Thanks for sharing this Brad....so many years in this game and the memories are almost more important than the experiences.
I'd modify that: the people have become more important than the experiences.
I've been climbing with Harden for nearly 30 years, and with Ron for 23. Robert and I passed our 20 year anniversary of climbing together last year. Dennis and I started climbing together in 1996, which is the same year I started climbing with Jim Lundeen.
Funny thing too; I passed the 30th anniversary of the first time I went climbing and I didn't notice it until a week later. I started on May 9th, 1983, and spent May 9th, 2013 climbing with Gavin at Pinns in what turned out to be a very rewarding and fun day.
Here's the next set. I met Jerome in 2002 when he and I and Dave and Bart (those last two have now been climbing together for 40 years!) did a 14 pitch 5.8 on Mount Winchell in the Palisades. He and I have tried to do one long High Sierra route every year since then. Jerome is 6' 4" inches tall; he's the only person I've ever hiked with who hikes faster than I do (on trail at least - off trail I leave him in the dust).
Our route for 2004 was "the Long and Twisting Rib" on Mount Williamson. Mount Williamson is the second highest peak in California, it's just north of Mount Whitney. The climbing on this route is third, fourth, and very easy fifth class, but there is a hell of a lot of it. In fact, when combined with the hellacious hike up to Shepherd Pass (hardest-to-hike-to pass that is reached from the east side), it is quite an undertaking.
We took a whole day to hike in and bivied near the pass. In the first shot, taken from the hike in, the route can be seen just to the right of me (it goes to the right-most of two pyramids of rock, neither of which is the summit - the summit it to the right). Even approaching the climb from Shepherd Pass took nearly two hours (and we lost hundreds of feet of elevation too):


Most of the climbing is like this:

Although there's some good exposure in a few places too:

The summit of Williamson is 10,000 feet higher than the Owens Valley to its east. And, unlike with Mount Whitney, there is one ridge of this mountain that extends from the summit plateau all the way to the valley floor (reputedly the longest climb in the Sierra Nevada). Here's the summit:

And here's Jerome with Mount Whitney visible just to the right of him, Mount Russell just above him, and Mount Langley just to the left (all three are 14,000 foot peaks):
