hurt and only a week until my flight out of the Gold Coast.


Big Bend campsite
Boowinda Gorge

Taking the inland road down, we stop at Carnarvon Gorge for an overnight walk. It's cold in central Queensland. We might have ruined our ability to ever spend winter in Victoria again. Despite managing to organise a 2 week walk in Kakadu, somehow we manage to fumble a little overnight jaunt up a superhighway. We're about 20 minutes in when I ask Douglas if he'd grabbed the coffee. Oops. Oh well, tea and coffee lollies would suffice. A little further on, we realise we've forgotten a pot as well. Dinner became the crackers and cheese intended for lunch the next day and we'd just have to make it back to the car by lunchtime. The gorge is beautiful, but when you have been spoilt by off track wandering, somehow it's not the same traipsing up a path knowing you are going to find something good at the end of it, liberally decorated by placards and other walkers. We did see platypus and an echidna train. Horny echidnas are so focussed on their purpose they almost walk into you and over your rucksack. We were quite hoping for another party to be camping so we could borrow a pot. For once, we were disappointed to find ourselves alone and when another group did turn up at dusk, they didn't have any cooking gear with them at all. Crackers and cheese for dinner it was.
Echidna seeks sex

For a finale, we stopped back at Frog to do Deliverance. I figured a stronger day was unlikely to occur, and brave days never really occur, so this was as good as it gets. Douglas was still trashed, but like a dedicated climbing boyfriend, he came down to belay. Being the wuss that I am, I zipped over whilst cleaning Devil's Dihedral and whacked in some high gear to protect rather exciting looking start. The corner is ridiculously smooth low down, the crack fused except for spaced pin scars, which started off good before becoming bad and ending worse. I made it to my preplaced gear at the worst pin scar without too much drama, then got flummoxed. There was nothing on the face. The lock was bad and super painful. Above it, a pod opened up that would become the recessed twin cracks shortly, but right now offered the worst flared fist jam I have ever had the displeasure to try and pull on. I wedged my feet in the fused corner which was slightly more frictional than ice, cranked into a weird bum wedge then pushed into bridging on more ice in an attempt to reach the tantalising opening at the top of the pod. The feet went and so did I. In a vague attempt at salvaging the ascent, I lowered off, stuffed down some coffee lollies and went up again. This time I pulled it off and wedged into the twin cracks with relief. I really didn't want to fall off the rest of the route simply because I didn't want to have to repeat that start again. It hurt.


The middle section is easier but pretty odd climbing. Or at least it is for me. I don't know if normal people climb it with hands crossed into the opposite side crack to jam, or wedge a leg into the opening between the cracks like an offwidth or knee bar and chimney between the left wall and right crack, but it all worked well for me. Under the first roof, I reached up and placed some microcams as high as I could reach, then wiggled into as high a bridge as I could underneath it and just reached a hold that proceeded to moult on me. Reassuring. Warning Douglas, I committed to it anyway and soon found myself under the final roof. This one took a slightly chunkier green alien and I pulled through on good locks only to find myself desperately trying to get my feet over the lip in order to reach past the fused section towards some face holds. Eventually I admitted my foot wasn't going to make it and threw a knee at the left wall and bridged onto that inelegantly. Thus I could reach up for what turned out to be a non hold. I slapped frantically around to no avail and found myself dangling on the end of the rope contemplating I would have to do that painful start again now. Pulling on again, I sorted my feet rather than knees onto the rock and discovered something better resembling a hold further up and with only a little whimpering crawled over the top. I was wrecked. I was down skin on my hands, knuckles, knee and shoulder. I hurt everywhere I even thought about moving. We left the gear in and retired for chai and cheesecake.


Overnight, it pissed down. Really pissed down. It was the first rain we'd seen in 3 months. I got up in the night and walked straight into a puddle surrounding the tent. Fog, dampness and soreness delayed any thought of climbing in the morning and we went out for coffee thinking we might have a little abseiling excursion to retrieve the gear later. The sun did seem to want to come out and the ground was drying so soon only soreness was remaining as an excuse. Still, it was the last chance to do anything for the trip, so we headed down. A few laps on Gladiator seemed to kickstart the sore muscles and I roped up for Deliverance with the power of complete lack of expectation. The first bits of gear were wet. I cleaned a bit of grot that had washed down the corner overnight. Conditions were not looking good, but somehow it seemed more frictional and less painful than yesterday. Or maybe I was just numb. Actually, it was probably not carrying gear for 45m of climbing. But I found myself at the twin cracks without drama and suddenly the expectation level went up. Then I was under the final roof again, reminding myself where the holds had been and pulled up on the locks. The expectation level was sky high now. I got my feet up and cranked the final lock down, not quite reaching the hold as I felt it slipping. I wrenched those fingers harder in that crack, I was not slipping out of this now and cranked again, getting my tips over the hold, then walking them onto it properly, pushed out on the left wall to get my foot out wide and I was above the lip. Not the glorious onsight I had hoped for but nevertheless, a pretty good ending to the trip.  

Thursday 14 May 2015

Is the PPL debate missing something?

I know it's not very PC of me as a feminist to question paid parental leave, but I do wonder about government provision of it. When a worker gets sick, who pays for sick leave? The employer.  When their mother dies, who pays compassionate leave? The employer. When their son goes into hospital, who pays family leave? The employer. So why is it a government responsibility to provide parental leave, not an employer responsibility? Is it not reasonable to expect employers to provide a minimum parental leave in the same way as they have to provide sick leave, annual leave, long service leave?

When parental leave is provided by the government, I think it moves from being a workplace right to a welfare payment. Which in itself is problematic - do we want family leave to be a worker's right or a welfare payment? And since when have welfare payments been either the equivalent of the minimum wage or an actual wage replacement?  Why is parental leave paid by the government not paid at the rate of other income support? I don't really have a problem with a welfare based parental payment either, but what we have is some weird combination of employment conditions and welfare provision. Does sickness allowance get paid at the minumum wage or wage replacement? No. Why not? If one is sick for months but has a job to return to, is it not a very similar position to be in?

Of course, everyone talks about paid parental leave being good for women. Which is sort of is, but it sort of isn't. It's only good for women because women continue to be the primary carers. And despite the occasional non gendered language such as I am stubbornly sticking to, that it is regularly referred to as maternal leave. Saying it benefits mothers is freely admitting that women are expected to continue to be the primary carers. And nothing about these policies is going to change that. Until we address the underlying social issues and assumptions that lead to women doing more than their fair share of the caring work, no amount of "parental leave" will change this situation. It just continues to admit that women care for babies despite clear evidence that babies can bond and be cared for by a whole range of people as long as their are available, loving and responsive to the baby's needs. Saying fathers can't do that is a mix of sentencing women to do the work, excusing men from it and underestimating men's capacities.

Why are family measures in budgets always "good for women"? If we didn't have the dreary expectation that it is women doing the work in families, family benefits would be good for, well, families ... Whilst the current reality sadly is that women do most of the work in families, I don't think it challenges that idea to continually focus on family business as women's business. Women can, should and do have many other aspects to their lives, and strangely enough, quite a lot of them don't involve families. Some women are too young to have them. Have not decided when or if to have them. Have been unable to have them. Chose not to have them. Have been there done that. Have them, but they are not the major source of issues in their lives. So really, when we talk about them being good for women, they are really only good for certain women at certain times of their lives in the current state of labour division. I'm not sure how good that really is.

Tuesday 12 May 2015

Carrot or the stick? Or maybe just plain old fashioned assistance?

The budget papers suggest the govt is going to save $500 million dollars in child care benefits from it no jab/no pay policy. Well, now we know it's got nothing to do with increasing immunisation rates then.  If they thought the policy would actually increase immunisation rates, they would expect to still be paying the child care benefits. And in all honesty, they are probably right. Because how are you going to convince a bunch of people concerned about whether immunisation is all a big pharma/government conspiracy to immunise their children by trying to force them? Any sensible person would expect a knee jerk reaction of, "See it really is a conspiracy. They probably have microchips in the vaccines to keep track of everyone in the future".

Children who aren't vaccinated fall into those in families with socioeconomic problems such that they fall through the maternal and child health system and miss a lot a care as a result. Or those who come from countries where routine vaccinations just didn't happen. Or those who have deeply held, if misinformed, health/social/political concerns with vaccination. Are any of these going to be converted by the no jab/no pay policy? Probably not. The first two groups need intensive support to address the issues that have lead to them missing our on vaccinations and the third need to be provided with information in a non-aggressive manner and their concerns listened to respectfully and addressed appropriately. Of course, if you are going to consider religious objection to be a valid reason to not vaccinate, I don't quite see how other philosophical, non-scientific objection are any different.

But now we see that the government never really intended this to be a policy to address vaccination rates, but a way to save money on childcare benefits. Real action would provide further funding to access and support the families that need care. Carrots don't reach them through the complexities of their lives and sticks just put them further behind, whilst those holding "conscientious objections" tend to be well off enough to not be swayed by either.

Wednesday 29 April 2015

Today seems like as good a day as any to withdraw our ambassador from the USA.

Today seems like as good a day as any to withdraw our ambassador from the USA. And China. Saudi Arabia. Singapore. Quite a few places really. While we are at it, maybe we should kick out all ambassadors to Australia from any countries that do follow international law and human rights treaties and save those countries the trouble of following Tony's new found ethical example.

Tuesday 7 April 2015

Who needs sleep anyway? #penaltyrates

Oh those poor multinational companies paying penalty rates. I know running a small cafe can be a marginal business, but when we hear all this carry on about penalty rates, this is the only sort of business we hear about. No one mentions McDonalds, Starbucks, Shell or Coles. Or pubs, hotels and casinos. There are plenty of big players in the hospitality industry as well. Is it my cynicism that these are the drivers of the campaign against penalty rates, not small town cafes? Of course, it doesn't look so good to say a multi-billion dollar company has the shits with paying its lowly employees something in compensation for not having normal free time.

Shift work sucks. I have done it for many years in a variety of fields, and it is something to be tolerated not enjoyed. We pay more for evenings, nights and weekends, because these are the times people normally get together, relax, play sport and not the least, sleep. When do we have family dinners, birthday parties, BBQs, festivals, dance parties, weddings, sporting matches or just casual get togethers? It's very rarely at 2pm on Tuesday afternoon. When your friends or partner work normal hours, shift work is a sure fire way to minimise the amount of time you get to spend together. If you have kids, it's a sure fire way to reduce the amount of time you spend with them. It stuffs with your sleeping and eating patterns and has been shown to be detrimental to physical and emotional health.

If a night club objects to paying penalty rates, they could try opening on Tuesday at 2pm instead. I mean, it won't cost them as much. But then again, they might not get a lot of business. Some businesses just are suited to running out of normal business hours, and the price of running one is paying people to work out of normal business hours. It's not like these businesses went into it blind, it's been the case for 100 years.

These days, I'm a nurse. I hate working nights. I don't want to work nights, Tony, do you think the patients' families could just come in and look after them from 11pm so I could just go home to bed? Really, I don't think I am paid anywhere near enough to be desperately trying to go to sleep at 4pm in order to be awake all night then manage to get a few hours sleep in the morning before wandering around like a zombie until it all repeats again the next night. $67.70. That's it. A flat $67.70 night shift allowance for all that suffering. That's a 20% penalty rate. To work all bloody night.

But even if they were willing, neither Tony nor the patients' families could actually look after the patients safely, so I accept that much as I hate it, I will have to work nights. Someone needs to. And that is a basic fact of a lot of shift work. We aren't just talking about being able to get a coffee on a public holiday (and what is stopping these cafes from charging a public holiday surcharge if they are struggling so bloody much anyway?).  We are talking about nurses, doctors, carers, welfare workers, ambos, police, firepeople. And other unromantic jobs like cleaners, shelf packers and checkout operators. We all rely on someone doing this work. Strangely enough, only one of those jobs is renowned for its good income and even then, those doctors doing shift work aren't usually high in their pay spectrum. But it's ok to campaign to pay even less to these people already at the low end of income in Australia.

I've got this great idea. How much more productive could we be if all jobs were 24 hours? We could employ more people, get more things done ... look if all jobs were 24 hours, then we wouldn't have this strange prioritising of certain days over others or this expectation that we could actually sleep at night and we could just pay everyone the same rate for whenever. When Tony and the president of ACCI are awake at 3 am Saturday because they have to work, not because they choose to be out partying, then they can let us know what they think of penalty rates.

Thursday 26 March 2015

Did Tony really put that onion in the right place?

Honestly, it just shits me more every time I think about it. Refusing to provide basic services to remote Aboriginal communities. Did Tony not notice in the midst of the gustatory sensation of the onion that it's a little contradictory to announce a $200, 000, 000 subsidy to enable Tasmanian producers to export competitively with mainland producers whilst complaining that remote communities were unsustainable? You see, this isn't competition. It is supporting producers that would be otherwise unsustainable in the free market. Now, I'm not exactly a neoliberal economist, but I do think that neoliberal economists should accept that what is good for the goose is good for the gander. So until they stop diesel fuel subsidies to mining magnates (incidently, Gina earns my annual income in 3.3 minutes, http://www.howrichareyou.com.au/) and other myriad subsidies and tax breaks to people and industries generally doing a heck of a lot better and costing a heck of a lot more than remote Aboriginal communities, well, I think Tony should shove that onion up the other end of his digestive tract.

Hello kidney!

I love kidneys. I really came to love my kidneys the first time I worked in a dialysis unit. To be blunt, dialysis sucks. 3 days a week for 5 hours, you are connected up to a machine that is no where near as mobile as you own kidneys, ie, you are stuck in a chair whilst it does what your kidneys have nicely done for you for all the preceding years.  To add insult to injury, you should see the size of the needles they have to use to connect you up to the machine. And the surgery to create a fistula of an artery and vein to put said enormous needle in. And the scar tissue that builds up until you have a massive lump growing out of your arm from it. When you want to go away, you have to find another dialysis centre to attend because you can't go more than a day or 2 without your 5 hours of compulsory leisure time bonding with the dialysis machine.

Chronic kidney failure requiring dialysis in our indigenous population is something horrendous like 4 times the rate of the rest of us. And then, they are more likely to live far from the necessary services and be more concerned about accessing services that have often not been culturally appropriate. Whenever I get the chance, I tell people to look after their kidneys, because they do us amazing favours every moment of every day. Modern lifestyle illnesses such as obesity, diabetes and hypertension trash your kidneys.

 Chronic kidney failure massively reduces your quality of life. Dialysis increases your risk for nasty blood infections. And kidney failure will eventually kill you. It's particularly tragic that Aboriginal Australians suffer so much from it. Indigenous Australians suffer from massive social-economic problems that impact on their health as well as frequently having limited access to health care and facing culturally insensitive services. Low birth weight, malnutrition, challenging living conditions, high rates of infections, tobacco and alcohol use and the rapid change in diet and lifestyle resulting from dispossession and resultant modern lifestyle illnesses all increase their risk for kidney failure and it's just crap that as a society we like to blame individuals rather than looking at the social context in which this happens. Yet new diagnoses of 10 times the rate of other Australians, even higher in remote communities, are not exactly an individual problem. New diagnoses is those aged 34-55 are especially high. I'm sure you don't need me to point it out, but that's young. Really bloody young. These people are sentenced to life-with-machine and all our government wants to do is complain about the meagre support they provide to remote communities. Maybe real support could actually help cut back these horrific figures.

Friday 13 March 2015

If we called them towns, would they be treated differently?

The WA government has said it will "close" up to 150 remote Aboriginal communities. Really? Just close them down like they were a shop going out of business?  Now, I get that Colin is premier of a bloody large state with a very dispersed population. I should hope he knew that before he took on the job. I'm sure it is difficult and expensive to provide services to all those remote people, but that doesn't mean you can just close down a few inconveniently remote communities. Anyone in rural Australia could name a few remote towns of small populations that are difficult and expensive to maintain. Over the last 10 years, Victoria has had to run pipelines to most of the north west of the state and provide treated water to umpteen small towns. Did they propose that Noradjuha had to be closed down and the 10 or so households move into Horsham or Nati? Of course not. Noradajuha still has water, mail delivery, garbage collection, a school bus run.

Aboriginal communities typically have schools, general stores, health centres, not to mention homes. Maybe a police station, footy ground, community hall. That sounds an awful lot like a town to me. But by calling them Aboriginal communities (which in and of itself there is nothing wrong with, and maybe the residents even prefer it), it conjures up in the mind of your average ignorant Australian of people living in dirt and humpies. And maybe some do and they like it. Good on them. But I suspect it is a strategy on behalf of the government to separate these homes of indigenous people from what most Australians call towns and try and avoid the appropriate outrage. Because really, our governments support a lot of expensive to maintain stuff. Most of it is for much richer people, organisations, communities and companies than some  isolated communities that already do in tough in myriad ways. Indigenous people do want to live in remote communities for social, family, cultural and health reasons amongst others. Suddenly making them homeless and trying to herd them into slightly larger, still very remote communities may look like it saves a small amount in services, but is going to cost a huge amount in trauma to these people and in managing the high risk of arising social and health problems. And like the NT intervention, when would governments ever risk doing these things to nice white people?

Thursday 12 March 2015

Great, so now misogyny is all the fault of women too

In https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/the-mysteries-love/201502/12-ways-spot-misogynist, Berit Broogard tells us "Misogyny is typically an unconscious hatred that men form early in life, often as a result of a trauma involving a female figure they trusted. An abusive or negligent mother, sister, teacher or girlfriend can plant a seed deep down in their brain’s subcortical matter."  Fantastic. I never realised that patriarchy is actually the response of traumatised men to abuse by women. Throughout history, men have been forced to develop laws, religions, cultures and structures restricting and oppressing women, to infantalise, objectify and rape them,  all because their Mummy didn't love them enough. Hang on, who neglected or abused their Mummy so that she was unable to love them enough? 

I'm sorry, but this is hogswallop. Misogyny exists because we live in a society that allows and enables it. In fact, one that has required it. That rewarded it. Blaming women for men that abuse women sounds suspiciously like a bit more misogyny. Men who behave like this do so because they believe it is acceptable. Because they are rewarded for it with pats on the back from their peers and women who tolerate it. If women's abuse of men creates misogyny, well, the rate of misandry out there should be through the roof. Now, if only I stopped spanking my partner, maybe the patriarchy would all go away ...

Tuesday 24 February 2015

Stop the drug runners! On the death penalty and the fickleness of Tony

Before I get lambasted, I would like to make clear that I am against the death penalty. I think when a state starts saying it's OK for them to kill people in certain circumstances, it opens the possibility for many others to justify killing people for whatever reasons of their own. It's just a matter of the state saying "my reasons are better than your reasons". In all honesty, I am against the whole punishment model of crime and believe in reparation, reconciliation and rehabilitation and why is a whole other extensive discussion.

Despite this, however, I am struggling with the current popular movement against the execution of the Bali Nine guys. Sure, I don't think they should actually be killed. My problem is, why are we suddenly all up in arms about these guys? Texas killed 279 people between 2001 and 2014. Singapore killed 59 people for drug offences alone in the same time. Saudi Arabia executed 79 just last year and Amnesty International states that whilst information about death sentences is a state secret in China, it is thought they killed more people than the rest of the world combined. In the light of this, shouldn't we be a little more vigorous in our rejection of the death penalty worldwide? Or are we comfortable with the idea that it's only wrong when it happens to be some Australians involved? Or at least when they are on the receiving side. Did Australia complain when the Bali bombers were executed? No. In fact, they were tacitly supportive.

Then of course, we have Tony and Julie making appeals for clemency. Hang on, I thought the death penalty was supposed to deter people from committing crimes? So it's OK for Tony to lock 1000s of innocent people up indefinitely in appalling conditions as a deterrent to STOP THE BOATS, but it's not OK for another country, whose laws clearly state the consequence for drug dealing, to kill convicted drug runners when all they want to do is STOP THE DRUG RUNNERS??? Of course, Australia likes to couch their stance as saving lives at sea. So 1000s are locked up as a deterrent to people risking their lives at sea so they can instead risk their lives by staying at home. Ignoring the idea that punishment as deterrence is not actually all that effective, these people haven't even done anything to be punished for! Indonesia is concerned that they have 5 900 000 drug users and 50 deaths per day from drugs, not to mention being a focal point for drug trafficking. Indonesia sees their law as saving lives at home. Is the death penalty really reducing drug trafficking in Indonesia? Probably not. But that doesn't change that both countries are justifying the unjustifiable as protecting their country.

Sunday 1 February 2015

Latest athlete-model uncovered!

I was at the crag yesterday and had the privilege of shooting the latest up and coming climbing model. He's got great talent. Climbs 400 days per year. Spends 28/7 monitoring social media. Check out his slideshow below*.




Ok, so they look a bit ridiculous. Would they look any less ridiculous if I had shot a well known climbing hunk in this way? Say Chris Sharma? I don't think so. Try this as well for another idea of how images look when we shoot men in the same way as we shoot women.

http://www.fastcoexist.com/3021444/the-hot-underwear-models-selling-this-motorcycle-are-not-what-you-would-expect




*With much appreciation to my gorgeous partner for the immense fun had creating those images.

Thursday 29 January 2015

How super does superwoman have to be?

Sierra Blair-Coyle is causing a little controversy in climbing forums at the moment. http://eveningsends.com/climbing/athlete-models-sierra-blair-coyle/
http://www.rockandice.com/lates-news/tnb-a-short-talk-with-sierra-blair-coyle?fb_action_ids=10152748602508931&fb_action_types=og.comments.  On the one hand, I’m not going to object to any women putting out there that they are fit and strong. On the other hand, it’s problematic that to get this sort of publicity, they also have to be gorgeous, smiling and putting themselves out to the male gaze at the same time. Far from making climbing seem more accessible by climbing lesser grades than the top of the field, it presents an even more unattainable image. For the non climber, it all still looks impossible. V0 looks pretty bloody impossible to most people. Even for the rest of us, how many of us are sending V7? I’m not. Then on top of still unrealistic achievements for your average dogsbody, we also have to look gorgeous whilst doing it.  I seem to have missed the bit where going climbing needed a face full of make up. What a pain it must be though, having to make yourself look like that each morning just to go for a climb. Looking like that doesn’t come effortlessly, and I’ll bet she works hard at achieving that look. Make up, hair, depilation, clothing, not to mention diet and exercise … I don’t know how women find the time or energy for it all. I struggle to throw my dreads in piggy tail and stagger out the door.

I’m not dissing what she does per se, she climbs perfectly respectable grades, she’s found a way to market herself that’s obviously found a niche, she’s also at uni full time, it’s all a truckload of work and I wouldn’t bloody do it. But I do have a problem with a culture that asks for this stuff. It doesn’t reward women for getting dirty and sweaty, for looking like they just spent the day (or week or month) on the cliff, for battling and grimacing. You can’t just be an ordinary woman. Or even an ordinary woman doing extraordinary things. Or a gorgeous woman in your own way. You have to be a gorgeous woman willing to present yourself in a certain way doing extraordinary things. How super does superwoman have to be in this world?

And then I want to know, where are the male “athlete-models”? Sure, I admit I think Alex Honnold has gorgeous eyes. Most good climbers have a body worth admiring as well. I do my fair share of gawping. But where are the men marketing themselves to the female gaze in this way? Where are the sponsors paying them to sell their appearance over their achievements? Where are the men putting appearance maintenance into their training schedule? Having to dress themselves up even to run to the corner store? There is a substantial difference here. Then there’s also a long discussion to be had about women participating in their own objectification and what is free choice in all of that, but really, I haven’t eaten enough chocolate for that right now.

I also read an article about “bikini class” bodybuilders and the rigmarole around their appearance on top of all their training was ridiculous. http://www.buzzfeed.com/ashapiro009/training-tanning-and-branding-with-the-bikini-bodybuilding-s?utm_term=.pheJb4nMY#.dsQ4OldGJY. They too are marketed as the “accessable” end of their sport, which is just laughable and the end of body building where women are still “feminine” and “attractive”, because of course, it’s not ok to be a woman who is not easy on the male eye. One glance will suggest how much work goes into looking like that, let alone reading the actual story. Then because they also rely on social media for their following, they can’t leave the house without being all hotted up because someone might take a photo, bung it on Instagram and ruin their image. It all sounds like a recipe for misery to me.


Honestly, how come women all have to be beautiful? Even as people try and extend the range of what is acceptable for women, we just move on to other ways in which women can be beautiful. Women can be fat and beautiful. Intelligent and beautiful. Strong and beautiful. Talented and beautiful. Women of colour are beautiful. Really, what is wrong with just being happy, healthy, smart, capable, generous, funny, caring, fit, interesting or whatever … that we all have to be visually approved of as well? Are we really moving at all from the idea that women are most valued and most happy with themselves when their appearance meets cultural standards?





Tuesday 27 January 2015

Am I the oppressed short? Some thoughts on sizism and fat discrimination.

It's not very popular in feminist circles to be down on the fat activism movement, but I'm a bit dubious about it. After reading some extensive articles on thin privilege and how sizism is seperate to sexism , http://everydayfeminism.com/2013/10/lets-talk-about-thin-privilege/, http://everydayfeminism.com/2012/11/20-examples-of-thin-privilege/, I feel some crucial points have been left out.

All women are judged on their size. It's not just fat, overweight or underweight women; healthily sized women are judged on their size, size is a form of abuse thrown at all women. Commentary and judgement on their size is offered to all women. I am smack in the middle of my healthy weight range, and I have been call a fat cow, told I looked pregnant, told my bum is big ... Similarly, people feel free to comment on how when they think my weight is looking good as well. This constant scrutiny of size is not offered to men. Men are allowed a significantly greater leeway before people will comment on or disapprove of their size. Nor do i hear them randomly told how slim they look in that outfit. As a result, far fewer men spend a vast amount of their time worrying about their size regardless of whether it is something they should worry about than women.

And there does come a point where people should worry about their size. It is a health issue.A well documented and researched health issue. Is your size a health issue? No? Well, go out and wear and do whatever you damn well want. It is a health issue? Then address your health issue, but go out and wear and do whatever you damn well want at the same time.

Of course it is wrong to judge and discriminate against people based on their size. It is wrong to put people down because of their size. It is wrong to make jokes about size. This is all genuinely problematic. But some of this claiming fat discrimination is getting a bit silly. Can't get clothes in your size? Look, I can't get shoes small enough for me a lot of the time. Do I scream "average size foot privilege"? I have to hem almost every pair of pants I buy. Do I scream "average height privilege"? People just don't stock them because they don't sell many of them. And as the proportion of larger people has grown, large clothes seem to have become more available with the increase in demand.

Your health insurance costs more? My health insurance has never asked me about my weight, but it seems perfectly reasonable to charge more for a higher risk group. See earlier comments about well documented evidence for health concern attached to obesity. Note, not attached to simply being a woman whose body, like most women's bodies, doesn't exactly resemble the promoted ideal. Insurance companies always charge according to risk factors. Have a history of car accidents and speeding fines or not been driving long? Your car insurance costs more. Live in a high crime area without house security? Your house insurance costs more. Charged more by an airline? Well, if you overflow your seat, you need 2 seats. Airlines sell flight by the seat. Really, I'd quite like to have my baggage allowance increased because I weigh less than most people, but do I claim "small person discrimination" that me plus my baggage are less than an average sized healthy male yet they still want to charge me for every kilo  over the baggage allowance? I have to climb to get food from the top shelf in the supermarket. I stand on the seats to put my hand luggage in the plane's overhead lockers. Should I really be wondering if the world out to oppress short people?

When your doctor investigates weight related conditions first, they are making a reasonable choice to eliminate the most likely options first. They could test for ebola if you have just vomited as well, but they don't because it's very low down on the list of probable causes. Being obese is strongly correlated with developing myriad rather awful conditions. Visit a dialysis unit or care for someone with chronic heart failure if you want to see how bad these things will get. Or just think about getting older. We will all get weaker, develop some degree of arthritis and moving gets to be hard, hard work. If you are obese, you just aren't going to be able to move yourself around that much sooner. I'm not talking about just not conforming to society's generally harsh assessment of female appearance here, I'm talking about medically concerning weight.

My point in all of this is to focus on the actual discrimination here - pull people up for fat jokes and abuse. Stand up to real discrimination, not evidenced based assessments. Think about how your respond next time you find yourself caught up in the constant discourse about women's size. And get on with doing and being who you are whilst looking after your own health.