On Saturday (April 27th)
Bryan and I left the car early and prepared to get our butts kicked
by NE Buttress of Higher Cathedral. I know multiple people who had to
finish this route in the dark, and even spent the night on top. On
the other hand, our experience was completely different. We thought
this route was very enjoyable and liked it a lot more than East
Buttress of Middle. In addition, we spent an hour checking out the
views from the summit, and climbed Regular Route (direct variation)
on Higher Cathedral Spire.
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Lower and Higher Cathedral Spires |
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Sun is coming up. Book of Job goes up that obvious dihedral |
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Traversing pitch 5. Awesome face climbing. |
To give ourselves first place in 'line'
we left the car right before dawn. It was a good decision since
another party arrived shortly after I started leading. With
simul-climbing, I linked pitches one and two. Since I have not used 90%
of
our rack, I led 3rd pitch (which was one of my favorites)
as well. While Bryan linked 4 and 5 I chatted with one of the guys
who were following us. He told me it was his second time on route,
and first was a 21 hour epic, yikes.
Traversing pitch (5
th) had
cool face climbing on beautiful orange granite. After that I led
pitches 6 and 7, both of which were cool. 6
th featured
some lie backs and a bulge. 7
th was supposedly crux pitch
of this route which starts from a hand crack and some stemming,
continues into a thinner hand crack, pulls a roof and continues into
another tight squeeze chimeny. I did not find this pitch hard at all,
a bit burly in the squeeze chimney which I could not fit through (if
I ever want to do Steck Salathe I need to stop eating cookies?). So I
transitioned out to face, passed it and built a belay station above a
pretty comfortable stance.
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I want to be on top of that! |
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Last pitch of NEB |
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Me on top of Higher Cathedral Rock! |
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Ribbon Falls |
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Ribbon Falls, El Cap and Three Brothers |
As I remember, Bryan linked 8 and 9, I
took 10th, and Bryan led the last pitch. Pitches 8 and 11
were really good. We finished with original (5.9
mantle/hands/ow? to the left of a giant OW) variation which was recommended by some guys we saw
on the approach. I was expecting an easy hand crack but found it to
be a lot wider. It even required some technique. After topping out we spent a whole hour checking out the
views, eating, drinking, and thinking about what we wanted to do
next.
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I was jealous of a climber who was climbing last pitch of the spire |
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Can almost see him now |
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There he is |
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Me climbing in the same spot as the guy in prior photos. Life is good! |
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Bryan on top of HCS |
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Me on top of HCS |
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And one more on top |
Since summit of Higher Cathedral Spire looked like the coolest
thing around we decided to go there and see if we could figure out a
way to climb it without a topo. We were in luck since there were a
few climbers getting down. They provided us with a topo and an advice
to take direct variation. I was glad pitch 2 was Bryan's lead since
there was a difficult roof on it. My favorite part of the climb came
on pitches 4 and 5 when you get hit with the exposure, great
climbing, and see alpine glow on El Cap. The summit was spectacular.
It was worth missing pizza, though we did not miss showers ;)
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View down from the actual top of Arrowhead Spire |
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Arrowhead Arete from Arrowhead Spire |
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Free-hanging rappel from the top of the spire |
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Climbing cracks is addictive |
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Bryan on 3rd pitch, with Arrowhead Spire behind him
We were a bit tired and wanted to do something chill on Sunday. So we
picked Arrowhead Spire/Arete. Somehow we overlooked, or ignored that in
the guide book it is described as a "huge day." Our day was not huge,
but it was sure enjoyable (aside from bushwhacking). Summit of Arrowhead
Spire was a fantastic spot. Climbing on Arrowhead Arete was as
enjoyable as doing East Buttress of El Cap. Clean and varied from wide
cracks, to fingers, hands, and face thrown in. In addition the
knife-edge ridge on top of this formation was as cool as Matthes Crest.
In addition, I thought the descent gully was original. It contains three
rappels over drops that were created by HUGE boulders blocking the top
of a slot canyon. These boulders create a sub climate which allows a
bunch of flowers and grass to grow right under them. |
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Me stemming out on another pitch of awesome climbing |
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Tell me this isn't as cool as Matthis! |
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Views are awesome- typical |
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Bryan on the exposed crest |
OCB baby!
ReplyDeleteDon't post on my blog till you visit Lee Vining, son.
DeleteReally good photos, the second one is my FB cover image. We look tired on the summit of Higher Cathedral Spire.
ReplyDeleteAdam what's OCB?
I think it is an inside joke that him and I have going. "old climbing buddy." Kind of stupid if you don't know why we say it, but makes us laugh... lol
ReplyDelete