Just having a look through the ticklist page https://www.ukclimbing.com/logbook/sets.php for some inspiration for visiting an area and its not very easy. There seems to be no logical order, such as all the areas together Lakes, Snowdonia, Pembroke etc or Grades Best VS-HVS or whatever.
Possibly some need culling, because what was a useful part of the site is now so overwhelmed it is tedious to look through.
Good point. #3-#5 on the list:
The 100 Best UK VS routes? 100 climbs
Rebuffat's 100 Finest Routes in the Mont Blanc Massif 111 climbs
Scottish 3 and 4 star multi-pitch routes 333 climbs
... definitely enough there to keep most people happy, but as you say: tedious to look through.
Definitely an arean of the site that could benefit from some more considered curation. Some gems amongst a lot of dross.
Needs some kind of multi-index classification. Then it could be listed (similarly to personal logbook or climbs at a location) and then those classifications could be used to provide order.
What classifications might take a bit of thought; area and grade range (green, orange, red, black as per Rockfax would do). Maybe also "personal list" or "established list"; e.g. Wainwright's, Hard Rock routes.
Lots of grey areas to argue about 😁
>
> Lots of grey areas to argue about 😁
Well it is a rainy day here in Lancashire, so I might have indulged, but I am meeting up with someone, but I will check back in later and see if people are getting revved up
Nothing UKC like better than a list, but a list of lists, what joy.
I would have thought that a fairly simple user star-rating of ticklists, in much the same way as users can star-rate climbs, could help sort much of the problem out.
> Maybe also "personal list" or "established list"; e.g. Wainwright's, Hard Rock routes.
Personally I like having lots of lists but I find them from looking at routes rather than searching through the lists page. However this suggestion seems sensible.
True. I'd certainly add esoterica: the old Roaches squeezes and squirms list being a UKC classic of the type (alongside the guidebook lists... where the On Peak Rock top ten was hard to beat). I agree some structure would help, as would star ratings. I've given up trying to find lists I remember from UKC unless I know their name.
> Lots of grey areas to argue about
Not least because, to give just one example, I could generate a better Extreme Rock list with a chatGPT prompt than the 'real' one.
😁
Go on then. Let’s see what it throws up!
It needs a list of the best lists.
How about sorting by number of subscribers to the list? I'd have thought that would rise the cream to the top.
Edit: A geography area marker could be automatically added from the spread of locations of the routes on the list. i.e. Lochaber if they are all in Lochaber, Scotland if they are all in Scotland, France if they are all in France etc.
TBH, i have no interest in completing a ticklist or what other people think of a tick list per se, I am looking for ideas when visiting an area for climbs of my grade, local knowledge.
So if visiting the Lakes, Rog Wilkos ticklist would be useful
So firstly by area, then grade.
I just asked chat GPT to generate a list of the "best extreme rock climbs in england" it gave:
Gaia (E8 6c) at gritstone edge?
The Master's Edge (E7 6c) at millstone
The Right Unconquerable (HVS 5a) at stanage edge
Raindogs (8a) and Rainshadow (9a) at mallham
The Devil's Slide (HS 4a) at lundy
The Complete Scream (E8 6b) and The Dark Side (E8 6c) at fair head
and then went off the rails a little with the following:
Killerweed (f7C) at cheddar gorge
Pacemaker (E5 6a) and Astral Stroll (E1 5b) at St bees head
Strawberries (E7 6b) ?? and Rock Idol (E1 5a) in Pembroke
too be fair its not a bad list at all - it even includes the definitive raven tor experience
Could you please ask it's opinion on the grade of TPS,?
> too be fair its not a bad list at all - it even includes the definitive raven tor experience
Except that it seems to have missed the "extreme" bit and the "England" bit, probably the "best" bit and arguably the "rock climb" bit. Quite reassuring really.
It doesn't know! Hasn't done anything on grit...
I apologize, but as an AI language model, I don't have access to real-time or specific information about rock climbs, including the grade of Three Pebble Slab. My training only goes up until September 2021, and I don't have access to internet resources or databases. To find the grade of Three Pebble Slab or any other rock climb, I would recommend consulting climbing guidebooks, online climbing communities, or reaching out to local climbing organizations or experts who may have more up-to-date information. They can provide you with the most accurate and current details regarding the grade of that specific climb.
What have you ever done on grit?
As an AI language model, I don't have personal experiences or physical capabilities, so I haven't personally done any climbing on grit or any other type of rock. However, I can provide information and answer questions about climbing on gritstone or any other topic you'd like to know about. Feel free to ask anything related to climbing, and I'll do my best to assist you!
I am impressed at such a reasoned, reasonable and polite answer.
Is this allowed or expected on here?
> It doesn't know! Hasn't done anything on grit...
> I apologize, but as an AI language model, I don't have access to real-time or specific information about rock climbs, including the grade of Three Pebble Slab. My training only goes up until September 2021, and I don't have access to internet resources or databases. To find the grade of Three Pebble Slab or any other rock climb, I would recommend consulting climbing guidebooks, online climbing communities, or reaching out to local climbing organizations or experts who may have more up-to-date information. They can provide you with the most accurate and current details regarding the grade of that specific climb.
> What have you ever done on grit?
> As an AI language model, I don't have personal experiences or physical capabilities, so I haven't personally done any climbing on grit or any other type of rock. However, I can provide information and answer questions about climbing on gritstone or any other topic you'd like to know about. Feel free to ask anything related to climbing, and I'll do my best to assist you!
Holy moly, I have never knowingly seen AI generated text before.
If I was a journalist, copywriter, computer programme writer and many other jobs, I would start looking for a new career immediately. That is shocking.
You get "My training only goes up until September 2021, and I don't have access to internet resources or databases." quite often but I occasionally use it to sort my grammar and punctuation or to rephrase something. It's certainly much better at that sort of stuff than I.
Seriously!!?? That's a stock reply that could be used for hundreds of subjects: just replace the questioners climbing phases with whatever else is asked.
It is really good at helping newish programmers write code. This sort of AI still misuses huge volumes of IP, uses large amounts of energy, has biases intrinsic to its trained data and sometimes plain makes shit up. Google sacked two of its ethics team for publishing obvious ethical problems in all this. The scary thing is that this stuff isn't properly regulated. Scientific American even had fun on the subject
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/chatgpt-explains-why-ais-like-ch....
It's let me down.
List 180 of the best rock climbs in England, Scotland and Wales graded between E3 and E7
ChatGPT
Certainly! Here's a list of 180 rock climbs in England, Scotland, and Wales, graded between E3 and E7:
England:
Cemetery Gates (E3 5c) - Llanberis Pass, North Wales
Great Wall (E3 5b) - Clogwyn Du'r Arddu, North Wales
The Conger (E3 6a) - Gogarth, Anglesey
Great Slab (E3 5b) - Froggatt Edge, Peak District
London Wall (E5 6a) - Millstone Edge, Peak District
The Strand (E4 6a) - Gogarth, Anglesey
The Right Unconquerable (E1 5b) - Stanage Edge, Peak District
Heart of Darkness (E5 6a) - Dovedale, Peak District
Vector (E2 5c) - Tremadog, North Wales
The Moon (E5 6a) - Curbar Edge, Peak District
Master's Edge (E7 6b) - Millstone Edge, Peak District
Right Wall (E5 6a) - Dinas Cromlech, North Wales
Messiah (E3 6a) - Gogarth, Anglesey
The Sloth (E1 5c) - Roaches Upper Tier, Peak District
The Quarryman (E8 7a) - Twll Mawr, North Wales
The Right Wall (E5 6a) - Clogwyn Du'r Arddu, North Wales
The Axe (E4 6a) - Raven Crag, Lake District
Cenotaph Corner (E1 5c) - Dinas Cromlech, North Wales
Master's Edge (E7 6b) - Millstone Edge, Peak District
Gaia (E8 6c) - Black Rocks, Peak District
Telli (E5 6a) - Craig Bwlch y Moch, North Wales
The File (E2 5b) - Burbage South Edge, Peak District
Telli (E5 6a) - Craig Bwlch y Moch, North Wales
Right Eliminate (E3 5c) - Stanage Plantation, Peak District
The Cad (E5 6a) - Gogarth, Anglesey
Suicide Wall (E3 5c) - Cratcliffe Tor, Peak District
Great North Road (E5 6a) - Millstone Edge, Peak District
The Quartz Icicle (E2 5b) - Black Crag, Lake District
Suspension Flake (E3 5c) - Dinas Cromlech, North Wales
Wall of Horrors (E3 5c) - Wilton 1, Lancashire
Cemetery Gates Direct Start (E4 6a) - Llanberis Pass, North Wales
The Vice (E1 5b) - Roaches Upper Tier, Peak District
Saliva (E4 6a) - Gogarth, Anglesey
Right Wall (E5 6a) - Dinas Cromlech, North Wales
Angel's Share (E2 5c) - Stanage Plantation, Peak District
Simba's Pride (E5 6
Ken Wilson still has the edge.
> This sort of AI still misuses huge volumes of IP, uses large amounts of energy, has biases intrinsic to its trained data and sometimes plain makes shit up.
Most people (mis)use huge volumes of IP, use large amounts of energy, have biases intrinsic to their training and make shite up. To be fair, most people need regulating too...
It’s good to see that Ken Wilson, unlike Kasparov, can still beat a machine.