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North Buttress

5.10a, Trad, 2000 ft (606 m), 18 pitches, Grade V,  Avg: 2.7 from 21 votes
FA: W. Harding, F. Tarver, C. Holden and J. Whitmer, 1954, FFA: F. Sacherer and Bridwell, 1964
California > Yosemite NP > Yosemite Valley > Valley S Side > P. Cathedral Area > 6. Middle Cathedral Rock
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History and Strategy

This was the first major route done on Middle Cathedral. These days it is sort of a poor-man's DNB, less classic but considerably easier and better protected. Despite the similar names and ratings, the NB and the DNB are not even close together and are quite different. The North Buttress route is much less sustained and follows the greatest weaknesses of the face, most pitches involve some scrambling with short crux sections. However the climb is still 18 pitches long, with a lengthy descent, so you need to be reasonably fast on 5.6-5.9 pitches.

The NB appeals to a different sort of climber from the DNB. If 5.10a is your leading limit, you enjoy wandering up tree covered ledges sniffing out a route (like Warren Harding in 1954), and you want to look up the next day and say "I climbed that giant hunk of granite!", this route is for you. If you never climb anything under 10a, head for the DNB.

This route has a reputation as being one of the easiest Grade V's in the Valley, and perhaps the grade is traditional. Fast parties will down-Grade this to a IV. Still, I would not recommend getting a late start. You do not want to be doing the Cat Walk in the dark. When we did this climb we gave ourselves every advantage by starting at first light.

Description

The topo in Don Reid's guide is excellent, and I could not match it with a pitch-by-pitch description. This topo changed significantly from the previous Meyers version and a number of errors or misratings were corrected. When I did the route we had the original Meyers topo.

The climb begins quite a distance west from the toe of the actual north buttress and DNB. Begin right of a fallen slab. The first 5 pitches go quickly, as there is much 3rd-4th class. At this point you traverse right into an unseen crack to face the first 5.9 crack. This pitch is burly and exposed, probably the second hardest on the route. However the 5.9 section is not that long. The next pitch also has a short 5.9 move and leads to a large forested ledge.

The crux of the route is undoubtably pitch 11. This pitch was only rated 5.9 in the old topo but we thought it significantly harder than pitch 15 (originally rated 10a). Pitch 11 is a relatively steep, sustained face, and one problem is that its not clear where the easiest passage lies. There are a number of possible thin cracks to follow, only about 5 feet apart. Take heart, for after this pitch the difficulties ease and you are nearing the top. A mere 7 pitches remain!

On pitch 15 we were dog tired and anticipating the crux of the route. We were relieved to find the bolt protected face climbing no problem at all (it has now been reduced to 5.9, and it is one of the easier 5.9 pitches). With luck you will reach the end of the technical climbing before dark. Traverse the Cat Walk to safety, and eventually, beers. We were concerned about identifying the Cat Walk, or that we would have to put the rope back on, but we had no problems in this section.

According to the guide, it is also possible to climb all the way to the summit of Middle Cathedral, a spot that surprisingly few climbers have visited. Most of us are happy to escape down the ledge before darkness.

It is likely that many of these pitches can be combined with a 60m or 70m rope. This may not be such a good idea because the route wanders so much.

Protection:

Standard rack to #3 Camalot.

Photos [Hide ALL Photos]

Topo (part 1).
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Source: http://www.supertopo.com/tr/north-buttress-middle-Cathedral/t12686n.html
[Hide Photo] Topo (part 1). Source: http://www.supertopo.com/tr/north-buttress-middle-Cathedral/t12686n.html
Topo (part 2).
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http://www.supertopo.com/tr/north-buttress-middle-Cathedral/t12686n.html
[Hide Photo] Topo (part 2). http://www.supertopo.com/tr/north-buttress-middle-Cathedral/t12686n.html
Bivvy among ant trees, 1975.
[Hide Photo] Bivvy among ant trees, 1975.
Starting into the P5 'chimney' ...
[Hide Photo] Starting into the P5 'chimney' ...
Route Finding in 1982, Photo: David Hoffman
[Hide Photo] Route Finding in 1982, Photo: David Hoffman
Andrew Fairfield starting up P1
[Hide Photo] Andrew Fairfield starting up P1
I recall this being fairly ledgy and fun . . .
[Hide Photo] I recall this being fairly ledgy and fun . . .
Scott Senjo scoping the route
[Hide Photo] Scott Senjo scoping the route
I recall this being  a great climb...
[Hide Photo] I recall this being a great climb...

Comments [Hide ALL Comments]

Mark Dalen
Albuquerque, NM
[Hide Comment] 'Burly' is the right word for P5 ... is it just me or is that 'chimney' following the finger crack not one of the most sandbag 5.8s the Valley has to offer ... ? Dec 22, 2013
[Hide Comment] Totally agree with docsavage: the P5 chimney has a hard, exposed entry move and the chimney itself is bombay, rotten, damp, and full of moss/lichen.

Climbed to Tree Ledge in the 80s as a party of three. Our bivi on Tree Ledge was first spoiled by numerous red ants, then a massive thunderstorm lasting all night. We bailed at first light. Strike one.

A couple years later, me and a buddy planned to do it in a day. Got the crack-o-dawn start and I led P5 by 11am. My buddy got absolutely freaked following P5 and insisted we bail. Strike two. Feb 8, 2014
Rob Dillon
Tamarisk Clearing
[Hide Comment] Fun route, more in the rockaneering vein with a few cruxes here and there. Probably the best way to scope the DNB walk-off if you're concerned about 'on sighting' it in the dark. You are unlikely to wait in line for this one.

Me and another non-superhero got an 11am start in October and managed to get to the descent chimney by nightfall, so I think Grade V is a little much. Feb 27, 2014
Bryan G
June Lake, CA
[Hide Comment] If by modern standards this is a Grade IV, then I think also by modern standards the Steck-Salathe would have to be a Grade III, and the Rostrum a Grade II. Just for the sake of consistency.

This took us a little longer to climb than DNB, mainly because the route finding is more difficult and there's more loose rock you have to be careful with. Oct 13, 2014
Tony Lobay
San Carlos
 
[Hide Comment] Trip write up from freaky cold weather in July 2016.

(Note will not open correctly on iOS devices.)

iceclimb.blogspot.com/2017/…

And since everyone seems to be chiming in: it felt like a grade V, on par w/ the DNB. Route finding can slow you down. May 25, 2017
[Hide Comment] Agree with all of the comments above. P5 has a 10 foot burly section probably 10b/c seems about right to me. The fun isn't over on that pitch though there is a good slightly bulging chimney after. I thought the "horns" pitch was the hardest technically and strength wise - could be because I was tired at this point though and led all of the pitches on the route. I won't comment much on the grades of the other pitches on the climb because I myself appreciate a good sandbag!!!! Fun route that would get done a lot more if it wasn't for the bushes. Ohh and lastly, the 5.9 pitch with the old rusty bolts is real real fun but be solid at the grade those bolts are things you'd see in a museum, old 16 penny nail, another bolt is sticking halfway out of the was, anyways you get the point.

Fun adventure route!! Oct 18, 2018
[Hide Comment] FFA in 1964 was by Sacherer & Bridwell. Sacherer & Beck did the FFA of the Direct North Buttress in 1965. The notable story on the FFA of the "regular" North Buttress was that Bridwell fell leading one of the early pitches and landed on Sacherer. The rest of the way, Frank wouldn't let Bridwell lead any of the pitches. Jun 9, 2021
Thomas Kofron
San Luis Obispo, CA
 
[Hide Comment] Did this route a couple days ago. Was awesome. Shaded the entire day. was about 11 hours car to car. with half hour approach and 2 hours down the catwalk and gulley. I think the crux is just moving fast enough to get down before dark.
Gear:
double rack of totems.
2x #3bd
couple micro cams and set of micro nuts, (used 1 micro cam and 2 micro nuts) probably could do without these.
Simuled pitches 1-4 and 7-8. linked 9-10(terrible rope drag).
pitched out the rest.
Route finding wasnt to bad, downclimbed about 10ft on several occasions.
Lots of loose flakes, blocks and rocks on ledges.
Pitch 5 wasnt bad. the first small chimney was easily lay-backed(as the guides states). then exposed but good couple finger moves gets you around the corner and into a much easier chimney with plenty of holds. Pitch 9 had only a short crux(10a) section at the horn, but be mindful of rope drag at the top when traversing left. Pitch 12 bolted face section felt enjoyable secure 5.9. Final pitch is very long working your way through and over giant blocks to the top, choose your own adventure, high potential for rope drag.
Cairn at the top mark the start of the catwalk which starts through/over a bush. when you feel like you hit a dead end on the catwalk you will have a short tight tunnel through some boulder blocks, the rest was straight forward but narrow and slick. Would have not been fun in the dark. Anchor bolts/slings for the gulley descent looked in good shape. Enjoy Oct 16, 2022