Type: Trad, 900 ft (273 m), 6 pitches, Grade II
FA: Jack & LaDonna Kutz, Bob Kyrlach, Pete Skaates, Paul Wohlt, Dave Logan May 1966
Page Views: 2,021 total · 11/month
Shared By: Bill Lawry on Aug 17, 2009
Admins: Jason Halladay, Mike Hoskins, Anna Brown

You & This Route


1 Opinions
Your To-Do List: Add To-Do ·
Your Star Rating:
Rating Rating Rating Rating Rating      Clear Rating
Your Difficulty Rating:
-none- Change
Your Ticks:Add New Tick
-none-
Use onX Backcountry to explore the terrain in 3D, view recent satellite imagery, and more. Now available in onX Backcountry Mobile apps! For more information see this post.

Description Suggest change

I had labeled this as Hill's Route 2. Then Chris Wenker pointed out that it appears that the description in Hill's guide was copied out of Kline's. So I've shortened the name to just Route 2.

Dean Kuethe and I started at the middle of the base of the buttress. For us the mystery about this route is whether there really is a 5.6 way to do the first two pitches. Both the left side side and the right side side of the buttress have viable starting pitches. There is a bushy crevice in the left side of the buttress. We did not try it, but suspect it might be the original start that goes at 5.6. We were drawn by rock to the right, which lookes more like a rock climb than a scrambling bush wack, but by no means claim this was a wise decision.

Our start was at the small bush in the lower right corner of the picture, up broken blocks trending right, then back left to some bushes directly above our start, and up the obvious crack just to the left of the black waterstains. Not a 5.6 way.
P1 (5.7+, PG13): This above photo shows our start. Start up near the middle of the buttress (possibly a little right of the middle) over large cracked blocks to a ledge ~20 feet up. Work through the steep hand crack formed by a curving orange-lichen flake with black waterstains to the right of it. Continue to follow the weakness above, which directs you up a right-facing corner. At about 25 meters of rope there are precariously stacked blocks in the corner with hand and finger cracks on respective sides. DOK vaguely recalls (from an ascent over a decade ago) that continuing past them reduces the grade of the first two pitches to 5.7. Being over a decade older, we struck out right and up to find occasional protection in solid rock. Continuing up and right, an unexpected and welcome small belay ledge in a right facing corner appears at about 30 m of rope.

P2 (5.8+, PG13): Work slightly left and then up through a short and shallow chimney to a small roof; there is some crumbling rock in the back of the chimney. Pass through the roof (crux) and slightly higher until possible to trend left on very run-out moderate terrain back into the weakness we left in P1 (back "on route"?). Continue straight up through continuing sections of run-out on moderate terrain to a ledge at the top of the buttress. The ledge is larger than a dinner table and covered with grass. A 50 meter pitch.

P3 (5.4R): Now one can boogie for a few pitches . . . Head straight up off the ledge and onto easy runout slab for 60 meters to large trees. If the belayer does not use the rope to tie in, a 60 m rope will make it to the trees. This is the nice pitch.

P4 (a few 5.5 moves): Now, the climb follows the obvious ledge that diagonals left and up for two pitches. Ascend easy ledges about 60 meters to a ~10 inch diameter tree that is about 7 feet higher than a large flat platform. Tree is two thirds dead (Aug 2009) and not the only option for an anchor. 60 m.

P5 (a few 5.5 moves): Continue in about the same trajectory as P4 for roughly 30 more meters. There is a small tree out on the end of the ledge but we went up before reaching the tree and set a gear anchor in good cracks. 35 m. The below photo was taken from the end of our P5, and identifies some features around P6.
Photo taken from the belay at the top of our Pitch 5. Pitch 6 trends rightward and then turns up before reaching the outcrop of rocks against the sky in the upper right of the photo.

P6 (couple 5.7 moves): This pitch trends rightward and up, at first on good quality rock which soon deteriorates. This pitch would probably be 5.6 if one follows the obvious weakness and pulls on the spectacularly-precarious-looking, bus-size broken block. Rather we stayed to the left of it to climb atop a less-precarious-looking boulder whose underside forms an overhang. The route ends at the "W" of the Knife Edge, near the lowest SE point of the "W". Removed a fixed nut with a rusty wire on this pitch.

We then went down the Knife Edge to pick up dropped gear at its base (and water!!) and then returned via established trails.

Thanks to mtnrobb for posting the below photo. Hill's Route 2 starts just to the right of the darkest waterstains that are in the sun. The snow in the photo made it possible to identify the end of Pitch 3 at the big trees as well as the general trend of the traverse ledges of Pitches 4 & 5.
The Prow, lit up in front of the Shield. Photo by [[106272107]].

Location Suggest change

The route starts at the base of a shallow ~250 foot tall buttress in the middle of the west half of The Shield.

Protection Suggest change

A standard rack to 3.5 inches is sufficient however, a small SLC (e.g., #1, perhaps #0, TCU) is handy for the belay at the end of the first pitch and small tricams were handy in the run out sections.

Photos

loading