Margo Hayes is a perpetual motion machine. On a late-November morning at in Boulder, Colorado, she has already swept the bouldering area and is now logging circuits on the , a ten-foot wall set at an ab-quivering angle and littered with microholds. When Hayes falls, which is rare, she鈥檚 back on the wall before the chalk dust settles. After nearly three hours, Hayes appears to call it quits on her first training session of the day, but within minutes she鈥檚 slipping her climbing shoes back on to take another few laps on the MoonBoard. 鈥淚t鈥檚 never really time to stop,鈥 Hayes says with a grin.
That insatiable drive helped the 20-year-old Hayes make history in 2017. First came her breakthrough ascent of La Rambla (5.15a), a 135-foot endurance rally up an achingly steep line in Siurana, Spain, in February. The grade had narrowly eluded American phenom Ashima Shiraishi and Spaniard Josune Bereziartu, and Hayes鈥 success made her the first woman to climb a consensus 5.15 route.
News of her accomplishment spread quickly, thanks in part to a candid photo that Matty Hong, Hayes鈥 former coach and La Rambla belay partner, . In the image, Hayes clutches her arms in disbelief, her face registering a flawless illustration of strength and vulnerability. The shot logged more than 24,000 likes. 鈥淚t kind of went outside of the climbing community,鈥 Hong says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not like a photo of Chris Sharma gazing off into the sunset, where only climbers are like, 鈥極h, sick.鈥欌 But Hayes wasn鈥檛 finished. Seven months later, she repeated the feat by sending her second 5.15a, Biographie/Realization, in C茅眉se, France.

Even core climbing observers didn鈥檛 see that coming. Unlike, say, Shiraishi, who鈥檚 been in the spotlight since age 11, when she was , Hayes has operated mostly under the radar. Still, those who know her aren鈥檛 exactly surprised. Even as a grade-schooler, Hayes developed her own training routines and maintained a lofty set of goals, meticulously stored on checklists taped around her room. 鈥淒o you know that Margo Hayes came to me saying that she wanted to go to the Olympics?鈥 says coach Robyn Erbesfield-Raboutou, recalling the day when Hayes, then ten years old, joined her Team ABC climbing squad in Boulder. The young athlete became her biggest challenge. 鈥淚 have to be the best coach in the world to meet Margo鈥檚 standards of how she manages herself, because everything has to be on point for her,鈥 she says. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e not holding the bar as high as she is, then you鈥檙e not with Margo.鈥
I鈥檓 tucked into the comfiest seat in Hayes鈥 childhood home in South Boulder, stuffed with tea, chocolate, and a thick slab of honey-drenched banana bread. Scattered among our crumbs lay an assortment of watercolors; when I ask if she painted them herself, Hayes explains that it was her first time dabbling in the medium. I look back to the small, colorful squares鈥攁 frog, a taped hand, a bunch of carrots鈥攁nd blink in disbelief. They seem nearly flawless.
When I offer a compliment, Hayes is gracious but redirects praise to her mother, Cathy: 鈥淪he doesn鈥檛 call herself an artist, but she鈥檚 an artist. She can do anything.鈥 Hayes counts her mother as one of her greatest role models. The former schoolteacher made sure their home was full of creativity, introducing a new poem to her children every week (Hayes鈥 sister, Nola, is three years older), devising countless craft projects from thrift store finds, and creating themed installations鈥攁 rainforest decorated with monkeys, a glittering disco-ball tribute to ABBA, a buzzing beehive鈥攊n the family room to surprise her daughters on their birthdays.
Even as a grade-schooler, Hayes developed her own training routines and maintained a lofty set of goals, meticulously stored on checklists taped around her room.
Cathy and her husband, Tom, also cultivated a sense of curiosity and compassion in their daughters that prioritized the importance of world travel. In fact, one of Hayes鈥 most memorable childhood experiences occurred during a trip to Turkey at seven years old, where she witnessed a 鈥渕esmerizing鈥 performance of whirling dervishes. The significance of this memory is unsurprising when you understand that she was the rare child who was never content to sit numbed by a television set or video games. Instead, Hayes preferred to run wild outdoors, challenging her sister to near-constant races and roping friends into various competitive schemes conjured in her mother鈥檚 garden.
Instead of discouraging this kinetic energy, Hayes鈥 parents sent her to Boulder鈥檚 . There, she flourished in an environment that not only engaged her physically but also channeled her competitive drive into something constructive, which eventually afforded her the opportunity to participate in USA Gymnastics鈥 talent search program. However, Hayes鈥 tendency to push her limits also led to a parade of broken bones, the most severe occurring when she attempted to emulate Olympic gold medalist Nastia Liukin on the uneven bars and instead landed on her upper back. 鈥淢y legs flew over my head, and my feet hit so hard that I broke and dislocated my talus,鈥 she explains. 鈥淭he ER doctor said that it looked like a football injury.鈥

Climbing offered a theoretically less injurious pastime, and one that Hayes was familiar with from a young age. Her maternal grandfather, Dr. James Morrissey, led the first successful ascent of Everest鈥檚 Kangshung Face five years before she was born. Her father was a Yosemite Valley regular who introduced both of his daughters to the sport; her mother would also rope up from time to time. Mix that history with her active nature, and it鈥檚 not surprising that when Hayes landed at Erbesfield-Raboutou鈥檚 doorstep, she was primed for success.
Hayes began competing almost immediately, eventually winning a spot on USA Climbing鈥檚 national team. In 2013, she earned the North Face Young Gun Award, which honors up-and-coming climbers. Three years later, in 2016, she won three golds at the World Youth Championships, realized her goal of sending fourteen 5.14s during the year (an objective documented on one of her lists, of course), and won Climbing鈥檚 .
These accomplishments鈥攁nd a sponsorship deal from the North Face鈥攔aised her profile, but nothing prepared her for the acclaim she received after La Rambla. Hayes was bombarded by well-wishers and interview requests, an experience she calls humbling and overwhelming. So much so that she almost declined when Hong asked if he could use footage from the climb to create a short film. Eventually Hayes agreed, and the result is , a study in relentless devotion and training that chronicles her success on La Rambla and her four-month slog to follow it up on Biographie/Realization.

What you don鈥檛 see in the film is how difficult it was for Hong and his filmmaking partners to coax Hayes into opening up about any deeper intentions she had for those two climbs or to acknowledge their historic impact. 鈥淚t was really hard for us to get her to say, 鈥業 came to Spain to send La Rambla,鈥 or 鈥業 went to Spain to climb my first 5.15,鈥欌 says Hong. 鈥淪he doesn鈥檛 want to come off as someone who鈥檚 ungrateful or someone who鈥檚 arrogant.鈥
Erbesfield-Raboutou doesn鈥檛 disagree with this last statement but does acknowledge the extraordinary drive and work ethic that Hayes has possessed since childhood. 鈥淚 think that if you were to really, really strip that down, there鈥檚 no doubt that that Margo did it for her, but she knew what she was doing: She was trying to break a barrier. She was trying to push the bar higher because she believed she could do it,鈥 she says. 鈥淵es, she鈥檚 humble, and she鈥檚 been humble through the process, but she knows what she鈥檚 doing.鈥
Though she demurs a bit when I ask about it, it鈥檚 clear that Hayes is also quietly eyeing the 2020 Olympic Games, the first to feature a climbing competition.
Even though Hayes says she didn鈥檛 target La Rambla to make a statement about women climbers, she鈥檚 conscious of her new status as a role model. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a responsibility, but it鈥檚 also an honor,鈥 she says. 鈥淚鈥檝e been fortunate enough to have so many great people to look up to that I feel like I鈥檓 giving back a little bit to the community that has given so much to me.鈥 But Hayes is also quick to acknowledge the efforts of her contemporaries and those who have come before with a humility that鈥檚 both effusive and genuine. 鈥淚 feel really humbled by so many other people鈥檚 accomplishments,鈥 she says. 鈥淚f I make a little mark, if I add a little stone to the pile of our sport of climbing, then that鈥檚 something I鈥檓 proud of.鈥
Hayes wasn鈥檛 alone in pushing the sport last year. Shortly before she sent Biographie/Realization, Belgian Anak Verhoeven became the second woman to climb the grade, notching the first ascent鈥攐f any gender鈥攐f Sweet Neuf at Pierrot Beach, France, in September. The following month, Austrian Angy Eiter logged the first female ascent of La Planta de Shiva, a 5.15b at Villanueva del Rosario, Spain. 鈥淚 would say that Margo opened a door, but perhaps all of that would have happened anyway,鈥 says Erbesfield-Raboutou. 鈥淲hat that proves is that there are several women at the top who believe they can do just what they did, and I believe that will help other women push themselves.鈥
In November, when I meet with Hayes at her climbing gym in Boulder, it鈥檚 to reflect on an incredible year. But she isn鈥檛 quite finished making history. Though it鈥檚 only her third day on the MoonBoard, Hayes will win the inaugural MoonBoard Masters, along with partner Alexander Megos, just nine days later, on December 9. The following month, she鈥檒l receive an , along with the from the American Alpine Club, bestowed upon young climbers who鈥檝e shown 鈥渆xceptional skill and character in the climbing or mountaineering arts鈥 and demonstrate the potential to push even further in the sport.
Just as she鈥檚 done every year since childhood, Hayes has already begun constructing a list of goals for 2018. If she has any sort of master plan to chase grades or tackle even more impressive climbing objectives, she doesn鈥檛 say. Hayes offers me only a vague glimpse into her future, perhaps out of self-preservation as much as it is to avoid projecting self-importance: She鈥檇 like to continue her college education, advocate for the environment, pursue aesthetic lines, and possibly even bolt her own route as an expression of gratitude toward the climbing community.
Though she demurs a bit when I ask about it, it鈥檚 clear that Hayes is also quietly eyeing the 2020 Olympic Games, the first to feature a climbing competition. 鈥淚t would be a huge honor to be there,鈥 she says, before characteristically downplaying her own aspirations and potential as equal to any other athlete who holds the same dream. It鈥檚 a long road to Tokyo, of course, but I can鈥檛 help but feel that Hayes will put in an extraordinary effort.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 know what my limit is, and that鈥檚 so exciting,鈥 Hayes says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like you鈥檙e chasing this running carrot鈥攊t doesn鈥檛 stop moving.鈥
An edited version of this story appeared in the March 2018 issue of 国产吃瓜黑料.