Mountain Project Logo

Half Dome without cables

Original Post
Matt Lundy · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Jul 2006 · Points: 0

Does the standard Half Dome hiking route become a technical climb without the cables?

Eric Goltz · · Boulder, CO · Joined Sep 2003 · Points: 460

I've been up the cables on Half Dome several times. You'd look pretty goofy having walked the full 8 miles with a rope and rack, only to intentionally avoid a fully equipped walkup only feet away. I'd estimate it to be low 4th class, and not the *interesting*, loose Yosemite-style 4th class we're all so fond of. I would suggest Snake Dike as a worthy alternative, on the opposite side of the hill.

Matt Lundy · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Jul 2006 · Points: 0

I should have been more clear.

It is my understanding that they take down the cables during the winter (from about November until May). I am actually trying to avoid a technical route because I would have friends with me that don't have climbing gear. My question should have been: is it safe to hike up the cable route while the cables are not set up?

I know the Park service is going to tell me that it is unsafe, because they don't want idiots up there, but is it really that dangerous without the cables?

Matt Lundy · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Jul 2006 · Points: 0

Yes, the photos make it look rather steep. But are those planks that go across the route (resting on the metal poles, perpendicular to the direction of travel) still up when the cables are not? Are the cables still there, just not up on the poles?

Tico · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Feb 2006 · Points: 0

The cables stay, the uprights and planks are gone. I'd hesitate to say it's casual, I've descended the cables when the uprights were gone a couple of times, with no problems, but I think a girl died doing this just last year. The rock along the cables is pretty polished. I'd be very careful about bringing non-climbers up.

AndrewinLyons · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Mar 2006 · Points: 50

That girl was no fool either. I'm pretty sure she was a seasoned OB instructor.

Matt Lundy · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Jul 2006 · Points: 0

Thanks for the info. I guess we should be looking elsewhere. I'll report back how it goes.

Tico · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Feb 2006 · Points: 0
Greg wrote:I was always under the impression that the Park Service just pulled the uprights out of the holes and sort of laid the whole mess down on the rock. Not sure where I got that idea, but somewhere over the years. Is that not the case?
I'm pretty sure the uprights are gone, the steps are definitely gone. I can't remember exactly, but I seem to recall big cable junctures that we assumed would stop us since we had a ghetto via-ferrata set-up the one time (it was misty and slicker than snot).
Kelly Ringwald · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Apr 2007 · Points: 5

No, it's not technical. If anything I think it is easier with the cables down, especially if it is wet or you are carrying a large backcountry pack. Definitely bring some good leather gloves. You just hold the cable at hip level and slide your hands up it. The weight of the cable adds traction to your feet in slippery conditions. If there is snow pinning the cable to the rock then it gets tricky.

Guideline #1: Don't be a jerk.

Northern California
Post a Reply to "Half Dome without cables"

Log In to Reply
Welcome

Join the Community

Create your FREE account today!
Already have an account? Login to close this notice.

Get Started