After climbing for just two years, Vidal received the Piolet d'Or award from the Spanish Mountain Federation for her 1996 climb,
Principado de Asturias (Grade
A4) in Northern Spain. By the mid-nineties, Vidal had gained experience in both European climbing hot spots, like
Montserrat and in
Yosemite Valley, California. In August, 1999, Vidal, with partners Pep Masip and Miguel Puigdomenech, made the
first ascent of
Sol Solet on Amin Brakk, a 5800m tower in the Nangma Valley of
Karakoram, Pakistan. The tower was named after the expedition's Spanish cook, whose first name was Amin. In 2001, the
American Alpine Journal singled out the team's climb as a notable example of a "particularly impressive endurance test." The climbers spent a continuous 32 days on the wall, with climbing difficulty up to A5. In the end, the climbers placed only 31 bolts, with 27 clumped on a completely blank wall section. In September 2004, Vidal and partner Eloi Callado established a new, 890m route,
Mai Blau (A3+) on Neverseen Tower in the Indian Himalaya. In July 2007, Vidal made a solo expedition back to Karakoram, Pakistan, and put up a huge, 2900 ft solo route,
Life is Lilac, on the Shipton Spire. Vidal spent 21 continuous days alone on the wall, with difficulty grades of A4+. In February and March 2012, in another solo expedition, Vidal established
Espiadimonis, a 1500m A4 route on Serrania Avalancha in Chilean
Patagonia. Vidal spent 32 continuous days alone on the wall after bush-whacking through the jungle to reach the area and set up base camp. Wet conditions necessitated 16 completely inactive days lying in the
portaledge. The rainy conditions created waterfall-like effects along the face of the wall, so Vidal was nearly always soaked and "felt like I was in a swimming pool". In July 2017, Vidal established
Un pas més (A4+) on the west face of Xanadu, a mountain in the
Arrigetch Peaks of Alaska. Vidal received a special mention during the November 2021 awarding of the
Piolet d'Or for her contributions to solo
big wall climbing. == Climbing style and philosophy ==