In 1974, a Vancouver expedition hiked in on the Mulvey Creek Trail with enough friends to climb everything worth climbing. Three children and a sitter came in by chopper. This route was attempted, and Peter Koedt, Peter Rowat, Nona Rowat, and Greg Shannan did the first two pitches before weather forced a retreat. That September, Peter Koedt and James Hamlin returned to finish the ridge.
Peter Rowat and company made the first one day ascent of Mt Gimli's South Ridge during the early seventies. What follows is Peter Rowat's route description from the Kootney Karabiner, Volume 16, 1973:
"...The climb takes the crest of the ridge all the way. 1 The most southerly point of Gimli, the start of the ridge and hardest pitch of the climb, consists of a curvaceous jam crack at the back of a 120 ft high steep wide chimney capped by an overhang. Can be well protected with nuts and exits right at the top to a stance beside the overhang. 2 Go straight up 6 feet then back left onto the ridge crest and climb easier ground to the first notch. 3 Go up to obvious flake, aim for the obvious crack but traverse round corner to right. 4 Continue to big flat step. 5 Continuous 5.6 for 200 ft going right occasionally, to stance. 6 Continue up circumventing overhang on left. 7-10 Ridge rounds off gradually, scramble to top. Rating: 5.7. Gear: 6 pins from small horizontal to 1 1/2", 12 nuts."
High quality gneiss is climbed directly up the fin shaped southeast ridge of Mount Gimli. Since we use the Yosemite Decimal System, I like to use Valley routes for comparison. My crack-hating wife thought the crux first pitch to be much harder than Bishop's Jamcrack (5.8) and much easier than pitch two of the Central Pillar of Frenzy (5.9).
Start climbing left of the pack-stash ledge, up delicate but easy slabs, 20 feet left of the main crack system. Climb the excellent white corner passing a roof with good holds and strenuous pulls out right. 35 meters up, there are about ten slings, with rings, around a flake for a rappel anchor. Better to belay on the ledge a few feet above the slings. Anchor in the main crack on the left. Beware of the hollow horizontal crack that appears to anchor the better part of the ledge.
The second pitch climbs up to the ridge using thin cracks and dark gneiss band holds. About 5.7 to start, then easing up to a notch/Gendarme belay with a slung chockstone.
Pitch three climbs more gorgeous, steep, and tricky banded gneiss. End at a tree and nice ledge on the ridge (5.7, see photo).
Pitch four is again steep and beautiful, with a hard lieback move. End atop the grassy and comfortable "Lunch Ledge" (5.6+, 60 meters).
Pitch five is again fun and exposed for 60 meters to the base of the notorious roof pitch (5.8).
Pitch six starts with a short corner up the the roof move. Left around the roof up to a small ledge (5.10a move).
Pitch seven is the last of the fifth class climbing. Two hundred feet, with more nicely sculpted rock, up to a belay below the "diving board" (5.7).
A long stretch of class III ridge leads to Mount Gimli's sub-summit, then a notch, and finally a class II scramble to the true summit. Go to the Mount Gimlipage for descent beta.
Selected resources and trip reports:
Valhalla Rock guidebook preview: Dropbox
Nick Sweeney's TR: spokalpine.com
Pellucid Wombat posted a trip report for Gimli on Supertopo
North American Classics (includes a topo and a lot of info)
SLC
Squamish, BC
Second, this route is fantastic.
Third, there are a lot of goats up there. And there are really a lot of annoying bugs, though once you are on the route the bugs go away. The goats don't. I saw two of them on the summit, and they followed us down. Jan 23, 2015
Keswick, Cumbria
Bend, OR
The pitch off the lunch ledge to below the roof is not 60m. Needs a 70 or about 15-20 ft of simulclimbing with a 60. Which isn’t bad because the start of the pitch is about 20 ft of easy blocky. But just so you know. Also pretty
Much all the pitch lengths were off from MP and the Beckey topo but none of the others in a way that affect the rope you need.
Amazing climb. Just a couple 5.9 moves and the rest is super fun 5.7 and 5.8. Great climb to push your grade if you’re a solid 5.8 leader. Aug 6, 2018
Bozeman, MT
Castlegar, BC
Spokane, WA
Rap Beta:
As you near the top of P7 you will be below the "diving board", continue up a small corner past the diving board and onto slabby terrain. Immediately look left and you will see the bolted rap anchor. Easy step left to a good stance to belay the 2nd. You are now on the the rap line.
R1 - Descend gentle slope to large sloping ledge under prominent roof (25m)
R2 - Moderately steep terrain to obvious ledge (20m)
R3 - Rap steeps & overhangs to base of L-facing corner & hanging stance. Bypass intermediate S2G anchor in corner (25m)
R4 - Lower over blank white face to small stance (25m)
R5 - Down steep face to small ledge - rope stretcher! (30m)
R6 - Rap over large flake (stuck rope potential) to obvious treed ledge (25m)
R7 - Lower 10m past obvious large ledge to small sloping ledge in left-facing corner (25m)
R8 - Straight down to the top of the talus slope (20m) Jul 12, 2022
Sandpoint
Please remove the PG-13 rating from this route. Personally I do not think it has any stretch of climbing in which it is more unsafe than any other alpine rock route. I was able to protect everywhere that I needed/wanted to.
Also this doesn't deserve a 5.10 rating as some others have stated and rumor would have it. If you know how to look around you while climbing and use your feet there shouldn't be a single move over 5.9 on the route.
Go do it! Sep 22, 2022