Home - Destinations - People - Partners - Forum - Photos - What's New
 ADVANCED
Silverplume & vicinity

Show routes:
Select route...
Esperanza 
Silverplume Falls 
Sniktau Falls 
Stash, The 

Silverplume & vicinity

Submitted By: Chris Zeller on Nov 30, 1999
Administrators: Ben Mottinger, Leo Paik, John McNamee, Frances Fierst, Monomaniac
Views: 3,283 page views

Add Route  Add Photo  Add Comment  Add Event 

  Print a Mini-Guide - Includes Routes!

BETA PHOTO: Overview Early December 2002


Description 

By mid-winter, an icefall usually forms in a gully just above the ghost town of Silverplume. The climb is visible from I-70 and provides a tempting retreat from the usually-heavy ski traffic. Due to the accessibility and visibility of this climb, the climb is fairly popular with beginning to intermediate climbers. Nonetheless, the area sees much less traffic than those in Boulder or Clear Creek Canyon.


Getting There 

Take I-70 West out of Denver. Just past Georgetown you reach the town of Silverplume on the right. Take exit #226, follow Water Street through town. The road turns into an old mining road that parallels I-70 and leads to some abandoned mining structures. Walk up the obvious frozen streambed to the falls. The approach typically requires crampons but the low-angle ice is not technical.



Comments on Silverplume & vicinity Add Comment
Show which comments
By Cubby
Dec 4, 2001

This is in enough for some climbing, the ice is almost Alpine in nature, but fun, watch out for lots of other climbers as this is about the only ice close to Denver

By Mark Wheaton
Dec 27, 2001

Falls are sunbaked but still fat enough to climb. Ice is wet.

By Anonymous Coward
Nov 15, 2002

Went to Silverplume on 11-13-02. Quite wet, chandeliered and minimal though fun with a little mixed on the sides. Not much climbing but at this time of year beggars can't be choosers, especially with such easy access.

By Lee Smith
Feb 6, 2007

Anchor beta--the top rope anchor on the very crest of the flow is nice, but it is on a big boulder that is not very firmly attached to the planet. It looks a little sketchy to me, and we took the right side downclimb rather than rap off the anchor.