At first glance, Alex Honnold and Cedar Wright are a strange pair. Honnold is 35, doesn鈥檛 drink, and trains constantly. He looks as if he were chiseled from marble by Michelangelo. Wright, 46, calls to mind a different Michelangelo鈥攖he Ninja Turtle. He鈥檚 the life of the party, he caps off training days with pizza and whiskey, and he has passions other than rock climbing, including paragliding and filmmaking. They鈥檙e both opinionated, stubborn, and contrarian.
They鈥檙e also from different generations. When the two met in Yosemite in 2007, a couple thousand feet up the side of El Capitan, Wright had been on the North Face team for nearly five years, and Honnold was just getting noticed, quietly repeating some of Peter Croft鈥檚 free solos from back in the eighties. And yet theirs has become one of the climbing world鈥檚 most beloved friendships.
We interviewed each man separately, asking them the same questions about the other. They explained what makes their partnership work so well and unknowingly riffed off each other鈥攁s soul mates tend to do.
Shared Convictions
鈥淭here鈥檚 no replacement for spending time on real rock.鈥
Alex Honnold: Cedar really represents a previous generation who were all about big outings. You know, the climbers who grew up adventuring in the outdoors, without access to a climbing gym. I represent the first generation of climbers who grew up in a gym. But I personally enjoy that old-school style of climbing.
Cedar Wright: One of my first big free ascents was Uncertainty Principle, on Sentinel Rock鈥攖his really beautiful formation in Yosemite Valley. I remember being frustrated by a 5.13 pitch and asking a friend, climber Jose Pereyra, what I could do to get stronger. He said, 鈥淭he universe will train you.鈥 I鈥檓 not sure if I think the universe trains me, but I do believe there鈥檚 no replacement for spending time on real rock, a philosophy Honnold and I share. In this day and age, the concept of training has become extremely gym focused, about pure performance. For us it鈥檚 about heading out and being unsure if what we want to do is going to be possible.
AH: Even though we prefer outdoor epics, we both value the strength that only focused gym training can bring. He鈥檚 always motivated to do basic fitness with me. Even after he started paragliding a lot, he鈥檚 still hang boarding and staying relatively fit.
Good-Natured Smack Talk
鈥淗onnold is a terrible partner for a lot of people, for sure.鈥
AH: If I鈥檓 being mean, I鈥檇 call him the world鈥檚 weakest professional climber. I鈥檓 thinking specifically about a few of the bike-touring trips we鈥檝e done together [including riding to and summiting all 15 of California鈥檚 fourteeners in 2013]. There were certain routes that he鈥檇 see and say, 鈥淚 won鈥檛 climb that, it鈥檚 too hard.鈥 I鈥檇 be like, 鈥淚t鈥檚 the classic line. It looks great.鈥 Instead, he鈥檇 want to climb the overhanging 5.11 off-widths [cracks that are too big to fist or finger-jam, but too small for legs and upper bodies to fit inside], because he knew he could get up those rather than the beautiful, clean 5.13 corners.
CW: Honnold can be really matter-of-fact in a way that hurts your feelings. He鈥檒l say something like 鈥淚 don鈥檛 understand why you keep falling there, it鈥檚 not hard.鈥 His way of interacting with people doesn鈥檛 come from an emotional place but from an analytical or intellectual place. Honnold is a terrible partner for a lot of people, for sure.
AH: I think he has a stronger personality than I do. I mean, he鈥檚 burned more bridges in life than I have.
CW: But I appreciate the brutal honesty. I like to confront my flaws and inadequacies head-on. I go through cycles of extreme laziness, then extreme self-loathing, then extreme motivation. Honnold has pushed me to be a better climber through his discipline and consistency, and I think I鈥檝e pushed him as a person.
AH: I鈥檇 say my wife played a bigger role in that department than Cedar.
CW: I鈥檓 definitely a much more emotional, naturally gregarious person. Over time, Honnold has probably adopted some of my personality traits, and that鈥檚 probably been a godsend for his climbing career, because it doesn鈥檛 matter how hard you climb if you鈥檙e a dyed-in-the-wool asshole. He鈥檚 颅become more empathetic and willing to work with people.
Compatible Levels of 颅Mellow (or Lack Thereof)
鈥淲e鈥檙e both deeply impatient people who just want to fucking get it done.鈥

AH: We were climbing together in Antarctica in 2017 on a bad-weather day. We skied across a glacier to look at an objective we thought might be manageable in those 颅conditions. We got to the base of a little tower and I was like, I don鈥檛 want to do this. This is just too grim. I was slightly resentful of the fact that I often get roped into expeditions and then, because I鈥檓 typically the stronger leader, wind up having to do all these things I don鈥檛 want to do. I said to Cedar, 鈥淚f you want to climb it, you lead it.鈥 And he was like, 鈥淣o problem.鈥 He led the whole thing, scraping snow off the ledges, getting all gripped, and being, you know, super scared as he was trying to climb this frozen tower. Because I was on top rope, I stayed in my ski boots and wore his extra jacket the whole time, completely comfortable, totally warm.
CW: He also wanted to climb as fast as possible. Honnold can egg you on to do shit that鈥檚 a little at the limit. He鈥檒l be like, 鈥淒ude, what鈥檚 your problem?鈥 And you鈥檙e like, 鈥淲ell, my problem is that I want to put in a piece before I do what looks like some really hard overhanging climbing.鈥 And he鈥檚 like, 鈥淲hatever, put in the piece then.鈥 And I鈥檓 like, 鈥淒ude, take a chill pill.鈥 But I appreciate somebody who鈥檚 impatient. That鈥檚 maybe one of the reasons we have a good relationship. We鈥檙e both deeply impatient people who just want to fucking get it done.
AH: It was one of those times when I thought, wow, we got to sneak in this extra-cool climb on a day that otherwise would鈥檝e just been a bad-weather day, because Cedar was willing to make it happen. To me that鈥檚 a good partner.
CW: It felt like we鈥檇 sort of gotten away with something.
AH: When you go through really 颅intense experiences together, it 颅either destroys or solidifies the friendship. And in this case, I think it solidified ours.
Mutual Enabling
鈥淲here鈥檚 my thank-you at the 颅Oscars, fuck face?鈥
AH: I think Cedar鈥檚 biggest impact on my climbing has probably been facilitating certain sorts of adventures that I never would have done otherwise. Climbing California鈥檚 fourteeners and our expedition to Antarctica were some of the more formative moments in my career. And they wouldn鈥檛 have been possible without a motivated partner pushing just as hard to make those trips happen.
CW: Sometimes it鈥檚 about creating space for adventure. Just being like, 鈥淲e should try to do all the fourteeners by bike, it鈥檒l be awesome.鈥 That鈥檚 the best thing you could ask for out of a training partner鈥攕omeone who has a crazy idea and wants to try it. Even if I鈥檓 going to maybe be a little bit slower on the bike on certain days or a little bit slower on the rock on certain days, I鈥檓 there with him, with the motivation to keep going.
AH: I鈥檓 typically pushing for the harder routes and the more challenging lines. I think that鈥檚 probably helped Cedar stay strong as a rock climber. On the trips we鈥檝e done together, there was always a little bit of tension. But I鈥檇 constantly acknowledge it, like, 鈥淥h yeah, you鈥檙e gonna have to rest a little bit more than me because you鈥檙e like 11 years older.鈥
CW: I think Honnold probably owes most of his climbing career to me. I was like, 鈥淲here鈥檚 my thank-you at the Oscars, fuck face?鈥 I should have at least gotten an 鈥淚 owe it all to Cedar Wright, a middle-of-the-road climber who loves to get out there and suffer.鈥