Home - Destinations - People - Partners - Forum - Photos - What's New
 ADVANCED
Redgarden - Tower One
Show routes:
Select route...
Alice in Bucketland 
Apple Strudel 
Art Of Slappiness, The 
Art's Spar 
Body Tremors 
Chockstone Chimney 
Daedalus 
Deadpoint 
Doub-Griffith 
EL100 
Electric Aunt Jemima 
Fresh Garbage 
Grand Giraffe 
Icarus 
Ignition 
Italian Arete 
Magic Bus 
Magic Carpet Ride 
Mellow Fellow 
Memory Lapse 
Mickey Mouse Nailup 
Much Slater (left variation) 
Neurosis 
Parting Shot 
Phallus In Suck-It-Land 
Pigeon Crack 
Psycho Pigeon 
Psychosis 
Reaper 
Rocky Raccoon 
Roll Over Rover 
Rover 
Ruper 
Ruper to Grand Giraffe 
Short Arm Inspection. 
Smoke & Mirrors 
Song of the Dodo 
South Face of Tower One 
Super Slab 
Superspar 
Three Old Farts Young at Heart 
To RP or not to Be 
Vertigo 
West Arete (of T1), The 
Yellow Fellow 
Yellow Spur, The 
Ytrid Deed, The 

Art's Spar 

5.10c

   

FA: Steve Wunsch, Jim Erickson, Art Higbee, 1973
Type: Trad
Consensus: 5.10d [details]
Length: 4 pitches
Views: 904 page views

Submitted By: Richard M. Wright on Jul 12, 2001


Add Photo  Add Comment 

You and this route  |  Other Opinions (25)
Your todo list:
Your stars:
Your rating: -none- [change]
Your ticklist: [add new tick]
 Printer Friendly View

Unknown Climber below the Overhang. Photo taken Se...


Description 

Art's Spar connects the Lower Ramp to the Upper Ramp to the left of Ruper and via several means. As a variation to the Grand Giraffe, Art's Spar makes a largely fun link up that catches the roof that was actually dodged by the Grand Giraffe. I will add a story to this description because it must rank as one of the all time classic epics that should have ended in disaster, but instead saved the life of it's chief protagonist.

Begin Art's Spar at the top of the Lower Ramp as you would for Ruper. Following the Grand Giraffe, a pitch of 5.8 followed by a pitch of 5.4 takes you to the belay below the roof; stay in the 5.9 corner for the Giraffe or cut right and over the roof for Art's Spar. On the Upper Ramp, one has any of numerous choices to finish the headwall and catch the East Slabs. And this is a great route.

Now, I may burn in hell for telling this story, but it is too good not to tell. Eighteen years ago in September I did Art's Spar with a super athlete/climber who I will call DK to preserve my own hide. DK, as most masculine hunks, had hugely more balls than brains, although he did survive this epic so he must have had some sense of self-preservation - or luck.

We hit the Lower Ramp with just over one hour of sunlight remaining, and waltzed up the first two pitches to the Grand Giraffe belay below the roof at Art's Spar at approximately sunset. DK led the roof in classic, flawless style, but this took 45 minutes, which amounted to 45 min after the sun had set - dark in other words. Thinking of the exit off the Upper Ramp, the East Slabs, and the enclosing darkness, I suggested to DK that he rap back down to my belay from which we would descend via raps to the Lower Ramp and then rap this to the West. Agreed, he set up a rap and started down. Now, bear in mind that the roof is 300 ft off the deck. About 6 or 7 ft from the lip, DK stalled out and stopped his rappel. I inquired as his status and the progress of his rappel, to which I received a series of garbled grunts in response. After close to 10 minutes, perched above the Art's Spar roof, DK emitted a single sharp curse, SHIT!! In the silence that ensued, I heard the three notes that have burned themselves into my memory, perhaps forever: "PING!! Ping! ping...." "DK", I inquired with feigned calm ,"what was that?" .... "I just dropped my figure 8", he responded. In other words, while rappelling with the figure 8, DK managed to drop the very same device with which he was rappelling. Nifty.

At that time I was wagering to myself at close to 50/50 chance of DK living through this evolving epic, perhaps a bit less, but since it was DK I would go with 50/50. However, with a little school boy hand-over-hand rope climbing, DK did manage to get close enough to the belay for me to get a rope wrapped around his legs, then his waist, and get him back to the belay to continue our pleasant outing, which we did, under the cover of darkness. This was the last day that DK climbed. He even survived to marry the most beautiful woman in the universe; now both are happy.


Protection 

Bring a full rack and a standard 50 or 60 m rope. Plan on descending via the East slabs, unless you want to hassle with the raps off T1 (a bad idea).



Add Photo Photos of Art's Spar
Ivan jams the roof in Gunks style, on-site flash.

Ivan jams the roof in Gunks style, on-site flash.

Dave hadn't done the roof since the hold broke (and didn't know a hold had broken), so he had to work a bit harder than the last time he did it.

Dave hadn't done the roof since the hold broke (an...


Add Comment Comments on Art's Spar
Show which comments
By Anonymous Coward
Aug 23, 2001

Ah, such is the nature and challenge of the overhang...a sequence not quickly mastered leads to the rapid diminishment of strength on grades one would normally float.

The Spar is certainly 5.10...even in these sorry days of grade inflation. It's only 3 hand moves to the jug once you sort out the sucker holds from the good.

By Anonymous Coward
Jun 27, 2002

[Rossiter's 2000 guidebook] calls this route 10d/11a and says that a block recently fell out making it more difficult.

By Ivan Rezucha
Mar 21, 2004
rating: 5.10c

See comments under Superspar.

By Tony Bubb
From: Boulder, CO
May 31, 2004
rating: 5.11a

The route is really fun when approached via SuperSpar or the alternate pitch of "Ruper to Grand Giraffe" (see this site). I did it in autumn of 1995 and then again today and personally do not think that, within those dates, any "broken hold" has changed the difficulty of the climb; it has always been a little harder than most of the Eldo 5.10 standard bearers. Maybe 5.11a? People with big paws might find the last big jam more secure and downgrade accordingly. I for one have small hands & find it to be a little rattly.
I've always clipped the fixed gear in the Vertigo roof and ran up it, but this one gives me pause.

By Jim Erickson
Sep 30, 2005
rating: 5.11b

Some Pre-Cambrian history: Nobody really knows the story of the name of this route except the three of us. Climbers have always assumed that it was named for the crux roof, but that is not true. When we first did this climb, we started up the 5.8 dihedral of Grand Giraffe for 20 feet, then angled left via some run-out face climbing. Art led this pitch, and about halfway up put a long sling around a horn. Art was from Steamboat Spgs, and had quite a Western Drawl, yelling down "I'll just wrap this sling around this spar here" (he was trying to say spire). Steve and I giggled about this as he led the rest of the run-out pitch, and decided to name the route Art's Spar. I immediately remember that in North Boulder at that time, there was a sleazy "Gentlemen's Club" called Art's Bar and Grill, so I thought we should call it Arts Spar and Grill, but the simpler name stuck. About the grade: Art led the first pitch and I led the short 5.9 lieback to the roof, so Steve got to lead the roof. It took him two or three tries to work out the moves, but Art and I followed without falling, so we all felt it was an easy 5.10 like Superslab, Northwest Corner, or T-2 but not a solid 5.10 like Guenese or Naked Edge or Vertigo. When I was regrading climbs for "Rocky Heights" in 1976, all these routes got upgraded of course, and I graded Arts Spar 5.10d, but I feel that 11a/b or 11b is probably more appropriate today. I have no idea where the 10c grade came from. It's harder than that, in my opinion.

Jim Erickson

By Ken Cangi
From: Boulder, CO
Oct 1, 2005

This was one of the first routes that I did in Eldo, and it is among my favorites. I can't imagine it ever being considered 5.11. I did it in the early nineties, so I don't know if the hold was broken by then, but it felt like mid-range 5.10 to me. I have done many of the 5.11 Eldo classics, and this route seems nowhere as hard.

I have free soloed Tagger at least fifty times, and it always seemed harder than this roof. Maybe it is a hand size and height thing for some people. At any rate, it is fun route with an exciting position, and I would recommend it to any solid 5.10 climber.

By Jeff Giddings
From: Fort Collins
May 17, 2006

I've always thought this route was hard for 5.10. And now I have confirmation from Jim Erickson himself!!

By Brian Weinstein
Mar 20, 2008
rating: 5.11a/b

Finally got on this today and thought that it was harder then the Vertigo Roof. I agree with Tony...the bigger the mitts the easier it'll be. Thanks for sharing your story Jim!