Its February 2017 in Siurana, Spain, and 19-year-old Margo Hayes is climbing a notoriously difficult 135-foot route called La Rambla. She reaches her longarms and callused fingers from tiny hold to tiny hold and pulls herself skyward. At times, her foot nearly touches her head, locking onto a bump of granite and staying there, her five-foot-three-inch frame like a spider on a wall. La Rambla is rated 5.15a, and if Margo tops out she’ll become the first woman in the world to climb a route of this difficulty, which is as hard as climbing gets.
Margo’s brain wants to top out, but her fingers dont. She’s worn the tips of them bloody. About halfway up the route, she descends. Back on the ground, she contemplates taking the day off, letting her hands heal, and trying again tomorrow. But as she watches others climb on the same face, she thinks, You know, I’m going to try it one more time. Back on the wall, she bloodies more holds until she lunges her way to the top, and into history.

Since she began climbing competitively as a ten-year-old in Boulder, Colorado, Margo has out-climbed nearly everyone, man or woman, on the planet. Her big break came in 2013, when she earned The North Face Young Gun Award, which honors up-and-coming climbers. Three years later, she won three golds at the International Federation of Sport Climbings World Youth Championships. In the same calendar year, she sent a stunning fourteen 5.14s, a goal she made for herself, she said at the time, to learn as much as possible about climbing at that grade. Later she won Climbing Magazines Golden Piton award, for her prolific and impressive 2016 tick-list.
A few months after that, she climbed La Rambla with bloody fingers. And less than a year later, she climbed another 5.15a, Biographie, proving to the world that she deserves her ranking among the greatest climbers of all time. Lynn Hill, Margos mentor and the most famous big-wall climber in the world, says that when Margo became the first woman to climb 5.15a, it gave me goosebumps, because Margo was the perfect person to do it.
Its been a heady ride, one that Margo handles with poise. Of her natural ability, she says, I wouldn’t consider myself a climbing prodigy. I was born with a high level of athleticism and talent, but I would attribute most of my success to my work ethic. I work hard, because that is something that I highly value, alongside integrityand kindness.
Scott Rennak, marketing director for The Spot climbing gym in Boulder, says Margo offers something most climbers in our social-media-entrenched age don’t:shes a graceful and impassioned athlete who climbs real rock. And shes rising about as fast as a person can. But Hill, who shot to stardom at around the same age as Margo back in the 1980s, says that Margo would do well to take a measured approach to her fame. Margo is the can-do girl who masters problems through hard work and patience, says Hill. As a result, shes in a cycle of work and reward. To do that in climbing, your focus must reach obsession levels. But getting out of that mode, inevitable as a climber ages, continues Hill, is going to be a transition. Hill cautions Margo to look toward the future even as she dominates the present.

Hill isnt the only one interested in Margos future. The climbing community is watching closely, waiting and hoping for her to climb La Dura Duraa 5.15c thats rated the worlds hardest sport route. Only two peopleChris Sharma and Adam Ondrahave ever successfully navigated it.
Margo wont say if La Dura Dura is in the offing. She keeps her projects close and when shes not training or traveling, she spends her time painting, reading poetry, and mentoring younger climbers. But first ascents are in her blood. Her maternal grandfather, after all, is Dr. James Morrissey, who led the first successful ascent of Everests east face. She has winning DNA.
For more than 50 years,has empowered people to push their boundaries in the outdoors. Today, theyare enabling the future of all exploration by celebrating creators, athletes, educators, innovators. Relentless and unexpected explorersrole models who move mountains.
Lets canvas the world with stories of female explorers to ignite more. Post a black and white image on Instagram with #SheMovesMountains to tell your role models story.