Austin, tx --> Durango, Co?
|
Hey MP, |
|
Check out the Durango area section on the routes page. Plenty to climb in Durango. |
|
pretty good sport. not so good trad. close to town. indian creek is fairly close as well. |
|
For sport climbing you have Golf Wall 20 min. up Hwy. 550(limestone), Cascade Canyon (limestone) 30 min up hwy. 550, Lemon Res. (granite) 35 min. from town, and Falls Creek 5 min. from town (sandstone). Durango has great trad/ sport climbing up at East Animas 5 min. from town and S Denny is right about the Creek only being 2 hours. We also have a high concentration of boulders within 5 min of town. |
|
Sounds like a great town! And with a good amount of Sport Climbing. Yes, playing is certainly top priority, not looking for any night life what-so-ever really....other than hanging with friends obviously. |
|
Definitely make the move - you won't regret it. I lived in Texas for 23 years of my life and finally got out and moved to Colorado. I don't miss Texas one bit. |
|
Having sport climbed a bit in Austin on the Barton Springs trail, I'd say that Durango offers maybe slightly lower quality climbing, more diversity, and more adventure than Austin's crags in the "less than .5 hour" range. If you count the climbing in Durango on the "less than 2.5 hour drive" and "less than 5 hour drive" orbitals, Durango is infinitely better than Austin. While as a city Durango doesn't have the same buzz as Austin (nor the other major cities in CO or other locales near great sport climbing), it has a pretty active yet low-stress community. I'd characterize the community here as a nice mix of an old west, agricultural history with a strong representation of serious outdoor enthusiasts. Most folks have professional careers, too, and there's enough tourism to keep the economy relatively healthy. It's a darn good place. |
|
Oh yeah, I meant to mention that I moved here pretty much only into sport and trad climbing with little interest in bouldering. While I still do plenty of roped climbing, I've gotten way more into bouldering as it is just so good and so extensive. I'd say - hesitantly - that the bouldering is the highest quality climbing in Durango. |
|
Bryant, I see your profile picture is you pulling through the roof at Seismic wall on... Lonesome Dove? East A (~20 sport routes, some -STELLAR- 2 pitchers): -10 minute drive -10 minute (hoofin' it) approach -YEAR ROUND Lemon (30 routes, some sport, some mixed): 30 minute drive, 10 minute approach -late spring through late fall Cascade Canyon (~30 routes, sport): 30 minute drive, 10 minute approach -lat(er) spring through earl(ier) fall Rest day activities: -Backpacking, peak bagging, alpine climbing in CO's largest wilderness area -Whitewater kayaking through downtown -World class mountain biking (kicks the greenbelt's a**) -All the local breweries -Moab is not far (3hrs) -Ouray/ Telluride (Ice climbng/ skiing) Less than 2 hours SOME THINGs YOU -MIGHT- MISS (I do) ABOUT AUSTIN: -Swimming in Barton Springs after cragging (swimming and Colorado don't like each other) -The top rope gang bang sessions at new wall/ prototype wall -The community is not tightly nit -There is no "governing body" for climbing ethics here (no CTCC) -New route development is not too prevalent -It's not appropriate to show up at a crag alone and expect to find partners there -We have winter. (lows occasionally around -20 degrees F). Skiing?... There will most certainly be days you simply -cannot- climb (rock) -No cheap airfare (no Southwest Airlines out of Durango Regional) -No tufas -The guidebook is no John Hogge masterpiece... :) I hope any of this helped! If you -really- want to enjoy yourself out here, plan on getting into trad climbing in addition to the sport scene. You'll tire of running laps up at golf and on the watch crystal quickly, and the siren song of desert towers and endless splitters will be hard to resist (unless your online business is hand modeling) |
|
Dylan, |
|
Christopher, |
|
Dylan mentioned a lot of important features about Durango, including that the community is not that tight here. There are plenty of great folks who climb, but there isn't the cohesion that other areas seem to have. It's not that hard to find partners, but it is also very common to meet folks who are serious climbers and been here for years whom you've never met. Kind of funny. |
|
Thanks for the heads up Chris. Quite a different community it sounds like compared to my local crag, we often share ropes (and dirty stories) with total strangers that are clearly competent climbers, just ones I haven't yet met. In time I'm sure I'll find some climbing partners in Durango. |
|
Hey Bryant, |