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鈥淚 would rather live 40 years of excitement and fun and exhilarating and WOO full volume than 80 years of la-dee-da-dee-da. You know鈥oring,鈥 said in Yosemite Valley in 2006 while shooting a segment featured in the anthology film The Sharp End. 鈥淲hy not get out there and live it?鈥
Loved by many for being a rowdy, charming, and encouraging, and for channeling a pirate鈥檚 attitude, Ammon passed away on February 18, 2023 in Moab, Utah at age 52. With over 75 ascents of El Capitan, nearly two dozen speed records of big wall routes in Yosemite and in Zion national parks, and first ascents of hard aid climbs across the U.S., Ammon made a huge impact on big-wall climbing. Besides his extensive BASE jumping resume and innate boldness, Ammon鈥檚 friends and family remember the nearly six-foot man with the earrings, the narrow face, and the wide grin for his kindness, his support, and his ability to authentically and unapologetically be himself. Ammon lived a life of volume.
Born in June of 1970 as the third of five kids to Ron, a construction worker, and Joan, a stay-at-home mom, Ammon grew up in a Mormon family in Saint George, Utah. 鈥淗e almost killed himself every year of his life,鈥 said his brother Gabe McNeely, who is 15 months older. Ammon dodged death from the start after being born breech. At 2 years old, he hopped into a raging section of the Colorado River. His uncle dove in and rescued him. As he grew, danger followed Ammon, or he followed it. He started climbing young, getting high in trees in Saint George and scrambling up 5.6 routes in Snow Canyon state park. He sometimes climbed a hundred-foot radio tower near town. 鈥淗e would walk along the top,鈥 Gabe said of the stunt. 鈥淚t was only a foot wide.鈥
鈥淲e used to skate halfpipes when we were kids,鈥 Gabe said. Ammon would do hand plants, the rail slides and pull air way above the coping. When his parents divorced in high school, and his mother moved to Huntington Beach, California, Ammon lost his access to skating. In 1988, Ammon married his high school sweetheart, Kim Page, and their four-year marriage gave him his first son, Austin McNeely. He had a second son Zach, in 2001 with Shannon Culver and a third son Aiden, in 2001 with Saskia Stallings. In 2002 he married Catra Corbett. The pair divorced in 2007.
Living around Huntington Beach and Lake Arrowhead in the 90s, Ammon slowly explored the climbing at Taquitz, Suicide, and the crags of Southern California. Primarily self-taught, Ammon鈥檚 knowledge came from John Long鈥檚 climbing books and in buying a rope and shoes in 1995. He decided to push himself and became fully invested in the sport.
鈥淗e went up on the NA with nothing,鈥 Ammon鈥檚 friend, Kurt Arend, said of Ammon鈥檚 1996 arrival in Yosemite and his 10-day solo ascent of the North America Wall. 鈥淚 think he just had a couple set of cams and a ton of pins. He didn鈥檛 have a clue but he didn鈥檛 give a fuck. He was just going for it. True Ammon style was just go for broke.鈥 After summitting El Capitan, Ammon met the infamous big wall guru 鈥淐hongo鈥 Chuck, who in exchange for Olde English and some Indica taught him all about hauling systems. Ammon moved into a tent in the woods behind Camp 4. With a bit of wall knowledge from Chongo and an unparalleled boldness, Ammon began raging the granite seas of Yosemite. He quickly became known as the El Cap Pirate, climbing routes that others had bailed on and flying his skull and crossbones flag on the side of El Cap. 鈥淭o plunder the booty!鈥 He鈥檇 exclaim with a hearty 鈥淎RRRRG MATEY!鈥
鈥淚 wanted to hit El Capitan with all the force I could muster,鈥 Ammon wrote in Alpinist of coming into Yosemite in 2004 for an unmatched season of wall climbing. While known for his antics on the ground, on the wall Ammon was known for his efficiency, safety, and willingness to keep going. 鈥淚t was like having a special weapon going up on the wall, if you had Ammon, you were going to succeed,鈥 Gabe said of climbing with his brother. His 2004 season reinforced that.
鈥淚n all, I climbed 11 El Cap routes in five months, nine of them in record time, five as first one-day ascents,鈥 Ammon wrote in Alpinist. 鈥淚t was the greatest number of speed records anyone has made in a year in Yosemite. But without my partners, it would not have been possible. I owe many thanks to Chris (McNamara), Ivo (Ninov), Cedar (Wright) and Brian (McCray) for these amazing adventures.鈥
Ivo recalled their record setting May 2004 33:02 ascent of the Pacific Ocean Wall route on El Capitan. 鈥淲e blasted with Ammon leading the first 11 pitches,鈥 he says. On the Island in the Sky ledge, at the end of Ivo鈥檚 block, Ammon just wanted to sleep, so Ivo pulled two beers from their haulbag. 鈥淲e drank the beer and blasted to the top of the Capitan.鈥 says Ivo, 鈥淗e鈥檚 my brother. We didn鈥檛 have to talk.鈥 The pair climbed 30 El Capitan routes together and set numerous speed records, including on the routes Pressure Cooker, Zenyatta Mondatta, Native Son, Magic Mushroom and The Reticent Wall. 鈥淩arely do you find people like this.鈥
Chris McNamara also set speed records on El Capitan and in Zion with Ammon. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 say I ever saw him get scared,鈥 says Chris, 鈥淗e鈥檚 also just one of the biggest hearted, nicest people.鈥 The combination helped Ammon push his partners in a supportive way. On Rodeo Queen, Chris had a meltdown in the middle of the night wanting to bail on a pitch. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e going to feel a lot better if you finish this,鈥 Ammon said, wanting his friend to make it through the difficulties and raise his game.
鈥淗e truly was like that modern day pirate,鈥 says Chris. 鈥淗e was charging hard at all times, life to its fullest and always a little on the edge of what鈥檚 appropriate or legal.鈥
Dave Allfrey and Skiy Detray were with Ammon when he took a 70 foot fall in 2010 while short fixing on the first one day ascent of a route called Scorched Earth. 鈥淗e burned the ink out of his arm,鈥 says Dave. When he fell, his aiders caught in his belay system, disengaged his GriGri, and he fell to the end of his rope. His fall bent the third bolt of the anchor upwards. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not to the bone, let鈥檚 keep going,鈥 Ammon said, according to Skiy鈥檚 recount of the ascent. The fall, one of many giant whippers in Ammon鈥檚 life, left a permanent scar in the tattoo band on his left forearm. The team fired the route in record time.
In late summer 2011, he made the second ascent of the notorious hooking route Wings of Steel 聽over 13 days with Kait Barber. Jeff Vargen made a short documentary, Assault on El Cap, about their ascent.
Austin McNeely, 13, alongside his father and Uncle, Gabe, made the first ascent of the Jose Memorial Variation, a five pitch variation to the Zodiac. He presented the epic to his fifth grade class for a 鈥淲hat I Did This Summer鈥 presentation. He described not pooping for six days, and then doing the porch swing, the hundred foot rope swing at the top of the Dawn Wall. 鈥淭hey didn鈥檛 believe me dad,鈥 Austin told his father. Surprised, Ammon gave his son a disc of photos from their trip showing them on the side of El Cap and the epic. Austin returned to his fifth grade class and gave his presentation again. This time, the teacher鈥檚 mouth hung open. Austin climbed a few other walls with his father, including a spring 2020 ascent with their friend Hayden O鈥橲hay, which involved another classic Ammon epic.
鈥淚 thought he was falling to his death. He was screaming 鈥楩uck! Fuck! Fuck!鈥欌 says Nicola 鈥淢otherfuckin鈥 Nickoli鈥 Martinez. Ammon had led most of聽 the Muir Wall on El Capitan and, on the last pitch, Nickoli had hiked to the top of El Cap to help the team carry down loads. 鈥淚 thought I lost my friend,鈥 Nickoli says. After a moment, Nickoli yelled. 鈥淎mmon! Ammon! Are you there?鈥
鈥淵eah,鈥 Ammon responded, pretty bummed. 鈥淚 lost my leg.鈥
During one of the tension traverses on the last pitch, his prosthetic, which was attached by a button, scraped against the granite. The button came undone. His leg, which hadn鈥檛 been backed up to his harness, flew off the wall, bouncing past the Heart, past Mammoth Terraces, and onto the Valley Floor. Nickoli helped the team haul the last pitch and then hiked down to find assistance for Ammon鈥檚 descent. Before he drove to El Portal to get crutches, he stopped at the base of El Cap and hiked up to the area between Sacher Cracker and Moby Dick.
鈥淚 fucking found the leg,鈥 Nickoli said. Just two feet from the wall, Ammon鈥檚 leg sat there, having taken a 3,000 foot fall and surviving unscathed. Nickoli returned to the summit and gave Ammon his leg.
鈥淗e had the biggest grin,鈥 Nickoli says.
Beyond his leg taking flight, Ammon himself had an extensive flying career, having started BASE jumping in January of 2007, jumping off the 486-foot IB Perrine Bridge in Twin Falls, Idaho, with Chris McNamara, Ivo Ninov, and Sean Leary. He base jumped off of El Capitan, often narrowly and sometimes not so narrowly escaping the rangers upon landing in the meadow below. Once, he got tased by the rangers after jumping the formation. Unfortunately, Ammon suffered a few accidents while base jumping, twisting an ankle badly after jumping off El Cap in 2007. In 2013, Ammon nearly lost his left leg while base jumping in Moab Rim. On September 3, 2017, Ammon struck the wall while base jumping in Moab. He spent thirteen hours at the base of the wall before being extracted. Besides fractures of his left wrist, left leg tibia/fibula, and left clavicle, Ammon also severely damaged his right leg, resulting in amputation. He received his prosthetic after the accident. He often base jumped with a crew in Moab, Utah, climbing towers like Castleton and jumping off. With his prosthetic, it became easier to do the short hikes and base jump than the long approaches to climb.
Ammon supplemented his climbing and base jumping by working as a rigger over the years, often hanging acoustic insulation. With Ivo, he drove across the Midwest changing fiber optic cables in ATM machines. He occasionally worked doing tandem base jumps at skydiving sites. The past few years, Ammon had been working seasonally in Moab, Utah, for a hot air balloon company chasing the balloon and then loading it when it came down. Before his death he was transitioning to a job with Austin working for a Moab zip line company. In between work and base jumping, he continued to climb, establishing new routes in the Bartlett Wash including The Never Ending Story with his partner Sarah Watson, who had met him in Moab.
On February 18, Watson, Ammon, and a friend hiked to Hurrah Pass to watch the sunset. Watson stepped down on a diving board, which had a two hundred foot drop. As the sun dipped towards the horizon, Ammon lowered his prosthetic to descend onto the small stretch of sandstone. Weighting it incorrectly, Ammon lost his balance and fell to his death. He was 52.
The following day, a crew of Moab residents jumped to his body. They built a shrine where he fell and marked it with a flag. Below Last Hurrah Pass, the pirate skull and bones of the Jolly Roger flies.