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Reefer Madness

5.10- R, Trad, 400 ft (121 m), 4 pitches, Grade II,  Avg: 2.7 from 25 votes
FA: Kem Johnson, Mark Axen, Rich Thompson (Direct: Paul Davidson, Steve Grossman, Randy Mettler)
Arizona > Southern Arizona > Mt Lemmon (Sant… > Mt Lemmon (Cata… > 7 - Upper Highway > Reef of Rocks > Aegir

Description

This exhilarating route offers splitter cracks, runout slabs, an exposed hanging belay, and (previously featured) a door-sized loose flake that you have to gently climb around. A great taste of everything the Reef has to offer, at a "moderate" grade.

In my opinion this route hovers between PG-13 and R for sections of climbing on pitches 2 & 4 (direct finish).

(Note: pitch lengths listed below are just guesstimates on my part.)

P1 (regular): From the northwest corner of Aegir, traverse straight right along a weakness, doing battle with a bush, until you reach a small belay alcove with a large loose flake and obvious left-facing flake/corner above. Not great climbing, but interesting position. 5.7, ~100 ft.

P1 ("Reefer Direct"; recommended; not to be confused with the much harder "Direct Madness" which is on the north face): turn the right side of the roof band with fun moves on grainy rock, then move up and left to an engaging seam. Both the roof and seam are about 10- and have decent gear, but you have to work for it. Be sure to have a nut tool handy on lead. Easier but more runout climbing leads to the same belay alcove described above. 5.10-, ~90 ft.

P2: Climb up into the left-facing, leaning flake corner, doing everything you can not to touch the giant detached flake to the left of it. (This thing is gonna go one day, but surely not the day you're on it. Edit: terror flakes are gone!). Climb the fun 5.9 corner, then move up and right up easy ledges to a spicy 5.9 slab section (on good rock) with gear and ankle-busting ledges below your feet. Belay on a small ledge with a small tree and a block. 5.9 PG-13/R, ~80 ft.

P3: Move out left into the crack system which turns into a beautiful 1-inch splitter. Some of the best crack climbing on Mt. Lemmon. Set up an exposed hanging belay at the left edge of the huge roof that caps the west face of Aegir. 5.9, ~110 ft.

P4: (easy finish). Do a fun, exposed traverse to the right under the roof, and belay at its end. Finish on the last pitch of Blockbuster Ballet by moving up and left, connecting flakes and cracks to the top. Both short pitches are about 5.7, but they would be difficult to link due to the roof and the nearly 180-degree change in direction. However, you can combine P3 with the roof traverse if you want to eliminate a belay.

P4: (direct finish; recommended). From the hanging belay, climb straight up the exposed corner above. A well-protected 5.10- move yields to spicy 5.9 stemming with some shallow micro-nut placements. Continue up the easier remainder of the corner to the top, and belay with incredible exposure and views of Neptune. 5.10- PG-13/R, ~100-120 ft. This can be combined with P3 with a 70-meter rope. However, I thought the hanging belay was one of the coolest positions I've been in on Mt. Lemmon, and worth savoring.

Location

The regular start begins at the northwest corner of Aegir just before you drop steeply downhill to gain the west face. Set a belay and poke around until you find the easy weakness that allows you to get established on the west face.

For the direct start, once you drop down to the west face, there is a long, low roof band. Start up the right end of the roof band where you can get some okay gear and good holds in horizontals. You are aiming for the left-leaning shallow corner/seam above this, which is usually visibly vegetated.

Protection

No fixed gear unless there are bail slings. Standard rack to a #3 camalot with two each .5 & .75 camalots for the pitch 3 splitter. Micro-nuts and possibly micro-cams are useful on the last, direct pitch. A 48" sling or cordolette helps at a couple of the belays.

Photos [Hide ALL Photos]

mt. lemmon or the sierras??
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(taken from Blockbuster Ballet)
[Hide Photo] mt. lemmon or the sierras?? (taken from Blockbuster Ballet)
Former location of p2 flakes
[Hide Photo] Former location of p2 flakes
Third or fourth pitch of reefer, high on the fin factor that's forsure
[Hide Photo] Third or fourth pitch of reefer, high on the fin factor that's forsure
Reefer direct starts on steep horizontals on the right side (and just out of view of this photo) and continues up the crack (black streak) to the vegetated ledge.
[Hide Photo] Reefer direct starts on steep horizontals on the right side (and just out of view of this photo) and continues up the crack (black streak) to the vegetated ledge.
Richie Winter on the money pitch
[Hide Photo] Richie Winter on the money pitch

Comments [Hide ALL Comments]

[Hide Comment] First ascent party spent a couple of hours under the roof waiting out a big rain storm. When it finally passed, Kym Johnson was so anxious to get outta dodge that he took off up the slab in rather wet condition. There's more to the story that I can't recall right now. Jun 8, 2010
1Eric Rhicard
Tucson
 
[Hide Comment] Reefer Direct is the way to go. Way better than traversing the ledge. You could easily combine pitch two and three by placing gear in the horizontal you use to move left. A half dozen shoulder lengths will keep the rope drag down. Oct 19, 2014
Charles Vernon
Colorado megalopolis
  5.10- R
[Hide Comment] I attempted this climb again recently, and the second pitch seemed like it has become looser. The door-sized flake was just as I remembered it (i.e., pretty terrifying), but not any worse. However, there is a flake wedged in the main crack which I used to jam and place pro behind which now seems to have partially broken off and is visibly loose. Maybe due to freeze-thaw action? It makes this section scarier and more committing, and I ended up backing off.

It's certainly possible that it hasn't gotten worse, and that my perception is due to age, fatherhood, etc., but I had led this pitch three times previously and never noticed an issue with loose rock in the main crack. Jun 20, 2016
Kem Johnson
Methven, NZ
[Hide Comment] It's Kem, btw. not Kym. I really don't remember much about putting it up other than it was without pitons, bolts, leg loops or chalk. Might have had something to do with Reefer, dunno. Those were the days. Aug 14, 2019
[Hide Comment] Definitely a really good route I wish some of the pitches were longer but still super good!
1# The direct start can be reached from the main trail that follows the wall Climbers right, I was under the assumption that I had to go down into the gully to get to the direct start which was false
2# The direct start, starts pretty much directly below the seam you will be climbing in, not off to the right. That’s another route UC 5.10 R although you can traverse left to the seam 5.8+ R (after the opening moves 5.10) and is super fun
3#. Gear I used for the anchors: 1st dmm offset big blue and grey and #3 2nd #4 #3 #2 3rd 2 #.75 4th ( end of roof traverse ) #2 #.4 5th .4 .75 if you are using this beta look around for the belay, basically each one is off-set from the line
4# I didn’t think the moves ending the second pitch were R you could call it PG, a few tough moves… and if things go south make sure to jump out and you will be fine. The move left starting the third will get your attention but it’s all there! I finished on the traverse super fun!
#5 my rack doubles .2- 3 and one 4 probably could have got by with less but definitely used everything May 26, 2022
Jon.R
Tucson, AZ
  5.10- R
[Hide Comment] As of two-ish weeks ago, most (all?) of the horrifying flakes on p2 are gone. If you climbed over them in the past, rejoice! for you may have dodged a rather large bullet May 30, 2022
jbak x
tucson, az
[Hide Comment] I second the "holy shit " ! One of the more minor bullets I dodged back then, but still. I remember a BIG flake there. May 31, 2022
jbak x
tucson, az
[Hide Comment] It's been 10000 days since I did that route. So the odds seem very slim. Like 1/10000. I've been up against way worse. Spooky at the time, but no real sweat. May 31, 2022
1Eric Rhicard
Tucson
 
[Hide Comment] JBak and all of the more experienced of us climbed for 20 years when a fall on any day climbing could lead to serious injury or death. Then drilling bolts got easy with cordless drills and it got a lot safer. Now if you can't place a bomber piece of gear or clip a bolt every 6 feet climbs get a PG 13. When John and I started you learned there were thing you didn't touch or climb on and things you danced gingerly over. I think when Jbak says "minor bullet" he means that this was just one death block of dozens he had to avoid pulling off. Jun 1, 2022
Gabriel Kerbs
Lander, Yeehaw!
 
[Hide Comment] 2 stars for rock quality, plus a star for puckerfactor= 3 stars in my book Jul 1, 2022
adrian montaño
Tucson, AZ
  5.10-
[Hide Comment] Props & thanks are due for cleaning the P2 terror flakes; that section is now casual & fun laybacks up an aesthetic flake corner with a bomber ramp for feet. With the rock quality & exposure on P2 & 3, and a now softened R rating, I don't know how people aren't climbing this all the time.

The direct finish is the only thing that may keep this route hovering around PG-13. Aug 19, 2023