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Jesse Dufton completes first blind lead climb of The Old Man of Hoy

Jesse Dufton and sighted partner Molly Thompson have made history as they summited the Old Man of Hoy.

At 10.10pm on June 4, Jesse was the first blind person to lead the 450ft Old Red Sandstone seastack.

Jesse Dufton, GB Para climber, said: “I did it! A clean onsight lead of the Old Man of Hoy. I led all six pitches placing my own gear, feeling my way up. This is the most adventurous hard Trad rock route I’ve done. It was truly epic.”

Jesse Dufton (red) lead climbing the bold 4th pitch as time became an increasing factor for the team (©Alastair Lee/Brit Rock Film Tour 2019)

Jesse lead climbed the classic East Face Route (E1, 5a***) which was also the route by which Chris Bonington first ascended the stack in 1966 (and later re-climbed for the BBC’s The Great Climb in 1967).

Molly seconded and offered placement tips via handsfree radio, though due to the nature of the climb Jesse often had to climb on feel alone.

The ascent marks the culmination of a joint project between Jesse and director Alastair Lee, who is making a film about Jesse to form part of the 2019 Brit Rock Film Tour – both of which are supported by Montane.
For the ascent of the Old Man of Hoy, Al climbed a pitch ahead to film Jesse from the route itself, alongside supporting cameras on the mainland and in the air via drone.

Alastair Lee, Posing Productions & Brit Rock Film Tour, said: “I’ve never seen him searching around for holds so much, holding himself in strenuous positions as the obvious footholds sat quietly unused and all the sand on the holds. It must have felt pretty insecure to say the least. But on he battled, and what a glorious ascent it was. Staggering.”

Jesse fights through the steep and awkward crux (©Alastair Lee/Brit Rock Film Tour 2019)

Due to weather limitations the attempt could not be made until the day the team were due to leave Hoy. Once the weather changed they had to walk for over an hour from the campsite, and then ascend the steep slippy cliffs to the base of the stack. This 300m section alone took approximately 1.5hrs. As such, climbing did not commence until 3pm. Even with the long days experienced at the Orkneys latitude, time became a constant worry.

The ascent itself attracted attention from local media. Montane gave regular updates via their website and social media, and will continue to share updates about the project.

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