Climbing legend’s death stuns friends

SAN FRANCISCO – Renowned rock climber and author Todd Skinner had pioneered new routes before, claiming first ascents in Pakistan, Mali, Kenya and Greenland. Skinner’s proven skill and years of experience have left friends wondering what could have gone so horribly wrong Monday when he fell 500 feet to his death in Yosemite National Park while blazing a new route near Bridalveil Fall.

“We don’t know whether it was a climbing harness failure or a problem with his equipment or an error,” said Steve Bechtel, Skinner’s former climbing partner and friend. “He’s a larger-than-life climbing hero and it’s a great loss to the entire community of climbers across the world.”

Skinner, 47, of Lander, Wyo., was celebrated for having climbed hundreds of rock faces from Canada’s Yukon Territory to the Himalayas using a technique called free climbing, in which climbers ascend using no artificial aid – only a rope to protect against falls.

“He was the first person to think it was possible to free climb,” said Ann Krick, a friend who hired him as a motivational speaker. “He always said that the most dangerous thing was to pick an easy mountain. As a climber, he said he needed to pick hard enough climbs because those are the walls where you’ll learn the most.”

Skinner, who wrote “Beyond the Summit,” also was the first to climb a now-famous route on El Capitan, Yosemite’s famed granite monolith, without artificial aid, according to his Web site.

While climbers have been scaling Yosemite’s sheer walls for more than four decades, the most adventurous still seek out new ways to the top.

At the time of his death, Skinner was working on a new route up Leaning Tower, near the famous wispy waterfall that greets visitors entering Yosemite Valley by car.

The Mariposa County coroner’s office will perform an autopsy, and park officials will determine the cause of Skinner’s fall. Bechtel, who was not present at the scene, said Skinner’s climbing partner, Jim Hewitt, reported his death as soon as he reached the ground Monday afternoon.

Skinner is survived by his wife and three children.

In the world of rock climbing, those who successfully pioneer first ascents are admired for pushing the boundaries of their sport, said Hans Florine, one of the world’s fastest rock climbers.

“Someone might have climbed a peak or a crag or a cliff before, but never the way Todd Skinner did,” Florine said. “His mission was to be the first person to free climb all the biggest faces in the world.”

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