The Rich Roll Podcast - Alex Honnold On The Responsibility of Adventure, Olympic Climbing & Reversing Climate Change
Episode Date: March 29, 2021With great adventure comes great responsibility. It’s not enough to simply appreciate our natural world—we must also protect it. Preserve it. Regenerate it. All of us. And with our full attention.... No one embodies this ethos quite like Alex Honnold. Renowned adventurer and global icon of athletic mastery, Alex is widely recognized for his death-defying ropeless ascent of El Capitan—a 3,600-foot sheer vertical rock face he climbed without a harness or any protective gear whatsoever. It was a feat that stunned the world. Landed it’s cinematic document Free Solo an Oscar. And cemented this unique and compelling individual as one of the greatest athletes of all time. While our conversation back in 2018 covered this incredible accomplishment, much has transpired in Alex’s life since the whole Free Solo affair. So this conversation takes a different tack, exploring a different side of Alex. We steer clear of the more well-trod terrain and topics he has exhaustively fielded at this point and instead venture into new life experiences and other interests post-Free Solo: Alex as storyteller, podcast host, climbing historian, environmentalist, activist, husband, and more. The crux of today’s exchange is Alex’s environmental work with The Honnold Foundation.The impact he’s made thus far. He’s intentions for the future. And the steps he intends to pursue to help reverse environmental degradation: the greatest existential threat to life on Earth. We talk about the challenges of combating the climate crisis and why his current passion is solar and renewable energy. We also discuss his new turn as a podcaster, co-hosting the newly released Climbing Gold, a special miniseries of climbing-centric stories that explore the past, present, and future of the sport. In addition, Alex shares some insight into climbing’s debut at the Tokyo Olympics. But overall, the most important lesson Alex imparts is the responsibility of the adventurer. To be a climber, skier, cyclist, runner, or outdoor enthusiast, you must also be an environmental steward—and take personal action to preserve and sustain nature’s finite offerings. FULL BLOG & SHOW NOTES: bit.ly/richroll591 YouTube: bit.ly/alexhonnold591 Alex is wise, remarkable, and someone I deeply admire. My hope is that this conversation will inspire you to think more deeply about how you can positively impact the world we all share. Peace + Plants, Rich
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I think that the most important issue facing humanity is climate change, or sort of environmental
degradation more broadly, let's say.
And at the same time, I think there's no point in trying to solve environmental problems
that don't also improve quality of life, that like help the human population.
And so, you know, I think that when you focus on environmental issues, it's important to
also sort of focus on equity issues of like all humans should be entitled to certain standards of living. And so I think that if you're trying to solve environmental issues without also
focusing on the equity side, like making sure that all humans are equally able to take care
of themselves, you know, basically it's just not fair to not do this both at the same time.
And so that sort of informed the initial projects from the Hanau Foundation is like looking for
environmental projects that also improve standard of living that like helped folks. And over the years, we basically always
wound up choosing solar projects because they just often are the most elegant solutions to
those kinds of problems. Where it's like good for the environment, good for people, you know,
clear win-win. And then after several years of supporting a bunch of different solar projects,
we were like, we should just make this explicit. Because at a certain point, I just think solar is such an obvious solution to many human problems.
I'm Alex Arnold, and this is the Rich Roll Podcast.
The Rich Roll Podcast.
Yeah, buddy, that's right.
It's true.
The free soul, a free solo, global icon of athletic mastery.
Alex Honnold is indeed back and in the house.
I think at this point we can dispense with the bio, right?
I think at this point we can dispense with the bio, right?
We all saw his death and gravity-defying,
ropeless ascent of El Cap on the big screen.
It's a feat that landed free solo,
a documentary Oscar, of course,
and cemented Alex as truly one of the greatest athletes of all time.
Alex came on the podcast three years ago,
that was March of 2018,
after his big climb, but actually before the movie had come out or I had had the opportunity
to see the movie, to talk about all the things that he's been talking about ever since the film's
release, his life, his relationship with fear and the pursuit of mastery. But I would suggest considering
episode 351 as just a primer because today we explore a new side of Alex. A lot has happened
since the whole free solo affair, obviously. So this conversation takes a little bit of a
different tack, steering somewhat clear of the more well-trod terrain
and topics that Alex has exhaustively fielded at this point
to explore some of his life experiences
and other interests post-Free Solo
as a storyteller, as a new podcast host,
a climbing historian, an environmentalist,
activist, husband, and more. It's such a good one.
Definitely distinct from other conversations with Alex you may have enjoyed,
and it's coming up in a few, but first.
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go to recovery.com. Okay, so this conversation is basically free solo free, focusing instead on Alex's environmental work with the Honnold Foundation.
We talk about the challenges of combating climate change and why his current focus and passion is on solar and renewable energy.
is on solar and renewable energy.
We also discuss his new turn as a podcaster,
co-hosting the newly released Climbing Gold,
which is this special mini-series of climbing-centric stories
that explore the past, present, and future of the sport.
In addition, among other subjects,
Alex shares some interesting insights
into climbing's debut at the Tokyo Olympics.
But overall, this is a conversation
about the responsibility of adventure.
It's not enough to simply appreciate our natural world.
We must also care for it, protect it, preserve it,
regenerate it, all of us, and with our full attention.
Alex is somebody I deeply admire.
He's wise, he's remarkable.
And my hope is that this conversation will inspire you
to think more deeply about how you can positively impact
the world we all share.
So ladies and gentlemen, this is me and Alex honnold cool man are we good oh we're rolling excellent man um yeah we're already recording good to see you
yeah good to see you uh do i need to worry about where anything is i don't think so just worry
about where the mic is but you know that because now you're a professional podcast well i'm i don't
really do the the technical side of it.
You do have to talk into a mic though.
I bring nothing to the team except for the witty banter with the guest.
Well, I listened to like the first little,
like the little trailer thing.
You do the little like, hey, is this thing on?
Or like, let's do take two or whatever.
Yeah, which is fun.
Actually, I don't know if I've heard it yet.
Oh, you haven't even listened to your own podcast yet?
Well, I've been gone.
But the idea, I mean, it's called Climbing Gold.
The idea was the idea at the inception
that it was gonna be more about the Olympics
and then that had to pivot a little bit.
Yeah, exactly.
The idea for the podcast was to focus
on the road to the Olympics, sort of the buildup.
Because going into 2020,
it felt like climbing was having a huge moment.
It's funny, I'm on the board
of a climbing gym organization as well.
And it felt like it was this huge moment for climbing
because climbing is in the Olympics for the first time
and it's like going off.
Obviously COVID changed that quite a bit.
Right.
So when we started talking about doing a podcast,
it made sense to explore sort of the history
and the future of climbing during this moment.
And then when the Olympics got pushed because of COVID,
we sort of went forward with it anyway,
mostly because we felt like there were still
interesting stories to tell.
Yeah.
But so now we're still doing,
I think we're doing 20 episodes and the second 10
are focused more on the lead up to the Olympics.
Right. So it's sort of doing 20 episodes and the second 10 are focused more on the lead up to the Olympics.
Right.
So it's sort of like the history and the untold stories and the kind of things that happen.
Cause so much of climbing occurs outside
of the spotlight of the media completely.
And so much of climbing history has occurred
before there was media to some extent,
before things were easily recorded
or digitified and shared.
And so there are just so many classic climbing stories
that are sort of lost to history a little bit.
So it's pretty fun to uncover some of those and share some.
So did you have to be like a journalist
and go and find these people and talk to them
and have them tell their stories?
Like a very unprofessional journalist,
like a very unskilled journalist.
A podcaster.
Yeah, exactly, exactly.
Let's not confuse journalism with podcasting.
Exactly, exactly.
No, it's not fair to say that we did any journalism,
but we did seek out interesting guests in different spaces.
And I think the thing that we're trying to sort of add
to the space of climbing podcasting as it were,
is a little bit more editing
and a little bit more of a thematic focus,
like having multiple voices from different people
in the same episode talking about specific themes
to sort of help educate about certain aspects of climbing
and share a little bit about where climbing has come from.
Right.
And your co-host has, he did another podcast, right?
Dirtbag Diaries or something like that?
Yeah. So my co-host is Fitz Cahal
who's an actual professional podcaster.
He actually knows what he's doing.
He's the one that sent me the microphone that I use
and told me how to set it up and how to use everything.
And yeah, he's the one that really,
I mean, really the whole reason the podcast exists
is because he approached me
about working on a project together.
And I was like, oh, he's the perfect person to work with
because he already knows how to do it.
Was there an original plan before the Olympics got pushed
that you would go to Tokyo and be make covering
the climbing competition there part of the podcast?
So fun story, I am actually supposed to be going to Tokyo
to do commentary for the Olympic channel.
So technically I have a contract already
with the actual Olympic committee or whatever
to go do commentary for climbing.
And so part of doing the podcast was
because I personally felt like it would be a great way
to learn how to commentate.
Cause you know, I don't know anything
about sports commentation,
but I figured I'd learn before the Olympics.
And so the podcast seemed like a really great way
to get to know some of the backstory,
meet some of the competitors, learn about their process.
And so as it turns out, we haven't focused on that so far because the Olympics got pushed.
So we just decided to kind of wait and see on that side.
But it's almost better this way because this way the episodes that we have recorded are like the deeper backstory.
And then allows us to sort of set the stage that when we get to the Olympic side of the podcast,
there's already a good context for it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So somebody who doesn't know anything can listen to that.
And then by the time the competition starts,
they feel like they have a context
for everything that's happening.
That's exactly the hope is that
someone who's interested in the outdoors
and has maybe climbed once,
or just sort of a general interest
could listen to the podcast, understand and
appreciate the stories and still feel like they learned something important about the sport.
Right. How do you feel in general about climbing being in the Olympics?
I'm pretty into it. I mean, there are a lot of climbers, particularly older climbers that are
sort of crusty about it that think that it's a, you know, degrades the sport in some way or sort
of, or really the fact that I'm calling climbing a sport. I think some climbers would take,
take, take umbrage with that, you know, because a lot of people consider climbing more of a
lifestyle or, or more of like an adventure. Um, but you know, I come from a gym climbing
background. I grew up going to a climbing gym. So I've always thought of climbing at least in
some part as a sport. And so I'm excited about the Olympics.
I mean, I'm psyched to go, I'm psyched to see it.
I saw a rendering of the venue.
It looked incredible.
Yeah, I haven't seen it yet.
It's this huge like amphitheater with the walls
and like, you know, the seating.
I don't know what it's gonna be like
now that they're restricting kind of attendance, right?
Like if you're a foreigner, you can't go or how-
But I think there'd be enough domestic attendance
that it'll still be crazy.
I mean, climbing in Japan is a big deal.
Is it?
Yeah, it's really popular.
And Japanese competitors have sort of dominated
the World Cup scene for the last few years,
which I think is maybe part of the reason
that climbing is in the Olympics in Tokyo this year
because I think the host country has some influence on it.
But yeah, Japanese competitors will likely do very well
and will likely have enthusiastic support
from the home crowd.
Well, what's interesting about it now being a sport,
well, there's the controversy of it being a sport
to begin with.
And then there's controversy around
how they're constructing the competition, right?
Like you have these three events essentially,
like speed, boulder, lead,
and it's kind of your cumulative score
across those three disciplines
that determines your ranking.
Yeah, that's exactly it.
And so it's a slightly confused system in some ways.
I mean, I think it's fine.
It skews towards doing it fast though, right?
Which is kind of a weird thing, isn't it?
Sort of, it's like, should we just dive into it?
It's like slightly complicated.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, like, I mean,
this is like inside baseball, but this is interesting.
And especially since the Olympics are gonna be happening
and we're all gonna be watching this.
And actually, so yeah, I'll dive into like the nitty gritty
of climbing scoring, but I think what's interesting
about it is that you can kind of apply this to all sports because like the decathlete or, you know, the biathlon or whatever,
like to some extent, any sport you see in the Olympics is being arbitrarily scored in a way
that, that the competitors, or at least the organizing committees have agreed upon. And so,
you know, any sport that you're watching is slightly arbitrary, you know? I mean,
other than just the purely elemental, like swimming or running like strictly for speed,
other than that, you're always getting
into formatting issues and like,
it's just interesting.
And so with climbing, like you said,
it's the combination of the three disciplines,
it's a combined format,
but it's actually, you multiply the scores in them.
And so it's sort of disproportionately weights excellence
in specific categories in a weird way.
Right. You know what I mean?
And so in theory, if someone's average,
someone's pretty good at all three disciplines,
like they get fourth in all three, you think that's great,
but they'd actually, they would do worse
than someone who was a great speed climber,
but not as good at the other two disciplines.
So it's this kind of weird formatting
style that favors, you know, dominance in one category. And that's one of the reasons that a
lot of climbers have complained about speed climbing being included because most people
focus on the other two aspects. Most people focus on bouldering and lead climbing and sort of exclude
speed climbing. Right. And so by combining them all into this combined format,
it suddenly forced these otherwise elite competitors
to sort of learn this new sport that they didn't really want.
Like trying to tell a middle distance runner
that suddenly they have to be a hundred meter sprinter.
Yeah, I mean, that's not a, yeah.
It's like telling a middle distance runner
that all of a sudden they're gonna have to do
a hundred meter sprint
and that's gonna count into their score. Right.
You know, they're like physiologically,
it's different things, you know?
And more than the physiological difference,
there's also a skill difference with the climbing speed
climbing because the,
the speed wall for climbing is like a specific track.
Basically it's a specific sequence of movements.
So you do have to learn that track,
like learn how to jump between the holds well.
And so it's made for TV because you have two people
right next to each other scurrying up the wall
as fast as possible.
Yeah, me personally.
In like five seconds or something.
Yeah, exactly.
That's exactly, yeah, five seconds up a 15 meter wall.
It looks completely insane.
Yeah, so for me as a spectator, I think it's awesome.
Like it's easy to understand.
It's an incredible display of athleticism.
Like when you see people speed climb at an elite level,
you're like, that guy is a good athlete,
just hands down.
And I can understand why the climbing competitors
aren't into it, but I'm like, I don't know,
from an outside perspective, it looks amazing.
It's great for TV.
It's easy to understand.
And I kind of like the well-rounded,
the fact that it forces the competitors to be well-rounded.
Right, right.
It's like a holistic.
Rather than just making like swimming or track and field
where these would each be individual events.
So that's part of the thing is that
because climbing is an exhibition sport in 2020,
they're only, the sport is only allowed one medal.
And so that's why they did a combined format
because that way had they just excluded
speed climbing altogether,
that's not fair to the speed athletes.
But with only one metal, like how are you gonna do it?
So they just combine it into one.
So the other one is how far you can climb,
like the height that you can climb
in a six minute interval or something like that?
No, so lead climbing and bouldering,
both basically, so lead climbing is climbing
a taller wall with a rope,
bouldering is climbing a short wall without a rope.
And both of those are basically just measures
of pure difficulty.
So the bouldering, the boulder routes that you have to climb
are incredibly difficult.
And so they're like a test of max physical power.
So it's almost like power lifting,
but with an incredible amount of, you know,
gymnastic skill and technique built into it.
And then the lead climbing wall is the same thing,
but on a higher, you know, because you're climbing higher,
it's a more of an endurance test basically.
So are any of them scored like diving though,
with like, you know, numbers or is it all on a watch?
No, they are scored with numbers,
but they're scored by numbers
because you basically count how many holds
up the route you make it.
Okay.
So if the lead route is, you know, 50 holds long,
like 50 hand movements up,
your score is basically, you know,
which hand movement you made it to before you fall off.
Right.
But in general, if you see somebody successfully climb
from the bottom to the top, they're basically gonna win.
Like if someone makes it to the top,
you're like that guy's the champion.
He's the dude.
Yeah.
Who are the standouts?
Like, are there any runaway like favorites here?
Yeah, yeah, there are a few.
Careful.
Yeah, exactly, exactly, exactly.
I'm like, well, yeah. No, okay, so there's, I mean, there are a few. Careful. Yeah, exactly, exactly, exactly. I'm like, well, yeah.
No, okay, so there's, I mean,
this is a real test of my future.
I'm accommodating.
Yeah, here you go.
But let's just say that by August,
I will be much better versed in this.
But so the three for men,
the three that come to mind right now
that are obvious standouts are a Japanese man
named Tomo Narasaki
who dominated world cup scene,
has incredible boulder,
but also happens to be a very good speed climber.
So he kind of has this leg up in the combined format
where he can really win in any of the three disciplines,
which makes him incredibly competitive.
And then there's Adam Ondra, who's a Czech climber.
The Czech guy.
Yeah, Czech Republic,
who is arguably the best climber in the world.
He's pushed the standards of difficulty twice now,
like breaking into new categories
of difficulty for climbing.
And he's also repeated all the hardest walls in the world.
And he's an incredible climber.
And he basically won all the world cups
that he entered last year.
So I mean, he's, or the year before last,
since they kind of canceled the COVID season,
but incredible climber, not a great speed climber,
sort of a self described poor speed climber,
which is ironic because he actually climbs very, very fast,
but he's just not good at the sport of speed climbing.
You know what I mean?
Which is, that's where all this stuff gets so weird
because any casual climber looking at Adam Andre climb
would be like, wow, he's so fast.
But then when it comes to speed climbing,
he just doesn't quite sprint fast enough.
Right, right.
It's like, it's so weird.
I would think that over time though,
once this becomes institutionalized
as an Olympic sport going forward,
that young people who get enthusiastic about this
are gonna be doing almost all of their training and learning
in an indoor climbing wall, right?
Like what is the relationship between outdoor climbing
and kind of how you, I mean,
I know you do a lot of indoor climbing,
but essentially you're an outdoor climber.
Yeah, I'm essentially an adventure, you know,
like by the standards of Olympic competition,
I'm not even a climber.
Like I'm not even climbing at the difficulty
that these competitors warm up on basically.
But your relationship to climbing
is one of adventure and outdoors
more than it is about an indoor climbing.
Yeah, though I bridge it a little bit
because I came from the indoor world.
I still love climbing indoors.
I still train in a similar way to competitors,
but just at a much lower level,
but at least I'm still trying to do the same things.
But yeah, it is interesting.
I mean, and that's a big part of what we get into
in the podcast talking about in climbing gold
is this contrast between adventure and athleticism
and like, where is the sport going?
Because like you said, people that get into it now
get into it in the gym and train indoors.
And I mean, it's just interesting that an Olympic climber
could potentially never climb outdoors. And then even more it's just interesting that an Olympic climber could potentially never climb outdoors.
And then even more interesting when you think that
the history of rock climbing sort of branches off
from classical mountaineering and like people summoning peaks
in the Alps and things like that.
And when you think that an Olympic rock climber nowadays
could have never even hiked up a mountain outside,
you know, never even gone hiking.
Just divorced from that entire tradition.
Yeah, which I'm not saying that's good or bad,
but it's just interesting to see
how the sport has sort of splintered over time.
Yeah, it's cool that it's in there though.
And I guess there's, when you look at Tokyo,
there's karate, skateboarding, surfing, right?
Yeah, totally.
The Olympics have changed quite a bit.
As they should.
I mean, the Olympics should reflect the times, I think.
And you know, in like the, what, 40s or 50s,
the Olympics included mountaineering.
They gave medals for mountaineering back in the day.
Wow.
You know, when you think of old school,
like the first ascent of the Eiger and things like that,
like classic mountains in Europe,
like those received Olympic medals some.
Oh, I didn't know that.
And you know, in that one way.
That feels like a story you should tell in the podcast.
Yeah, yeah, we haven't gotten into it,
but we probably will.
Cool, when does the podcast launch?
I think the podcast, yeah, I think at the end of the month.
So I think the 26th of March is the first episode,
but honestly I'm uninvolved with the whole launch. Come on, so I think the 26th of March is the first episode, but honestly, I'm
uninvolved with it, with the whole launch. Come on, you know, you're the host though. No, but,
um, I'm the unskilled host. Everybody's got a podcast. Come on. Just embrace it. You know,
it's, it's been fun though, because you know, so many of our guests, so many of the people I get
to talk to are personal heroes of mine from childhood, you know, people whose films I watch
or books I read or, you know, whose posters I had in my room, things like that.
And so it's fun to be able to talk to them
about how they got into climbing and what it means to them
and just hear some of their opinions
about where the sport's going.
Because so many of them are like, that's my hero.
That's cool.
What do you think this whole thing is
that I've created here?
It's like the ultimate excuse to call up cool people
and talk to them.
And then you get to share that.
Like imagine yourself, young Alex at age 12,
if a resource like that had been available to you,
like be the person that you needed
when you were that young person,
like searching for the thing for you.
I mean, that is cool.
And it's interesting because I think a big part
of what made me somewhat successful as a climber in my life
was the fact that I had access to a climbing gym
earlier than most.
And the gym, the climbing gym that I was going to had,
it had a little gear shop built in
and it had this little video display
constantly going with certain climbing films.
So you'd always see like certain climbing films going,
old school VHS, you're like, this is awesome,
super inspiring.
And I'd be climbing and then I'd like read all the climbing magazines
and watch the films.
And, you know, to have that opportunity as a young person,
you know, is a big part of what allowed me
to become a decent climber.
Yeah.
And like, and nowadays people have that,
you know, exponentially more of that,
like more access to information,
you know, more climbing footage available to them.
Yeah, it's cool.
And they have way better facilities,
like way better gyms.
Well, the gyms seem to be ubiquitous these days.
Yeah, and not just more common,
but just better, better lit, more open, cleaner,
like nicer, better holds, better setting,
like higher quality training facilities,
better pads, like better flooring,
which is a big deal.
I broke my arm in the gym when I was a kid,
not so much because the flooring was bad,
but that kind of thing does factor in,
like if you can safely climb in a,
like basically modern gyms are just safe.
And so you can climb,
you can push yourself super hard physically
with no risk of injury.
When you were doing the free solo tour,
I mean, it would be, you would share like in every city
that you would go to for the tour,
it was all about like, where's the climbing gym
and like the workout that day
before the screening or whatever.
I've sampled like almost every gym in the country.
You must have been in every climbing gym in America.
It feels like it, but actually there's so many gyms
in America now that I've probably sampled
the tiny percentage actually.
But it is true that every major city in the country
I've sampled the gym.
Cause I typically would land,
I would go from the airport straight to the gym.
I would train, I'd take a shower at the gym.
I would go straight to the venue,
do whatever event I was supposed to do.
And then basically either go to a hotel
or go back to the airport.
But it's like gyms have always felt
like a second home to me almost.
I walk into a climbing gym anywhere and I'm like,
ah, home sweet home.
I take my shoes off, I wander around,
I dump my stuff everywhere.
But it has to be complicated with you now
because if you just wanna go and get a workout in,
you're gonna have to be a bit of a politician
for a while first, right?
Depends, depends.
You wear your hood, you keep your head down,
you just climb.
Yeah, to some extent, it's always a little bit of a scene.
But on the other hand, any gym in the country,
I mean, everyone's there to do the same thing as you.
Like it is nice because you're all just there
to climb together.
So when you get past the initial, like,
oh, what are you doing here?
That's crazy, can I take a picture?
Ultimately you're like,
let's just session all these boulders together.
Yeah, cause it's like,
we're all just there to do the same thing.
Well, it's been a crazy couple of years for you.
The first time that you did the show,
we talked about the free solo climb,
but it was before the movie came out.
I know, I remember.
Do you remember that?
So I just remember thinking that I had a grip
on what it is exactly that you had done
and feeling confident that I understood it.
And then you invited me to the premiere,
I remember in Beverly Hills, that screening.
And I watched the movie and I was like,
oh, I didn't understand it at all.
Like, I'm sure I still don't, but the movie, you know,
took it quite a bit further in terms of, you know,
getting me to fully grok what had actually happened.
And then of course, you know, your story's well told
with everything that happened with the movie.
And you went on this crazy press tour
and did eight bazillion interviews
and I'm sure completely talked out on this movie.
So I wanna talk about other stuff today,
but before we kind of move off of Free Solo,
I mean, in the wake of being so exhaustively interviewed
about that, do you feel like there's anything left to say
or anything left unsaid or anything, looking back on it do you feel like there's anything left to say or anything left unsaid or anything, you know,
looking back on it that you feel like people misunderstood
about the movie or you, or is it just your time
for the next chapter?
No, I think it's all pretty well.
It's been said.
Yeah, well, I mean, I think part of why the film did so well
is that it is an incredibly honest look at the process, you know, leading up to free selling our cap. Um,
so I don't know, I've got nothing but positive, you know, it's like the,
the media tour around it was crazy. And like going to the Oscars is crazy.
And, you know, meeting, uh, Prince William or whatever, you know,
cause we want a BAFTA. So like you're in the UK,
like meeting royalty or whatever, like it's all totally crazy whirlwind tour,
but, um, but I can still
look back on it and be be happy about the whole thing you know because I am you know understandably
proud of freestyling El Cap like it was something very difficult that I worked hard for that I'm
proud of and I think the film reflected that really well you know and very honestly and so I'm like
yeah proud of the film proud of the whole deal deal. It's like, it's cool. It was a phenomenon though.
I mean, everybody was talking about this movie
for a documentary to break out like that
was just extraordinary.
Yeah, I mean, I don't,
I was like so in it that I can't really say,
I was just surviving the tour.
It was like such a whirlwind,
but no now looking back on it
with a little bit of perspective a few years away, I'm like, what a life experience, like what a a whirlwind. But no, now looking back on it with a little bit of perspective a few years away,
I'm like, what a life experience,
like what a crazy whirlwind.
Crazy man.
I mean, before the movie was made,
I joked that all I wanted was to see El Cap on IMAX,
just because El Cap to me
is the most meaningful wall in the world.
It's like the most beautiful iconic face.
And to see it on the biggest possible screen,
I was like, that's cool.
Right.
And sure enough, we saw a shot on IMAX
and I got to see the movie on IMAX a couple of times.
And I was like, this is so awesome.
You know, it's just, it's cool.
I was like, oh, we did the wall justice.
We did, you know, you somebody justice.
I was like, oh, I'm pretty proud of that.
And you did the world of climbing justice.
I mean, it was so effective in introducing the magnitude
of what you do to the world
and what's so kind of cherished about the community.
Or maybe too effective
because then everyone that doesn't know anything
about climbing, they're like,
so do you use a rope?
And you're like, yeah, mostly use a rope.
It's just this one crazy movie like happened to,
because I know a lot of my serious climbing friends, their families watch the movie and then they're like, is that what you're like, yeah, mostly use a rope. It's just this one crazy movie like having to, cause I know a lot of my serious climbing friends,
you know, their families watch the movie
and then they're like, is that what you're doing?
And they're like, no, no, that's not what I'm doing.
Right.
But, and that's not even what I'm mostly doing,
you know, because I'm typically climbing with partners
and, you know, in training and just like climbing normally.
But obviously the documentary is focused entirely on this,
you know, this one sort of quixotic goal.
Yeah.
But, you know, even that, I mean,
they filmed for two years, you know,
the preparation training and like getting ready
for that climb.
And I did maybe a half dozen sort of cutting edge free solos
to build up to that, but still that's like seven days
of soloing in the two years that we were filming.
You know, so you watch the film and you're like,
he's a crazy soloist. And you're like, yeah, you know, for seven days out soloing in the two years that we were filming. You know, so you watch the film and you're like, he's a crazy soloist.
And you're like, yeah, you know,
for seven days out of two years,
like, you know, you gotta keep it in perspective.
Right.
So you go from being, you know,
this living a certain kind of lifestyle
to be the climber that you are.
And then you have this whirlwind crazy,
like Hollywood year where you're just like on planes
and, you know, going, I mean, your life is upside down.
So I would suspect that the pandemic for better or worse
has kind of suited you to like kind of get back
to just doing what you do and like being left alone.
So you can just climb and live your life.
Yeah, that's, it has, yeah.
I mean, so I live in Las Vegas
and through the whole pandemic, uh, even during like
lockdowns and shutdowns and everything, outdoor recreation was always explicitly allowed in the
state of Nevada. So, uh, combined with the fact that there's almost limitless rock around town,
it was always totally okay for us to go out and develop some new climbing areas and go climbing
and do, do things near the house. And so it was an incredible place to live. Um, yeah, I mean,
the whole pandemic for me
has just been sort of returning to roots,
where I have no obligations.
I go climb every day.
I explore new crags, develop new climbs.
I'm just like, oh, it's not that bad.
And I know that's an incredibly fortunate position to be in.
Though it's also, I mean, I do live there for a reason.
It's like, I moved there because it's the best rock
and because of that degree of access.
And you're married now.
Oh yeah, I'm married now.
Yeah, that also happened during pandemic.
That's the thing is, I mean,
personally it's been kind of a good year, you know?
But yeah, but it's like embarrassing to say so
because obviously there's been so much hardship
for so many other people,
but you know, sometimes things just work out in life
and you're like, nothing wrong with-
How are you settling in?
How's Sonny doing?
Yeah, no, Sonny's good.
What's going on?
Sonny's actually great.
Sonny is in a weird,
like I don't know if podcast listeners care
about this kind of thing,
but she's like climbing really hard right now,
which is like started this whole interesting
positive feedback thing where because she's really strong,
she's like more excited about it
because it's like more fun for her
which makes her more excited to train harder,
which is making her stronger.
She's like in this total positive phase of life right now
where she's like really cranking.
She's like climbing her hardest grades.
She's all fired up.
That's cool.
Yeah, we just trained in the gym last night
and she was like performing to a degree that I was like,
huh, it's like damn.
Cause I've been gone on expedition for a month
and she's been basically just like cranking
for the month I was gone.
And I came home and I was gone. Right.
And I came home and I'm like, whoa.
Was she even a climber when you guys first met?
She had barely started climbing when we first met.
Her sister was into it and her cousin to some extent,
basically like her family got her into it a tiny bit.
And then when we started dating,
obviously she started climbing more.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's good.
Yeah, now she's like pretty good.
She's super into it.
Yeah, it's just like anything,
you get good at it and you get strong
and then you're more emotionally connected to it.
Yeah, of course.
Yeah, and you're more excited.
And I think for her,
you know, I don't know for sure,
but I think as she started climbing,
there was a little more fear involved, you know,
it was like, cause climbing is kind of serious
and kind of hardcore.
And I think that because she was dating me,
she kind of like went into the deep end right away
and it was maybe exposed to like a little too much
of the like hardcore side of climbing straight away.
And I think now as she gets like stronger and more able
and can like do more as a climber,
it's all like much less scary.
Right.
And so it's like obviously more fun
when you're not scared at all.
It's like, she's doing it in reverse.
Like let's start with free selling El Cap
and we'll work our way backwards to the climbing gym.
Yeah, no, I mean, it kind of is.
Certainly psychologically I think that's, yeah.
That's funny.
And there's some degree of luck involved with it all too,
because like, because she's been connected with me for years
and I know like basically everybody
in the climbing community, over the last few years, there were sort of like a series
of unfortunate accidents where like people,
prominent climbers died in various ways.
And so, you know, all of those sorts of accidents
like affected her personally in a way that
if she just started climbing in the gym and not known me,
she wouldn't know any of the people
and it wouldn't have like touched her quite as much.
I don't know.
That's the kind of thing that you're like, well, you know, sorry to drag you into it. This is the world that you're
in though. Yeah. Yeah. Well, but there is a degree of luck to that because for several years, it
seemed like really bad where like there were just a bunch of high profile accidents that were kind
of terrible, but then you can go five years and have nobody that you know die. You know, it's,
I don't know. Yeah. But it's, it's one of the few sports where that, like what you just said would even come up. Yeah. Well, I don't know if you're road biking all the time. Yeah, but it's one of the few sports where that,
like what you just said would even come up.
Yeah, well, I don't know if you're road biking
all the time.
Yeah, that's true.
That's true.
There was just a terrible road biking thing in Vegas.
They like totally shook the cycle.
Oh wow, I didn't know that.
It was like a truck basically like drove over
like seven cyclists on a group ride
and killed six of them or something.
It was like crazy.
Oh man, I hate hearing that.
I know that's the thing is I'm always like, oh.
And you're out on your bike.
Like I've noticed that you've done like during the pandemic,
you kind of have created, we're gonna talk about Guyana,
but you've kind of created these endurance challenges
for yourself.
Like I'm gonna ride my bike a hundred miles
and then climb this mountain and ride home in the dark.
Yeah, that sums it up.
Well, it's, you know, because if you live in one place
and you don't have access to big mountains,
you can at least make the mountains that you do have
challenging in an appropriate way.
Yeah, I'm gonna show up exhausted and see how I do.
Well, I really love challenges that you can do from home
when you just bike out of your driveway
and then have this crazy epic day in the mountains,
then bike back to your home.
And, you know, to be able to do that in the suburbs
in Las Vegas is pretty awesome.
Yeah.
You know, you're like biking along surface streets,
just like, and especially in Vegas,
I actually ride on the sidewalk a lot,
which is kind of embarrassing,
but it's the best way to not get hit by a car.
I feel like a little kid or something,
who's like afraid to bike in the shoulder,
but there are big sections of Vegas
where it's definitely safer to ride the sidewalk.
And you're like, this is totally absurd.
But then three hours later,
you're grinding up this crazy hill, like a mountainside. And then a couple hours after that, you're like hiking through is totally absurd. But then three hours later, you're grinding up this crazy hill, like a mountainside.
And then a couple hours after that,
you're like hiking through the woods by yourself.
And you're just like, it's pretty amazing
to have that kind of access.
So let's talk about Guyana.
You were like off the grid for like a month.
Yeah. It's like this Nat Geo project. Can you talk about that or? I think like off the grid for like a month. Yeah.
It's like this Nat Geo project.
Can you talk about that or?
I think so.
I mean, who's gonna stop me?
I don't know.
I'm not.
Yeah, exactly.
No, no, I think it's all totally fair.
There's no network boss that's gonna call here
and tell you to shut up.
Yeah, no, I think it's all fine.
Yeah, so it was being filmed
for an episode of National Geographic Explorer,
which I think is a series.
It was being filmed by some friends of mine.
And it was a crazy trip, yeah.
So we flew into Guyana, into Georgetown.
And then the goal was to climb this Tapui,
which is like a big sandstone,
well, sort of quartzitic sandstone wall
that sticks out of the jungle.
And there are a bunch of Tapuis
that are kind of scattered across Venezuela
and Guyana and Brazil.
Actually, have you seen the movie Up?
The really like charming Disney movie,
Pixar movie, whatever,
with like floating balloon house, like over there.
Those are Tupuis.
So that's like what we were trying to climb.
Or if you've seen the new Point Break,
that was also filmed on Tupuis.
There's something like that in Avatar too.
Like these-
No, the ones in Avatar are modeled on this area in China.
That's like limestone.
It's like a different, it's caused in a different way.
Like it's a different geological process
that creates the Avatar mountains.
But yeah, it is kind of a similarly surreal
mountain landscape with dense jungle around it.
But anyway, so we were going to climb this wall
that hadn't been climbed.
And then we also had this sort of renowned biologist with us. It's got Bruce means who, um, had done
extensive work, uh, researching the, the frog species in the area. So he was going to sort of
finish this transect of, of the, the river basin that this wall, uh, formed the top of, and he was
basically, uh, researching different species of frog along the way.. And he was basically researching different species
of frog along the way.
And so it was kind of a combined trip
where we were gonna get him up the wall
so that he could find some of the frogs on the summit
and possibly on the cliff itself.
So it's like adventure meets science experiment.
Yeah, adventure meets science, yeah.
Which is sort of the perfect Nat Geo thing,
where it's like adventurous,
but there's a strong educational scientific component to it.
And why had those peaks not been climbed before?
So that particular peak hadn't been climbed,
I think largely because it's next to this mountain
called Roraima, which is, I forget what the name means,
but it's like source of waters or something.
Roraima is, it marks the boundary
between Venezuela, Guyana and Brazil.
So like this one point in the middle of this big mountain,
it's the highest mountain in the region.
And then from that summit,
the water that comes off the various sides,
like one aspect drains into the Amazon river,
one drains into the Orinoco and Venezuela, I think,
and the other into Guyana.
But so basically it's like,
imagine a big mountain that splits three countries
and splits the headwaters of three distinct basins.
So it's like this really famous sort of important peak.
And we were climbing the little peak next to it.
So you can kind of see why the little peak next to it
hadn't really had much action over the years.
Yeah, cause like people love Roraima
and Roraima has this huge history to it.
And like people were doing expeditions there in the 1800s.
Like people are all about Roraima. Nobody cares about Waiasapu, which is the little peak next to it. And like people were doing expeditions there in the 1800s. Like people are all about Roraima.
Nobody cares about Waiasapu,
which is the little peak next to it that we were doing.
And one of the things, I mean,
based on what you were sharing on social media
was just like how wet it was and just the condensation.
Yeah, I mean, technically we were there in the dry season,
but it rained something like eight hours a day.
It was like totally insane.
Every day we would joke, we're like,
what the heck kind of dry season is this?
It's like so crazy. But day we would joke, we're like, what the heck kind of dry season is this? It's like so crazy.
But technically was it a difficult climb?
Not. Or just hadn't been done.
It hadn't been done.
I mean, we didn't know obviously,
cause it's never been done.
So we climbed this sort of large overhanging wall.
You kind of have to only climb the overhangs there
because otherwise they're covered in vegetation and water,
which is cool.
It makes the style of the climbing really fun.
The rock is incredible.
Some of the best rock on earth.
It's like this amazing quartzite, really hard, really solid.
And then what we did for climbers is a six pitch 12B.
So it's like, you know, hard enough that it's,
like it's not easy by any means,
but it's not like cutting edge elite climbing either.
But for an expedition like that, it's pretty, it's solid.
You're like, well, we did something that we're proud of.
Well, you were there a month.
Did he find his frogs?
Did you get the frogs sorted out?
Yeah, so yeah.
So Bruce, so actually he probably doesn't want too much said
about it because I think he's gonna publish it all
in scientific journals and things.
But basically he left the jungle with many, many specimens.
Like he had glass jars full of specimens
and then he'll take them back to his university
and do a DNA sequencing on all of them
to see whether or not they're a new species,
whether or not they're related to existing things,
just basically to break it all down.
But he was personally focused on the frogs,
but he also took many other creepy crawlies of interest
because basically anything,
the thing with where we were
is that no one's ever been there before.
So there's been like no science done
because there's the rainforest approach
to get into the mountains,
but then between the rainforest and the actual mountain,
which is say three or 4,000 feet higher,
there's a big steep long hillside,
which is sort of the cloud forest,
which is like, if you imagine like stunted
kind of gnarly trees growing over the talus field,
like the rocks that would have been below the cliff,
it's like a whole different ecosystem.
And so no one had ever been through the cloud forest
at all in this area.
So potentially anything that he found there alive,
could be new to science.
So, I think he cast a pretty wide net
in terms of collecting specimens
because like anything could be new
and it could all contribute
to a scientist's understanding of that biome.
Wow.
So did you have to like bushwhack in
and were you camping out there the whole time?
Like how difficult was it to actually
just even get in there?
Dude, bushwhacking does not begin to describe the whole,
like yeah, the cloud forest,
we called it the slime forest because it's like,
it was really interesting.
I read a couple of books about sort of natural history
of Guyana while we were there,
because you know, it's the tropics,
so it's dark from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. every day.
And we were staying in hammocks the whole time.
There's nothing like, there's no flat ground.
Basically the whole trip, there's no flat ground.
So you're always just rigging your hammock between trees.
And so I was in my hammock for like 12 hours a day,
basically reading books and like, you know,
learning and stuff.
It was kind of fun.
Yeah.
But it was, it's just wild.
I mean, the cloud forest, there's no, there's no soil.
It's like, it rains so much that it washes away soil.
And this is particularly true on the summits of the Dapuis,
like on top of the wall that we were climbing.
It rains so much that any kind of earth gets washed away.
So you wind up with plants just stuck to the rock itself.
And then that means, because there's no soil,
it means that the plants all have to get their nutrients
in other ways.
So the summits of Dapuis have some of the highest rates
of carnivory in plants.
Like the plants all eat insects and things,
or they're like big, like teacup type things
where like things will fall into the water collecting
the bottom and drown and then rot.
And then the plant will like absorb the material basically.
It's just like this crazy landscape.
So like crazy plant kingdom out of like-
I'll show you some pictures.
Totally insane.
Wow.
Totally insane.
Yeah, and also the highest rates of endemism on earth,
like endemic species,
like species that are unique to that specific place,
because these dapuis are so isolated from the jungle below,
like because they're like a 2000 foot wall, let's say,
sticking up out of the jungle,
the summits are a totally different climate basically
than the area down below because it's higher,
it gets higher UV exposure, more rain, harsher conditions.
And then the summits have been separated
from the jungle below for like 40 million years
or something because of the erosion
and the way it winds up being an island.
So it means that all the species have been diverging
for 40 million years.
Right.
I don't know.
So it's like a, it's sort of like a last vestige
Galapagos type situation where it's a,
it's like a Petri dish for study.
No, exactly.
It's exactly like the Galapagos.
I was about to say,
welcome to the ritual science podcast.
I was like super, I got super into it on the trip.
I thought we were gonna talk about mindset.
Yeah, exactly, exactly.
Let's talk about biomes.
No, it was, it was a crazy trip.
I mean, a month is a lot.
I like, if you, I mean, you did that one climb,
but like, what were you doing for the rest of the month?
Dude, I read a lot of books.
And like, it's so grim being in the hammock for,
I mean, you know, it's one of the things you're like,
oh, you're in a hammock,
but like my hammock had a puddle in the bottom
for like the whole time we were at the wall basically,
because we're on the cloud forest.
You're just waiting, you're waiting for an opening? No time we were at the wall basically, because we're on the cloud forest. You're just waiting for an opening?
No, we were just toiling away, you know,
takes a long time to get to the wall.
And because we were filming, you know,
because it's a TV project, everything's a little bit slower
because obviously you have to wait for cameras
and there's just more equipment to move around.
And it's an incredibly difficult environment
to move equipment around in,
because you're like literally crawling through roots
and vines and things, you know,
that's why we call it the slime forest
because you're basically like climbing up this lattice
of roots and like shriveled little tree trunks.
But like I was saying,
because it's kind of a difficult environment,
it's not like the plants are like rooted in soil.
Most of the plants are growing on other plants.
So it's like, there'll be a tree trunk,
but the tree trunk is like covered in moss. And then there are little parasitic flowers growing out of the tree are growing on other plants. So it's like, there'll be a tree trunk, but the tree trunk is like covered in moss.
And then there are little parasitic flowers growing
out of the tree trunk as well.
And then, you know, it's like,
there's all kinds of like epiphytes,
like it's like plants growing on other plants.
And so it's just like this crazy dense, like wall of life,
you know, and you're just like crawling through it.
And it's like not an easy place to get around.
Yeah. You know, it's not like,
oh, I'm walking on a flat trail.
It's like so grim.
Are there predators or?
No, there aren't that many living things actually,
or aren't that many animals
because the whole place is like pretty tough actually.
We saw birds, we saw,
apparently we saw sloth droppings at the wall.
So there were sloths there, I guess.
But we didn't see that much.
Most things come out after dark,
like the frogs come out after dark.
We heard lots of things, I mean, tons of spiders and snakes
and all kinds of things like that,
but nothing like exciting when you think of the jungle
and you're like, oh, monkeys all over.
It's like just not that kind of scene
because we were kind of in like Alpine jungle,
you know, like up high towards the base of the walls.
It's all like a little bit more inhospitable
than like a tropical rainforest.
Well, as somebody who's so environmentally conscious
and environmentally minded,
like to visit a place like that,
where it's just bursting with life
in a way that you just don't see,
you know, that's almost impossible to see, right?
Like what a unique, cool experience.
When you come back from that, I mean,
I know you just got back, but that's got a, you know,
kind of land as a meaningful experience in terms of like
how you think about all the advocacy work
that you're doing with the foundation.
Like this is what's at stake, right?
Like they've, this protected place is what is, you know,
at risk.
Yeah, so you mentioned the, my foundation,
the Holland Foundation, actually this year we funded,
like last year, we funded this project called Car Solar,
which does solar powered boats in the Amazon.
I saw that.
In Ecuador, oh yeah, you saw that?
I read the annual report.
Oh, cool.
It's very professional.
I love how, speaking of professional,
I was like, man, you sure do your homework.
No, but so part of the reason I was excited
about this trip to Guyana and like climbing this wall
was because, you know,
we had just funded this project in the Amazon
and I was kind of like, oh, that's interesting.
And a big part of that project, Car Solar,
was that by keeping transportation costs on rivers low,
like basically by enabling boats
to navigate these rivers easily
without, you know, with low fuel costs, basically solar powered boats with an electric motor.
It prevents the need to cut roads through the jungle. And it was interesting because,
you know, we did exactly that. We basically flew to the most remote airstrip and then took a whole
day in a dugout canoe up this river,
which was totally insane.
It felt like an amusement park ride
because there's so many big logs that fall over the river
that you're constantly ducking and like, you know,
avoiding vines and each time you go,
your boat barely makes it under some log, you know,
all kinds of things like fall into your boat
and then they're like spiders all over the boat.
And like, you know, there's just so much life
and it's so crazy.
But, you know, I was like,
this is exactly the type of project
that we were supporting through the Haunted Foundation
is like making sure that this type of transit
is economical and functional
so that you don't have to cut roads
through places like this.
Because, you know, rivers really are the primary means
of transit through that whole, like, you know,
basically all of the upper half of South America.
You know, it's like, there's so much water.
I've never been somewhere where it rained so much.
There's just water everywhere.
The dry season though.
Dude, it's crazy, crazy.
Well, those boats are really cool.
Like they're like these low slung, super long canoes,
and they're just tiled with solar panels.
Yeah, solar on top.
And you were calling it like, what,
like the ghost boat or something like that?
Yeah, yeah. I forget. Cause there's silence, you know, like the ghost boat or something like that? Yeah, yeah, I forget.
Is there silence, you know,
there's no like motor that you would,
you know, or the smell of the gasoline
that you typically hear.
And more importantly,
you don't have to import the gasoline
or the diesel or whatever,
because in these super remote villages
to get gasoline in there to power your boat,
you know, first it has to fly in one or more small flights
and then take other boats, you know, first it has to fly in one or more small flights and then take other boats,
you know, before you even get to the villages at the very end of the rivers, basically,
you know, so it means that the cost of gas in those communities is incredibly high because
it's really hard to get gasoline there. So when you can do something like a solar powered boat,
it's just a lot more economical option. So how many boats now are outfitted with solar?
No, I actually don't know.
The Car Solar Project, I think they'd built a couple.
It was not quite a demonstration project,
but I think it was like, you know,
they were creating this new idea basically.
And I think, you know, moving forward,
they'll just keep building boats as, you know,
demand dictates.
Yeah.
Well, it's cool the work that you're doing
with the foundation.
I mean, the last time we talked was at that event
in Denver, that Rivian thing,
where it was kind of an announcement about the project
that you're doing in Puerto Rico,
creating this community organized and operated,
micro solar grid, using like batteries
from the Rivian trucks, right?
As like solar cells, which is pretty cool.
So let's talk about that a little bit.
Like what an amazing project this town, you know,
overridden by the hurricane has no power.
I mean, how did you even find like Arturo
and like the people to like make that happen?
Yeah, it was, that's one of the projects I'm most proud of
through the Haunted Foundation
because it's just such an interesting
and potentially transformative project.
But so just for context, it's in at Juntas in Puerto Rico,
which is kind of the center of Puerto Rico,
which is pretty hard hit by the hurricane.
And basically because it's sort of in the center
of the island, it was cut off,
transmission distribution lines for power
were sort of severed for a long time.
And so you wind up with the whole city
off the grid for like months after the hurricane.
And so sort of just as luck would have it,
that community has this community organization
called Casa Pueblo,
which has already done sort of environmentally focused
community organizing for many years,
like opposing a big mine in the middle of the country
and a couple other sort of like environmental advocacy type projects. And they've always embraced solar,
like Casa Pueblo's always had solar on their own facility. And so after the hurricane,
they became sort of this energy oasis in the middle of, you know, an otherwise blacked out town.
And so I think that's a big part of why there's such community buy-in in Adjuntas,
you know, because they had months where there's basically one structure in the whole city that
has power and it's Casa Pueblo and it's because they embrace solar. And so there's tremendous
community buy-in and combined with the fact that utility rates are really high, people are basically
paying way too much for their power anyway. So they're really open to other solutions. And so Casa Pueblo was looking to institute a micro grid
in the whole city center.
So basically all the main businesses downtown
could go onto a micro grid
and sort of separate from the utility.
And the executive director of the Honol Foundation
reached out to him because she heard about his work.
Yeah, Dori, Dori Trimble.
She's incredible. But so she reached out to Casa Pue heard about his work. Dory? Yeah, Dory, Dory Trimble. She's incredible.
But so she reached out to Casa Pueblo and was like,
oh, we'd love to help support this project.
And then we wound up wrangling Rivian,
which is a personal sponsor of mine,
the electric truck manufacturer.
They offered to supply the batteries for storage
for the project because half the micro grid
is being able to store the energy that you use.
And that's basically how it all came together.
Right. It's pretty cool.
Like what was really cool was hearing RJ,
the founder of Rivian talk about how they've created this battery technology
such that when the car has run its course and people are done with it or
whatever,
they can pull the battery out and then they can repurpose it for this very
thing. Right. To like power these grids.
Yeah, that's exactly. And that's an important part of the Rivian design because some electric
cars haven't really designed their batteries with the second life applications in mind.
They just make the cheapest battery they can. And then when it's done, it just kind of gets,
you know, shredded, like, you know, so I think that when you go into the design process with
the intention of using the batteries for something else useful after their life in the car, you know, so I think that when you go into the design process with the intention of using the batteries for something else useful
after their life in the car, you know, that's an important.
And I mean, really that should be a design principle
for all products, you know, thinking about what happens
to it when it no longer-
Especially when the mining, you know, the minerals
and every, I mean, it's so intensive now
and the environmental impact of that is so traumatic
for the planet.
But the thing that, I Totally. But the thing that I think my,
the thing that the biggest like personal thing
from the Adjuntas project,
I don't even know what you call it,
but like the thing that struck me the most
from the microgrid in Adjuntas is that
when you're in Adjuntas and you're in the city center,
it's like a classic sort of Plaza,
like what you think of, you know,
small town America or something with the city square, you know, it's like this bust sort of plaza, like what you think of, you know, small town America or something with a city square.
You know, it's like this bustling town center.
There are tons of cars, tons of people.
It's like, you know,
it's the center of this whole community.
And to power the whole thing,
it's something like eight Rivian truck batteries.
And so if you think of it as eight trucks,
are we gonna power that whole downtown?
When you're standing in the downtown
and you look at how many cars are around you,
there are like hundreds of cars,
like parked on both sides of the street,
bumper to bumper going around the square.
It's like crazy, it's super dense.
And you're like, man,
eight of those can power the whole thing.
It's like pretty striking actually,
because Rivian, like I think Amazon
has already pre-ordered 100,000 electric delivery vans
from Rivian, maybe even more now
because that was their initial thing.
Yeah, that was a big deal, right?
Like that's like a huge part of Rivian's business
is gonna be powering the Amazon fleet.
Totally, but so 100,000 electric delivery vans
and you think that, you know,
all of those will be, you know,
sort of phasing out in 10, 15 years.
And it only takes eight of them
to power this whole city center
in a way that's like transformative for the community.
You're like, when you multiply that out,
you're like, man, that's a lot of communities
that could be positively impacted in that way.
And so that's kind of the exciting opportunity
for the Honol Foundation, I think,
is to help establish sort of a pipeline
for Second Life batteries
and potentially implement more microgrids like this
around say the Caribbean or something.
Right.
I mean, I suppose we should say,
you created this foundation
well like three years ago or something like that?
No, no, I made it like in 2012 or something.
But it's just been a slow-
It's kind of hit this stride
in the last couple of years.
And a big part of that is hiring
the executive director, Dory,
who's actually very smart.
Because for many years,
it was just a way of me personally donating money.
And so I would just donate some money.
It'd be split into let's say two grants
to two different organizations and like, that's it.
And then in the last three or four years,
sort of since Free Solo and the whole crazy movie tour,
it's really become like much more of its own organization.
It started as your own personal effective altruism.
Yeah, no, I mean, exactly.
And then it's become institutionalized.
I think you guys, you donate like 1.3 million,
you had like 1.3 million in revenue.
Yeah, exactly.
You donated like 87%, like a really high percentage
of what came in, like went directly to projects.
And you've picked solar as the primary focus,
at least for now.
Yep.
So I have lots of things I wanna say about that,
but maybe explain as somebody who's very, you know,
environmentally literate and has spent a lot of time
studying environmentalism, thinking about it.
Why have you, like why is solar the primary focus right now?
So when I started the foundation, you know,
like you said, it was just my way of
sort of trying to affect, you know, effective altruism. So I was basically just looking for
any kind of, well, I guess, you know, starting in the beginning, I think that the most important
issue facing humanity is climate change or sort of environmental degradation more broadly, let's
say. And at the same time, I think there's no point in trying to solve environmental problems
that don't also improve quality of life
that like help the human populations in the area.
Because, you know, I've been on enough expeditions
to various parts of the world
where you see communities that, you know,
like they'll cut down the last tree, you know, on earth
if it means boiling water for their family
to like keep their kids safe and things like that.
And the solution can't be premised on us all being martyrs.
No, exactly.
That's the thing.
It's like, and anywhere you go in the world,
and it's funny because, you know,
we're talking about Guyana,
like we were just hanging with these,
all the Amerindian folks, like deep in the interior,
like basically, you know,
Native Americans for South America.
And, you know, a bunch of the villages,
they're living super traditional lifestyles.
It's like, you know,
basically just still practicing slash and burn agriculture, cultivating cassava. It's all, you know, as it has been for,
for thousands of years to some extent. And they're all like, we want direct TV, you know? And you're
like, you don't even have power. Like there's no grid, there's no, there's no cell service,
there's no connectivity, there's no transportation. You know, they have to take a boat for a day to
get to the closest town. You know, there's, it's like so disconnected and they're like,
when's the direct TV getting here? And you're like, I think it might be a minute, you know, there's like so disconnected and they're like, when's the direct TV getting here?
And you're like, I think it might be a minute, you know?
Like, you're like, first you gotta,
like, there are a lot of things,
like first you need a metal roof, you know?
Like you need to be able to keep stuff dry, you know?
Plumbing. Yeah, totally.
General electricity.
And so, you know, I've been on enough trips like that
where you realize that they're really humans all over earth.
You know, even if they're actively trying to preserve
their traditional lifestyle,
like they still want, you know, refrigeration.
They want access to medicine.
They want communication.
Like pretty much all humans want some degree
of material comfort in their life.
And that's only fair, you know?
It's like, you know, I wanna be relatively comfortable.
I want, you know, climate controlled,
at least to some extent, you know, I want like flooring. You know, it's like, I wanna not relatively comfortable. I want climate control, at least to some extent. I want like flooring.
It's like, I wanna not get parasites, things like that.
Like I want access to clean food and water.
And so, I think that when you focus on environmental issues,
it's important to also sort of focus on equity issues
of like, well, humans, like all humans
should be entitled to certain standards of living.
And so I think that if you're trying
to solve
environmental issues without also focusing on the equity side, like making sure that
all humans, you know, are equally able to take care of themselves, you know, basically it's just
not fair to not do those both at the same time. And so that sort of informed the initial projects
from the Honnold Foundation is like looking for environmental projects
that also improve standard of living,
that like helped folks.
And over the years,
we basically always wound up choosing solar projects
because they just often are the most elegant solutions
to those kinds of problems.
Where it's like good for the environment, good for people,
you know, clear win-win.
And then after several years
of supporting a bunch of different solar projects, we were like, we should just make this explicit. Cause at a certain point, you know, clear win-win. And then after several years of supporting a bunch of different solar projects,
we were like, we should just make this explicit.
Because at a certain point, you know,
you may as well focus on what you already know
and what you're kind of good at.
And I just think solar is such an obvious solution
to many human problems.
Yeah, I mean, the sun is shining down.
That's the thing.
Beating us with, you know, all kinds of power
that we can utilize if we can figure it out.
And what's problematic about that?
I mean, it seems like it's easier to implement
a solar solution in a developing country
than it is in the United States.
Like solar has been so problematic and tricky
to get implemented in houses across America.
This is like Bill Maher talks about all the time.
Like every show he has like a countdown.
He's been trying to get solar at his house for like,
you know, years and he's like, it's day 1000.
And there's all these like regulatory hurdle.
Like we've had a couple companies come out to our house
and do like an evaluation.
And there's always some reason why it was just
ridiculously expensive or way too
complicated. Yeah. I mean, cause I just feel like it should be easy. You know, it should, my point,
my, my larger point is like, why isn't it just like super easy to get this done? It is. I mean,
I don't know. I think a lot of that is personal experience and depending on your home. Cause you
know, I've put solar on a couple of, well, a bunch of homes now through the foundation and then,
but my own as well. And it's like super easy. Is it? Yeah. I mean, I need to talk to you about who I should be calling. Yeah, totally. I
mean, I've done, uh, most of that stuff remotely too, or like, uh, my home in suburban Las Vegas.
Uh, I was actually on a climbing trip in Wyoming at the time, living in the van. I basically made
some calls. People went to the house, they installed solar, turned it on, all worked fine.
I, I was like never even involved, you know, I just wired money online. It was like totally chill.
all worked fine. I was like never even involved. You know, I just wired money online. It was like totally chill. Wow. I think a lot of that just has to do with, you know, where you live and how
difficult the system is and things like that. But either way, I mean, in general, it's not
that hard in the US. And I mean, and you see that because rates of solar adoption are steadily
increasing. You know, it's all sort of exponential growth. It's like, it seems to be doing pretty
well. Right. All right. Well, I need to revisit this.
Yeah, you should. Cause also the cost of panels has been exponentially dropping to the point that
nowadays, you know, the panels themselves aren't even the most expensive part of the install
anymore. It's like the actual labor and like the, the racking, you know, the, like the other things,
like everything else that goes into installation. Right, right. So what are the projects that you wanna be,
you know, working on?
Like what's the next, you know,
level of what you're trying to accomplish?
Well, so we actually just closed our latest open call
for what we call the core fund grants,
which are sort of like the interesting,
like we were talking about Car Solar,
the Ecuadorian Amazon solar boat project.
Things like that come through the core fund,
which are basically like grants around the world for interesting solar projects.
So the latest round, you know, we'll probably fund, you know,
10-ish projects like that.
But we got, well, we got hundreds of applications,
and of those we probably had about 50 or 60 that are legitimately good applications,
but we can only fund the top 10 or so.
So really, there's tons of incredible ideas and good projects out there.
It's just a matter of having enough money to actually implement them all.
Which, as you said, we gave away over a million dollars this year, which for me personally counts as tremendous success.
Because when I started the foundation, it was me donating 50 K a year of just my own money.
So to see, you know, 20 times the impact as when I started, I'm like, Oh,
that's awesome to do 20 times more work. That's great. Right.
But then also knowing that we could have a $10 million budget and still,
I think 10 probably actually would pretty much fill all the things that we're
seeing right now. But, but you know,
there's like hundreds of millions of dollars
worth of good projects out there that could be done.
Right.
There are individual changes that we can all make
to live more sustainably.
And then there are kind of institutional social changes
that we need to see move forward
in order to really kind of affect the problem,
the existential crisis that we're facing.
And those personal changes can be everything
from composting to your diet
and where you buy your clothes and all that kind of thing.
One of the things that you said in some article
or someplace you wrote this, I believe,
that I hadn't really thought a lot about,
but it's so obvious, which is like, where are you banking?
Right?
Yeah, I wrote an op-ed about that.
Yeah, like talk a little bit about that.
Yeah, actually I'll talk about that,
but then I also have some things to say
about personal choice like that also,
because so banking is pretty much the number one thing
that you can do for personal impact,
which is funny because it's so much less satisfying
than like changing your diet, let's say,
because it's less obvious.
But the thing is wherever you bank,
they're using your money the whole time
that it sits in whatever account,
like you put it into an account
and then they're investing it in things,
they're spending it, they're like using it basically.
And so, a famous example is like Wells Fargo
with Dakota access pipeline or something.
But in general, every bank,
every major bank in America is supporting both sides of the political aisle. They're making political donations. They're investing in fossil fuels. Basically, if you're using a mainstream big bank, it for sure is doing stuff that you personally wouldn't do.
it's like your bank is for sure doing stuff that you wouldn't want it to do.
And so, the solution there is to bank with nonprofit
credit unions, things like that,
like local banks, smaller scale banks,
like just bank with a bank that's not gonna be investing
in like fossil fuel infrastructure and things like that,
that you might not personally support.
Right.
Is there a resource where you can go online
and get like somebody who's done like a consumer reports on this resource where you can go online and get like somebody
who's done like a consumer reports on this, where there's like a house of like,
seeing what all the banks are doing? Yeah, I'm sure there must be. Yeah, there must be.
So my sister actually many years ago, before I started my foundation, before I started any of
this stuff, um, she gave me this book called the better world shopping guide, which I think is out
of print now, but at the time was this incredible resource where for any consumer product, including banking and things
like that, you could flip through and basically see all brands listed from A to F. And it was,
uh, and it was eyeopening for me at the time because I realized I could go to the grocery
store, look at breads and see two different breads on the shelf, same price point, same basic quality,
except one, you know, is basically actively supporting the type of world that I want to live in, you know, like paying its
employees good living wages and like, you know, providing maternity leave and things like that.
And the other is like ruthlessly exploiting its workers and, you know, degrading the earth.
And it's the exact same product. And you're kind of like, well, obviously I should support the one
that, you know, makes for a better world. And so, yeah, the better world shopping guide, my, my, my sister,
she signed it for me and said, uh, for Alex, in case you ever start giving a shit, love Stacia.
Like it was a pretty classic, you know, because, uh, especially when I was younger, I was just all
a little more like hard line. You know, I was just so focused on climbing. Well, but that's,
that's the interesting thing about like the long gradual, you know, awakening, I was just so focused on climbing. Yeah, look at you now. Totally. We're all about it. Well, but that's the interesting thing
about like the long gradual, you know, awakening.
Like you just learn more
and you start to care more about it.
And then, you know, you have no sort of virtuous cycle.
Well, that keys into something
I think you wanted to talk about, which is like this personal choice
thing. Yeah. So it's funny because I've sort of come full circle on this a little bit because
obviously I care a lot about personal choices. I went vegetarian because, you know, or like sort
of aspirationally vegan basically, partially because I'm lactose intolerant, partially because,
you know, basically just it's a much lower impact for diet.
I changed my banking.
I've changed all kinds of lifestyle things in an effort to minimize my personal impact on earth.
And even starting the Hanwha Foundation
was to some extent to know that I personally
was doing as much good as harm.
Because just by living and traveling to climb and all that,
like obviously I'm having a negative impact on the world.
And so I'd like to think that I'm doing as much good as, as harm. Um, but now I'm sort
of coming back around to where I feel like the whole, you know, onus on personal choice has been,
been sort of foisted upon us by outside forces. You know, it's like basically industry telling us
like, you should think about your choices rather than have the industry regulated in a way that's
appropriate, you know, because even if, and actually COVID has been an interesting measure think about your choices rather than have the industry regulated in a way that's appropriate.
You know, because even if, and actually COVID has been an interesting measure of this because even with travel lockdowns for the whole world for the last year, you know, global emissions
have only dropped, you know, seven or 10% or something like 7%. I mean, that's still barely
in line with Paris Accord type things. And so if you think that all of human society
has fundamentally changed for the last year
and we're still barely hitting the numbers
that we pledged to meet
for the latest round of climate accord negotiations,
you're kind of like, that's crazy.
I mean, it just shows the scale of real change
that has to happen.
And that kind of thing only happens with policy
because it's one thing for individuals
to choose the right product all the time policy because it's one thing for individuals
to like choose the right product all the time.
But it's another thing to just make sure
that all the products have to be made well to begin with.
Yeah. You know what I mean?
Like limiting pollution in different ways.
But policy is also a reflection of popular sentiment,
right?
Like if people are thinking harder
about their personal choices
and that becomes more important,
then culture reflects
that and society become, or policy becomes a downstream kind of reflection of that.
Like you need both. Yeah. Yeah. You do need both, but it's basically like, that's like a chicken
and the egg sort of thing. And I'm sort of arguing that I think that it's probably easier to lead
with policy changes. You know, like in the U S you know, the adoption of electric cars and things
like that, and like basically public transit and changing transportation models, you know,
transit accounts for like a third of our carbon emissions. And so, you know, it's like an area
ripe for change. An easy way would just be to basically put a tax on gasoline or something
like that, basically on carbon emissions. And that would drive all kinds of changes in consumer behavior,
rather than just hoping that individuals will go out
and like buy a Prius or like buy a Rivian or whatever.
It's like.
It's tricky though, man,
when you have legislators who are beholden
to their constituents and the lobbyists that are,
well-funded to push a certain agenda on behalf of a sector of the economy.
And that's why these things move at a glacial pace.
And I feel like voter pressure
on our legislators is so important.
And that's why you do need to kind of take
these personal choices to heart and make them known
so that there is that pressure.
Yeah, I agree with that.
But I know what you're saying.
I mean, it's like, you can't move the needle on like,
I'm gonna go vegan and this is gonna solve the problem.
Yeah, exactly, exactly.
Yeah, I mean, you going vegan is a good step for sure,
but it's like, farmers in Brazil will still be
cut in the Amazon.
But there's a symbolic power.
Like when you as somebody who so many people look up to
and you have a lot of people that follow your lead
and all of that,
like there's meaning in like these choices
that you're making
because there's a downstream impact
on how everyone else is gonna think about those choices.
A little bit, but I still think that-
I know you get a lot of shit though.
Yeah, well, that's whatever.
I mean, the thing is you get a lot of shit no matter what,
so it doesn't totally matter.
And while we're talking about getting a lot of shit,
it's not like I'm just like advocating for gas tax
because I know that kind of thing is super nuanced
because in a lot of ways that's regressive
because it affects lower income folks way more than hiring.
And that's not totally fair.
So it has to be very finely executed.
You know, it's like, yeah, I get all that.
I'm just saying that I think that starting
from the policy side can potentially have bigger impacts
in the world.
You know, individual choice is great for individuals
that have the bandwidth to think about it.
You know what I mean?
And like, I have plenty of free time.
I can read books about the environment and think about it.
But like the vast majority of Americans,
if you're working a minimum wage job,
you are not going home and reading books
about the environment to think about minimizing your footprint.
You're struggling.
It's hard.
Basically, so I think that putting the responsibility
on the individual is sort of,
most individuals are never gonna have the time
to think about it.
They don't have the luxury to reflect on that.
Of course, of course.
And it's not, it shouldn't be their responsibility
when they're just trying to survive, of course.
Yeah, like in an ideal world,
when you go to a store or something,
every product would be justly made, you know,
like fairly manufactured with no pollution
and like no externalized costs and all that.
And that's kind of the world that I think
most of us would like to live in.
You know, like you would like to think that anything you buy
will not be, you know, exploiting child labor
in other parts of the world or something like that.
It is like an arms race though,
because I do feel like we're moving into an economic culture
in which people really do care about those kinds of things.
And it's incumbent upon these corporations
to be transparent about their supply chain and how they treat their workers and the like.
And the average consumer,
if given the opportunity to think about it for a minute
is gonna make the better choice.
Like we're good people and we all want a better world.
But these changes are glacial,
you know, they're so, right?
And we're running out of time.
Yeah, totally.
So short of massive sweeping policy change,
like you and as somebody who has spent,
I know this past year you've gone down the rabbit hole
on a lot of this stuff.
Are you optimistic?
Like where's your head at in terms of like,
how are we doing?
I mean, I'm personally always pretty optimistic.
And even I think optimism and pessimism aside, I think that a realistic assessment of global climate,
basically a realistic assessment is that my personal lifestyle will probably be fine regardless.
You know what I mean?
Like I'm lucky enough that I go climbing all the time.
And, you know, if like climate impacts affect me,
I can move to other places.
And so, I don't know, I mean, that's kind of the,
and that's the real thing about climate change
is that for most of us,
like it's not gonna affect us personally.
You know what I mean?
Like anyone listening to this podcast basically
is comfortable enough that they're not gonna be the ones
that suffer from the effects of climate change. It's like, subsistence farmers in sub-Saharan Africa,
you know, that have crushing drought and then have crop failures and can't feed their families.
You know what I mean? But like, that's so far removed from our reality that it's easy to be
like, Oh, you know, we don't even know what that is. So we're not stressed about it. I don't know.
So, I mean, yeah, I'm optimistic that humanity
can sort of confront and solve some of these problems.
But even if we do move too slowly
and it doesn't really work out,
I'm also sort of recognize the fact that,
like realistically my life will probably play out
along a certain path regardless.
Yeah.
Which is incredibly unfair,
which is a big part of why I started the Haunted Foundation
and things like that, because it's like-
Are you, do you think you guys are gonna have kids?
Yeah, yeah.
I think so.
That changes like how you see all this stuff.
I am, you mean, cause you worry about the world
that kids are running up to?
Right, well you just start thinking, yeah,
you just, your perspective is tweaked.
Yeah.
But the thing is like, you know,
your lane is solar right now,
but that's an example of technology that currently exists
to solve these problems.
Like most of these problems,
we have the ability to solve now.
It's really about, it's about political will.
Like if you read Drawdown and it's like,
here's all the things, you know,
if we just do all these things, we're good.
And it's like, why can't we just do them?
No, that's exactly, I know. And that's like probably the most frustrating thing about reading environmental books. And it's like, why can't we just do them? No, that's exactly. I know.
And that's like probably the most frustrating thing
about reading environmental books is that you're like,
oh, all the solutions are here.
It's like a buffet of solutions.
Like Drawdown is a literal buffet of solutions.
Yeah, there's so many.
Let's just do five of these.
Totally, totally.
And so many of them are just such obvious.
And that's my thing with solar
is there's like an obvious win-win.
You're like, this is such a clear solution
to certain problems.
And like in Drawdown, one of the biggest climate impacts
we can have is women's education around the world.
And you're like, well, that seems like an obvious thing,
regardless, like climate aside,
even if you don't believe in climate change,
you should definitely believe in educating women.
That's like basic fairness.
Yeah.
We're both like, oh, sorry.
I know, well, you know, it is frustrating
because there is a ticking clock here.
And you say like, yeah,
your lifestyle probably won't be that changed.
But, you know, if you live in Miami
or you live in, you know,
like the low lying areas of, you know, Southeast Asia,
like this is a very real threat to you.
Yeah, even last year in California,
the wildfire season was so crazy because of drought
that, and I think this kind of, I don't know,
like I had an experience,
my family has a place in Tahoe that I like grew up going
to this like cabin in Tahoe.
And last summer the wildfire smoke was so thick
across the lake that you couldn't see the other side of Lake Tahoe and last summer the wildfire smoke was so thick across the lake that you couldn't see
the other side of Lake Tahoe. And, uh, at one point I saw this like party boat coming into shore
that like a big, like tug almost like tons of people on it, like partying on the boat. Like,
I don't really know what was going on, but I sort of jokingly was like, Oh look, it's climate
refugees, like escaping because it's like, it looks like the ocean and it looks like a barge,
you know? And it's like the kind of scene that you expect to see
in Southern Europe,
like folks like fleeing North Africa or something.
Yeah, exactly.
Like fleeing to Italy.
And I was kind of like, it's kind of tongue in cheek,
but then I was like, this is kind of true.
Cause all these folks in California-
The sky's on fire.
Yeah, the sky's on fire
and people were bailing out of the Bay area
to try to come to the mountains,
but then the mountains are on fire,
cause the Bay area was like crazy fire
this year too.
And, you know, I don't know if this will wind up
mattering in the world,
but it is interesting when effects of climate change
start to be felt closer to home.
You know, it's like when you can't spend a summer
in California, people are like, what the heck?
Like, that's crazy.
You know, especially, you know, I spent my whole life spending summers in California and kind of like, what the heck? Like, that's crazy. Especially, I spent my whole life spending summers
in California and kind of like, that's a first,
that's kind of unprecedented.
Yeah, I've lived here for, I don't know, 25 years
and the fire season when we had the big fires down here
and had to get evacuated, it was bananas.
Yeah, it's crazy.
It's crazy.
I've gone through fires, plenty of fire seasons.
That was completely another animal altogether.
Especially when you consider that,
I mean, fires are a natural part of the life cycle,
the forest, it's like when you're in the Sierra Nevada,
you're like, yeah, this is natural and it should be fine.
And yet, the sky is blacked out for almost a month
in Tahoe this summer, it was totally insane.
And you're like, that's not natural.
Like that's totally, that's craziness.
A different thing.
Yeah.
Swishing gears a little bit.
Yeah, totally.
From an environmental apocalyptic.
How much more can we dig into this?
I could talk about it all day.
Yeah, no, I could too.
It's like super depressing, but also super important.
You're like, this is probably the most important. We need to be talking about it. Yeah, like I could too. It's like super depressing, but also, you know, super important. You're like, this is probably the most important.
We need to be talking about it.
Yeah, exactly.
And if that just moves the needle with one person,
that's a win, you know, what else are we doing here?
Like what's the point of doing this stuff?
We talk about climbing.
You are in a unique situation though,
because you did this crazy climb, like, you know,
how do you, and your life is kind of devoted to iterative,
you know, difficulty, like continuing to put yourself
in difficult situations and master those, but you know,
it's hard to trump free-selling El Capso.
Like, you know, what are you gonna do?
Like, how do you find, like, how do you shift gears
and find meaning in a different way
in this thing that you do?
I mean, you've kind of already answered it.
You're doing all these other things.
You've devoted your life to these environmental causes.
Like you live a very big life that is providing meaning,
not just for yourself, but for a lot of people.
But it is, you know, just from the pure like athlete mindset,
like how do you get jacked up about like another adventure when you've climbed
a mountain, you know, you literally climbed the mountain. Yeah, no, that's, that's a totally fair
question. And I think it's taken, I mean, uh, you know, I freestyle at all cap, I think in 2017 and
the tour was in 2018. And so it's kind of taken me a year and a half, but, um, but really the
season is sort of the beginning of like a real fire or like real hunger for, for challenging
things again. And so, um, I mean, you're right that nothing will ever trump El Cap, like nothing,
nothing will be better than, than El Cap, but, um, you know, but there's still some other things
that are pretty cool that I'm excited about. And the world's a big place. Yeah, exactly. And,
and actually, um, a couple of things I'm excited about right now are just at home, like projects
in Red Rock, uh, which is the climbing area outside of Las Vegas. And, you know, I mean,
sometimes you just get inspired by certain things and you're like, this seems crazy and really hard,
but then you're like, I think I could do it. And then you're like, can I do it? And then you have
to find out if you can do it. And then, and really that's like the whole joy of the process is the
finding out like, well, can I do it? Like, is it crazy? Let's find out.
Right.
Am I right in thinking that before COVID hit,
you were thinking of doing the seven summits?
Yeah, though that, I mean,
I still would like to in my life.
That's not like a,
that's not really like a big climbing goal.
Right, I mean, that's a whole different kind of thing.
Yeah, I mean, for me that stems large,
like I don't know if you ever read the book,
"'The Seven Summmits by Dick Bass.
He was the first person.
He was, he's kind of a non-climber.
He owned Snowbird back in the day.
He's like a businessman.
I think he may have been oil or something,
but I think he was like a Texas businessman or something,
but he just got this like wild idea
that he wanted to climb the highest points on earth.
And so he was guided on him.
And this is like before it was a thing and people did it.
Anyway, it's a great book. It's kind of like classic adventure writing. And, you know, I read that many, many years ago And so he was guided on him and this is like before it was the thing and people did it anyway
It's a great book. It's kind of like classic adventure writing and you know
I read that many many years ago and was like that's awesome
like you know
I'd like to do that in my life and now it's a little bit weird because
Seven summons is so commercialized that yeah real climbers kind of thumb their nose at it like that's not cool
Mm-hmm. I'm like I still kind of want to you know, yeah, but um, but that But that's not a, like a rad climbing project.
That's just like a personal,
I'd love to do that in my life,
but we'll see how it plays out, you know?
Yeah, I mean, for what you do
to not like climb the seven tallest mountains,
like why wouldn't you do that?
Yeah, I've climbed a lot of other mountains.
Yeah.
But this is not a-
What do you think when you see, you know,
remember when those images were coming through from Everest and it was like the, you know, like there were just so many people up there and it's like a traffic jam and.
Yeah, yeah, it's crazy.
No, I find that somewhat distasteful, you know, I'm just like, oh, basically that's just not the experience that I'm seeking in the mountains.
And especially on Everest in particular, their ropes going the whole way up.
So everyone's just like clipped into a rope the whole way.
And somebody else has put those ropes up for them.
And so, you know, I personally have sort of mixed feelings about like outsourcing the risk and the challenge of climbing.
Like I don't want to pay somebody else to put the rope up for me.
You know, it's like if I can't put the rope up myself, I probably shouldn't be climbing it.
You know, and not to say that that's a standard that all people should hold,
because I'm sure,
and I think climbing Everest
is really, really hard regardless.
I think that even if you are just following the rope
that somebody put, it's still quite difficult.
It's a challenging physical experience.
But I don't know, I just feel like if I wanna go up there,
I wanna like actually climb something.
Are you gonna climb mountains?
I don't think so.
Why not?
I don't think that's my thing, man.
But you could.
It doesn't, I don't, it doesn't, I mean, I could,
but I don't feel the pull.
I don't feel like the allure.
You don't care about getting on top of things?
It doesn't like, that's not my thing.
Like I wanna go like in the ocean and swim down.
Oh, that's not my thing.
Or swim across.
But I don't think about going up that much. It's different, you know. That's not my thing. Or swim across. But I don't think about going up that much.
It's different, you know.
I went climbing a couple of times with some friends
and I was like, I don't think this is for me.
That's fair. It was weird.
But mountaineering though might be a,
cause that's basically like ultra running,
like trudging up hills as long as you can.
I like the idea of all these like FTKs that these guys,
you know, like Killian's running up these mountains
and seeing how fast he can do it.
Like, I just like the idea of like creating
your own adventure, like you're doing in Red Rock.
Like, here's this thing, we have all of this here.
Like we don't need some, you know, like race or event.
Like let's just figure it out.
One of the things I'm playing with this season
is a traverse of the entire range in Red Rock,
which is like this actually as the crow flies,
it's probably only like 10 or 15 miles like linearly,
but you're going up and over all these different peaks.
And so I haven't quite pieced it all together yet
cause it's incredibly complicated root finding and climbing
and I'm climbing classic climbing routes
and then down soloing other climbing routes
and like going up and down to tag the different summits,
but also do a bunch of good climbs.
But it's coming in at like 25,000 feet of vertical
or something.
Wow.
It's like a really, really big traverse.
And we'll see if I manage to do it
and how exactly it shapes up.
And I'm like, what an adventure,
to like leave your house and just climb this entire skyline
that you can see from anywhere in town.
It's similar to the thing you did with Tommy Caldwell.
Exactly.
Like 17 peaks or something like that
and like 20 K of vert.
Something like that.
Yeah, actually it was funny because with these really long
and technical rock climbing traverses,
it's actually hard to quantify the vert and like the numbers
because a GPS doesn't really work
when you're climbing vertical routes.
You know, like when you're doing sheer vertical walls,
your GPS will like ping you all over the place.
So it like messes up all the numbers.
So I don't know, have you had that experience?
Like if you go up really steep hills with GPS.
I don't go up hills that steep,
steep enough to do that.
Like, because basically GPS doesn't really work
on a vertical plan.
Right.
You know, it's like more for like a horizontal.
But, and then the thing I did with Tommy last summer
in Rocky Mountain National Park
wound up taking us like 36 hours.
So all of our devices died anyway,
because your batteries don't last that long
if they're tracking GPS.
Wasn't there like a, you missed a drop off
or somebody, something happened
and you had like no lights at night and stuff.
Yeah, we had, well, more importantly, we had no pants.
So we were like at 13,000 feet in running shorts all night. And it was a, it was pretty character building. Yeah. We had, well, more importantly, we had no pants. So we were like at 13,000 feet and running shorts all night. And it was, uh, it was pretty character building. Yeah.
What is Tommy been up to? He's like your main, he's like your main guy, right? Like he's like
your go-to adventure. He's one of my best adventure partners for sure. Um, actually I just
climbed with him last week. Like the day I got home from, from this expedition Guyana, uh, Tommy
just happened to be in Las Vegas climbing something.
So we managed to sneak out for a day.
But he's been doing some home repair.
He's like doing some,
he's doing a plumbing project on his house.
Hasn't been climbing that much this winter.
But he's always, he's just such an incredible climber
that even relatively off the couch,
he's just like, he's done his whole life.
And are you doing, back to the environmental stuff,
are you doing another podcast like with the Washington Post?
With that, I'm not sure.
There's nothing official that I might be.
And I might be, yeah, basically interviewing
environmental leaders or sort of scientists
about climate change, I think.
Which if it happens, I'd be pretty excited about,
but honestly sort of intimidated because, you know,
as you know, most podcasting is just chit-chatting
with people.
You rarely have to know a subject super well.
But the thing is, you don't have to hold yourself out.
Like they'll be so excited to talk to you
and they know that you're not, you know, a PhD
in whatever it is that they are.
And so they'll explain it to you.
Yeah, but don't you feel like-
And you're trying to be a cipher
for the audience anyway. That's true.
But you still feel like you should have enough
of an understanding to at least ask interesting questions.
Yeah, but you read books, you'll be fine.
Yeah, I'll read those.
We'll see if that, I don't know.
Speaking of that, like on this deep dive
that you did this past year,
like what have you learned that you didn't know
like before COVID when it comes to the environmental stuff?
I don't know.
That's an interesting question.
I mean, so on this trip in Guyana,
I just finished this book, Energy and Civilization.
This like baklava smells like this super dense tome
about sort of the progression of different energy systems
in human civilization.
And it was interesting.
I mean, I think that book gave me an appreciation
of how long and slowly the transitions between energy systems are.
Basically, going from human power to the introduction of the steam engine to coal fired to eventually oil, like full-on fossil fuels.
It's just like each transition takes quite a long time.
And it's given me an interesting perspective, I guess, on like our current transition to
renewables and what, you know, what that will take. And one of the interesting things I got
from the book was that, you know, every transition has been powered by the previous fuel, let's say,
you know, so like the transition to coal use is like, you know,
powered by steam engines and whatever else.
You're reliant on the-
Yeah, the previous energy model.
And which is funny because that's a common criticism
of renewables is like, oh, well, it's, you know,
all based on fossil fuels.
And you're kind of like, well, yeah,
because any transition is going to be based
on the previous system, which I found slightly heartening in a way, because I've always found it like, you know, it's a little bit of a bummer that like to build, you know, wind turbines, let's say by fossil fuels. And so you're kind of like, is it even worth building wind turbines if all the raw materials behind it are being mined
and milled through fossil fuel extraction?
You're like, is that worth it?
You're kind of like, yeah.
I mean, basically-
It's like a necessary evil of iterating to the next thing.
I mean, that's a big thing with the electric cars, right?
Like who's powering the Tesla grid?
Like what's the carbon footprint of that?
Like it's massive. Though that though, I mean, when you's the carbon footprint of that? Like it's massive.
Though that though, I mean, when you do the math on it,
even if it's all powered by coal,
it's still better than an internal combustion engine car.
So, it's like, yeah,
it's still a step in the right direction.
But I think the takeaway with all those,
sort of the messy technical questions of energy transitions,
like you still have to take these small steps
in a different direction
if you're ever gonna get anywhere.
Yeah.
You know, it's like, if you're hoping to decarbonize a grid
or like to change energy systems,
it's like, you have to start taking some steps,
you know, even if they're not perfect,
even if it's not a hundred percent, you know, correct.
Like you have to at least move in a direction.
And an appreciation that these things take time.
Yeah, no, totally.
I mean, it's not that removed
from like athletic performance.
It's like, if you wanna get better at something,
you have to just put in the days,
like grinding away, training.
It's like, some days you suck
and you just keep grinding away at it.
And eventually, hopefully, eventually you do something
that's actually meaningful.
Have you gotten your Rivian truck yet?
No, no.
When is he gonna start shipping those things?
In June, I think.
Yeah.
I just got an email that was like,
configure your pre-order, blah, blah, blah.
I figured it's gotta be getting close
because RJ started posting a lot,
like taking the trucks out and like, yeah.
And I was like, oh, they must be getting ready.
Cause like it's been underground for a long time.
No, it's happening.
They're, yeah, I just configured my pre-order.
Oh, you did? Yeah. It's pretty cool what they've time. No, it's happening. Yeah, I just configured my pre-order. Oh, you did?
Yeah.
It's pretty cool what they've done.
So they took over like an old, I don't know,
Nissan factory or something like that,
like outside of Chicago and like just retrofitted
the whole thing and made it like sustainable
and brought in like amazing chefs
and like used materials from the area
to like recyclable materials
and like wood that was like in the vicinity
to build the whole place out.
Totally.
And have you been to the factory?
I haven't been in the manufacturing plant.
I've been to the headquarters,
which is outside of Detroit,
sort of classic auto manufacturer, you know.
But no, it's super, I mean, when I went to the headquarters
for the company outside Detroit,
it was like full on vision of futurist.
It's like kind of what you would expect
from like a new technological startup sort of thing.
I was like blown away.
I had this VR experience there where I was like in a room
and I put on like a VR headset
and then basically like sampled an assortment
of their like futuristic ideas, you know, like concept vehicles,
but you could like walk around the space with a VR headset
and like interact with their concept vehicles.
And I was like, totally blew my mind.
I was like, is this Star Trek?
I was like, where am I?
And you know, and classic, like nice new facility with,
you know, it's like just clean and well lit and like classy
with like electric trucks all over.
And I was like, this is so.
Right, like not what you think of Detroit
being in the auto industry.
No, I was like, this is the future for sure.
Yeah, that's cool.
Have you done any VR stuff around climbing?
Actually, I'm supposed to be doing a VR project this year,
like filming in the next month
and then something in Europe.
That's cool.
Yeah, I think it actually has the potential
to be really cool, but we'll see.
Yeah, I had this guy, Michael Muller in here,
who's a big photographer.
With the shark stuff.
Yeah, so he showed me his stuff.
Yes, it's insane.
Yeah, totally blows your mind.
Yeah, he actually, he showed me the same thing
and you put on, you're like, oh, oh, it's like pretty mega.
Right, and they're using it for like PTSD in people.
Like not just like an experience,
but like also, no, like help with people's fear responses.
Yeah, yeah.
It's pretty interesting.
And so I was just imagining like that
in the climbing context,
like somebody who's afraid of heights
or like that's their big thing.
I think if someone's afraid of heights,
they probably should not watch my VR experience. I think it might be a bit much.
I know.
Yeah.
But, you know, listen, to have that,
like somebody who's not able to ever have that kind of,
somebody who's in a wheelchair,
there's never gonna be able to have that experience
to be able to like feel what that feels like.
Or even just a gym climber,
who's just realistically never gonna go
to some of these places.
Like the guy that I'm working with on the VR experience, um, shot an Everest VR piece,
like a three episode, uh, you know, basically he goes to the summit of Mount Everest and VR.
And I found it incredibly immersive and rich in a way that I did not expect because, you know,
I've read tons of books about Everest over the years and then to actually
be in it in VR and to be able to look around and like interact with the landscape I was like this
is so much better than all the books I've read I was like this is crazy that's the future I mean
those experiences are going to be ubiquitous in the next five or ten years yeah I mean like wearing
noise cancelling headphones with a good headset with like high res really good uh you know not
too like jerky and I mean like obviously the technical side of it
will only improve.
Yeah.
And you're just like, it's just so, it's so real.
It's getting there.
It's like, it's still not quite there,
but I feel like they're right on the precipice
of it just being.
Yeah, I've always felt like it wasn't quite there.
And then I watched the VR experience
and I was like, this is pretty there.
Yeah.
And that's kind of what inspired me
to feel like it was worth shooting a VR piece.
So I was like, even if the current headsets aren't perfect,
someone will be able to use that footage
on better models soon.
And it's all, it's pretty incredible.
Yeah, it's cool.
So when you do that then, like if you,
so if you're gonna produce that,
you gotta get up on some wall
and then you have like some kind of headset with
cameras all around it like how do they do that it's the opposite so the idea is that the subject
like climbs through the frame so the camera is fixed in a certain place and it's like full 360
camera you know crazy vr setup and then the climber climbs through the the frame i got it um
and that's to apparently to minimize motion sickness because if the subject itself is the VR focus,
like basically if you're wearing a VR headset
and everything's moving around you,
you get incredibly motion sick.
But if when you're wearing the headset,
you feel like you're in a stable place
and you're able to control the vision and like look around
and then you can just see someone doing an action
in your frame, then it makes you way less sick.
I see.
But how would they do that on a big wall?
Like, I guess-
It's hard work.
Yeah, I would imagine.
You have to like rig a separate rappel line,
you know, near the route, fix the camera to the wall,
like near the climbing route,
and then sort of center the camera
so that you're looking at the climber
as the climber goes up the wall.
But the camera remains static?
Yeah, but the camera remains static.
It seems like they could do some stuff with drones too.
No, no, it's too shaky.
Yeah.
And the point is for the camera to stay totally static.
Because ideally I think for the viewer,
they wanna be in like a swivel chair or something
or like standing in a room where they can fully move around
at their own pace and the way they want.
And there'll be something happening in the frame
that's like the movie.
Right.
But they can also just not watch the movie
and just look behind them and like look at the view the whole time. Right, right, right. But they can also just not watch the movie and just look behind them
and like look at the view the whole time.
But I think with the Mueller stuff,
it's his point of view,
like swimming outside of the cages and all that.
Yeah, different deal.
But maybe that's also why his felt so traumatic to me
is because it's like makes you vaguely motion sick
and like it's all kind of crazy.
I think the trauma might have something to do
with the fact that he swims outside of a cage and he's with great whites.
Yeah, yeah, I do.
It's unbelievable.
No, I think the climbing stuff that we'll be shooting
is sort of the other end of the spectrum
where it's like more expansive, broader views.
You know, a lot of it is about putting somebody in a position
that they could never see.
Like the molar shark stuff feels very like intimate and tight you know you're like oh my
god the shark's about to eat me it's like super close and seems scary i think the climbing footage
is more about being in a spectacular place and having a super broad vistas i got it yeah where
you can like see the world around you and then also witness somebody climbing something totally
spectacular um unless we get a great white to make a cameo. Combine these two worlds.
Yeah, exactly.
Two in a day.
You're in a, speaking of production, you're in LA,
you're doing like Leno's garage.
I get, yeah.
What is that about?
I honestly don't know.
I just do what I'm told, you know, I do.
You're like, we want you to be on the show.
So you're gonna go to like his warehouse
and like see all his cars.
Yeah, I think Jay Leno's garage
is where he like chats with people about their cars.
And I think he's a car collector, right?
So he has all kinds of interesting.
He's kind of a car collector.
He's got like multiple warehouses,
like hundreds of cars.
Whoa.
Like he has one of the craziest car collections
in the world, yeah.
Well, so I know nothing about cars
and I have my scrappy van.
I know, that's why I find this so interesting and hilarious.
But I think there's something to be said
for talking about, you know, the utility of cars.
Like, it's basically, I don't care at all about my car,
but I care about what it allows me to do
and the life that it allows me to lead, you know,
like being on the road and being able to climb full time.
And I'm sure that, or let's hope that
that's a useful perspective for his show, you know,
where I'm like, oh, it's not so much about the car,
it's about what I get to do with the car.
Right, he's got all these crazy antique cars,
like steam powered engines and all this wild stuff.
And he, like every weekend,
there's this spot that's not far from where I live,
where a lot of like motorcyclists and car enthusiasts
like go, it's called the Rock Store.
It's like a little bar cafe or whatever.
And it's like right where all these windy,
cool like cannon roads are.
So he like drives past my house like every weekend.
And if you're just at the right place at the right time,
you'll see him, but it's always like
some completely crazy car.
That like shouldn't, I'm like,
is it even legal to drive that thing on the road?
Like stuff like that.
So I'm sure it'll blow your mind. But I'm just like curious,
like what that conversation is gonna be like.
We'll see, we'll see.
I think I might be taking him climbing too or something.
So we'll just see how it all plays out.
Right on.
Yeah, I'm psyched.
Out in Burbank somewhere.
I know, well, I think-
Or in a climbing gym?
I think Stony Point.
It's like a kind of historic climbing area,
like North of here.
Oh, that's cool.
But we'll see, I don't know,
like all things in my life,
I'm like, I don't really know.
I'll just show up and see how it goes.
I'll just have a good time.
Alex, you have a say in these things.
Maybe, it's easier not to, you know?
Just saying.
Like honestly, my whole life,
it's like easier to just go with the flow with it.
And you're like, oh, it's all a crazy adventure.
I'm just on the ride and see how it plays out.
During the whole free solo craziness, did you ever max. And you're like, cool, it's all a crazy adventure. I'm just on the ride and see how it plays out. During the whole free solo craziness,
did you ever max out
and just be like,
I can't, I need like a break.
Like I gotta get out of here.
I think I skipped one event.
Like in the whole free solo film tour,
which was like six or eight months
of like nonstop scheduling.
Sometimes two events
in two different cities in the same day,
like something in Chicago
and something in SF in the same day, which is like pretty rugged when you add the flights in between everything.
I think in the whole tour, there was one event that I was supposed to go to that I was just like,
I just can't. And I think I went to the climbing gym instead. And it was only because either Jimmy
or Chai, the co-directors like took it over for me. Like they did the event for me that night or something.
But you know, I felt like it was pretty solid.
But then funny enough.
You showed up with a smile on your face.
I felt, I mean, just from what I saw,
you just, you've completely were a hundred percent present
for it.
Well, that's the thing.
Cause I knew it was like a once in a lifetime adventure.
You know, if you, instead of looking at it
as like this heinous work experience,
if you look at it as like, this is a crazy adventure that, you know, I'll tell my grandkids
about like the one time I got to sample the movie star life, you know, then, then it makes it not
that bad because it's, um, I kept calling it my deployment to Hollywood, you know, cause I think
of people being like deployed overseas for six months. And it did kind of feel like that because
it was a totally different world, totally different scene.
You know, I'm being taken places by car service
and I'm like, I don't use a car service.
You know, like I'm not used to having like a fancy SUV
sitting out front waiting for me to like whisk me
to a hotel, but I'm just like, I'm just going with it.
You know, I'm doing what Brad does, Brad Pitt or whatever.
I'm like, what else?
I loved how North Face made a tuxedo for you,
which was pretty cool. Is that where you got married? Did you get married in the same tux? Yeah made a tuxedo for you, which was pretty cool.
Is that where you got married?
Did you get married in the same tux?
Yeah, same tux.
Yeah, classy.
And funny enough, the formal wear stuff like that
actually does get more comfortable if you wear it more.
Because I've only ever worn formal wear like once
and you're like, oh, it's so starchy and painful
and like not that nice.
And then if you wear them a couple of times,
you're actually like, yeah, it starts to break in a little.
I'm breaking out the tux once a week. Totally.
For the deployment.
At the Oscars, the tux was like so tight and crisp
that I felt like my nipples chafed.
Like in the way that you read about that,
like with marathon runners,
if you're running 20 miles in the rain or whatever,
that like you start chafing weird ways.
You had an injury at the Oscars.
Totally, I was like, oh, like I feel like a sandpaper,
my nipples with this like starched shirt.
I was like, this is heinous.
I'm sure you had some surreal conversations with people.
Yeah, I know.
Yeah, Sonny too, like my now wife had a, who was it?
He won best supporting actor, I think for like Green Book
or I forget his name.
Viggo Mortensen?
No, his co-star.
Yeah, Mahershala Ali.
Yeah, Mahershala Ali.
He was like walking by and basically like said hi to me and then was like turning to introduce himself to Sonny or something.
And she was like holding little like appetizer pizzas in both hands and fully just threw it on the floor and was like, so great to meet you.
So, you know, like had this really like nice moment with him
like, which she was like so charmed.
And then he like, he wandered on,
he had this whole entourage with like a crew.
And then as soon as he walked away,
Sonny's like cleaning up her pizza off the floor,
fully like, you know, but it was like,
this is my chance to meet Mahershala.
Right. So it's like,
just like food on the floor and hello, so great to meet you.
Right. And just things like that.
Like, it's just fun.
I love that.
Well, the story that I heard,
and maybe it's apocryphal,
was that Jason Momoa was gonna be giving out the award,
but it was like, he wanted to be,
if Free Solo was gonna win,
then he wanted to be the one to like say it
because he's like, he's your climbing buddy and all that.
Yeah, he's a serious climber.
So it was pretty cool that he was the one who did it.
Yeah, he was genuinely like,
gave everybody big hugs and super psyched.
He seems like a good dude.
Dude, yeah.
I mean, I only met him briefly through the tour,
but super nice guy.
And he has like really legit climbing wall.
Yeah, he has climbing walls at his house.
And so we went to his house
and like climbed with he and his family.
And I was like, you're really strong for a very big man.
He's huge.
He's so big.
Yeah, like how do you climb when you're that big?
Well, you just have to be really strong apparently.
I belayed him in the climbing gym and it was fully like,
it's like scary to catch him on the other end of the rope
because he's so much bigger than me that I was like,
I don't know what's gonna happen.
Like I can't hold this guy up.
Yeah, no, I mean, obviously I caught him
and I like shot like a cork out of a bottle,
just like shooting up and I caught him.
I was like, whoa, that's so exciting.
I heard this interview that you did with Anderson Cooper
not that long ago.
And he was super into like hearing about
like your mindfulness practice
and how like climbing is sort of like meditation
in that it forces you to be so present with your environment.
And it wasn't until you were extracted out of that
environment and deployed to Hollywood that you were,
that you actually had to like reckon with that,
like and realize like that's part of what I miss about it.
And you had to like create a practice around mindfulness
and meditation to kind of ground yourself
through the whole thing.
Yeah, I got into the waking up app,
if you know that Sam Harris meditation thing.
But I can't remember if I talked about it
with Anderson Cooper or not,
but recently I kind of abandoned the app
and abandoned meditation.
So I was like, I just don't know if I actually need that.
Like now that I'm climbing full-time again
and outdoors all the time.
But now you're doing the thing.
You get that in a different way.
But most people are like,
they're not living that lifestyle.
Totally.
Well, I think for me personally, I was like,
I don't know if I need to practice less attachment,
or like be less,
cause like I already give-
That's not your malfunction.
Yeah, exactly.
Like that is not my problem.
And I was like, if anything,
I need more reasons to like care more
to like get amped up more.
And I was like, I think the time that I spend meditating
could almost be better spent listening to like heavy rock
and like thinking about climbing projects
and like getting psyched.
So I was like, if anything, I need to be more amped.
You know, like, especially-
You could create a counter-programming app.
Yeah, yeah, totally.
For the too mindful people out there.
Well, I'm not saying I'm too mindful.
Yeah, I know what you mean.
Because definitely in the, yeah, I mean,
I'm far from like any actual mindful practice.
Like, I mean, a lot of it, you know,
I found just as challenging as anybody else
to like stay fully present and all that.
But the activity is what gets you into that headspace.
Yeah, yeah.
I don't know.
I just find that, you know, hiking,
like being, I spend a lot of time by myself in nature
in beautiful places, just kind of like wandering
and in my own thoughts.
And I'm like, you know, I think that works enough for me.
Like, I just don't know if I need to consciously spend time
during my day, during that, doing that same thing.
Right.
And like, I could just do it, you know,
through outdoor exercise basically.
Yeah, fair enough, man.
Yeah. I think that's a good place to end it. Yeah, basically. Fair enough, man. Yeah.
I think that's a good place to end it.
Yeah, let's go walk outside.
Cool, you can climb up the wall
on the roof of the building if you want.
I might be able to.
All right.
We'll have to go look outside.
Yeah, nice.
Well, have fun with Jay.
Yeah, we'll see, just another adventure.
Every day you're like, what an unusual. It's cool.
You live a cool life, man.
Well, it's just nice to have variety.
You know, variety is the spice of life.
Yeah, man.
Well, good.
Come back and talk to me anytime, dude.
No, thank you.
Thanks for having me.
Always a pleasure to chat.
Yeah, nice.
In the meantime, check out Climbing Gold
coming into your podcast.
If you wanna listen to a less professional podcast.
I don't know.
The thing I heard was super polished.
This is the thing, like the new thing with,
like these like really highly polished
documentary style podcasts.
Like that's not what I do, man.
I'm old school with this.
So that's like you're on the cutting edge
of like what is working
and what people really like to listen to.
More like the team that I'm working with is on the cutting edge. I what is working and what people really like to listen to. More like the team that I'm working with
is on the cutting edge.
I am far from it.
Fair enough.
Yeah.
Cool, check that out.
And Alex is easy to find on the internet.
Yeah.
Just Google him.
Yeah.
That's it, man, right?
Yeah, that's it.
Anything else?
How do you feel?
No, just, you know, just another beautiful day.
Very good.
All right, man.
Peace.
Yeah, thank you.
Thanks. Thanks for man, peace. Yeah, thank you. Thanks.
Thanks for listening, everybody.
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