Watch
now:
(Trad)ition
and
progress

A rock climber wearing Mammut gear ascends a steep overhang with rugged mountains and a cloudy sky in the background.
A rock climber in a Mammut red shirt and green beanie ascends a steep cliff, focusing intensely, with chalky hands gripping the rugged rocks.
(Trad)ition and progress

As the sport of climbing continues to grow at an exponential rate, views around accessibility, protection and risk management have never been more extreme. In a community that attracts a huge range of personas, finding the balance between managing the accessibility of routes with the traditional values of the sport is increasingly difficult. Nowhere is the divide between sport and trad climbing more prevalent than in Europe. 

In his new film, Schild takes on a unique and formidable trio of routes that hold a special place at the heart of the European trad climbing community and explores his own personal relationship with the sport. 

Watch the Swiss climber send Gondo Crack (8c/5.14b) in Switzerland, Le Voyage (8b+/5.14a) in Annot, France and Greenspit (8b+/5.14a) in Valle dell’Orco, Italy and discover what is really worth protecting in the sport of climbing. 

“When
you
finally
reach
a
point
where
(…)
you're
putting
friends
next
to
bolts
all
the
time,
then
it
becomes
a
game
that
doesn't
really
make
sense.”

Mammut climbing gear hangs as a climber ascends a rugged rock face, with a bright sunlit valley backdrop.
Mammut athlete wearing an orange hat and white Mammut jacket hanging from a rock climbing fingerboard outdoors surrounded by trees.
A rock climber in a Mammut red shirt falls while climbing a steep rock face, secured with Mammut climbing rope.

“It’s
simply
important
to
retain
acceptance
and
perhaps
also
increase
it.
Otherwise
at
some
point
you
no
longer
have
the
potential
to
climb
trad
routes.”

A climber wearing a white shirt and blue pants, equipped with Mammut gear, scales an overhanging rock face under a dark sky.