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North Face (Pegasus 5.12)

5.7 A1, Trad, Aid, 1200 ft (364 m), 14 pitches, Grade V,  Avg: 3 from 11 votes
FA: Yvon Chouinard, Tom Frost 1962
California > Yosemite NP > Yosemite Valley > Valley S Side > B. Quarter Domes
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Description

The North Face of Quarter Dome is a fun, classic Yosemite big wall adventure. First climbed by Yvon Chouinard and Tom Frost in 1962 it was first free climbed by Mark Hudon and Max Jones in 1979 with only nuts, Proud! The position up Tenaya Canyon gives the climb a quiet, backcountry alpine feel and amazing views of Watkins the whole time.

Once the struggle to reach the base is over, the climb follows the obvious corners up to the summit.

P.1 (5.3) Either rope up or scramble some easy low 5th class ledges past the pin belay to the start of the 2nd pitch face traverse. Gear belay. 150 ft

P.2 (5.8) Climb a short, exciting, 5.7 face traverse off the belay into the easy cracks leading up to the belay ledge. Gear belay. 130 ft

P.3 (5.8) Alpine style hand cracks. Gear belay under the bulge. 170 ft

P.4 (5.10a) Short, funky .10a bulge to easier (5.7) climbing to the belay ledge. Gear belay. 90 ft

P.5 (5.9) Traverse left and follow up 5.9 cracks to bolted belay. 90ft.

NOTE: Possible to link P4&5 into rope stretcher with 60m or comfortably with 70m. Watch rope drag if linking.

P.6 (5.8) More fun hand cracks up corners. Gear belay. 180 ft

P.7 (5.10a) One last short pitch to the bivy ledges. Bolted anchors.

NOTE: If bivying, there are many flat ledges to sleep on though they tend to be long, narrow ones fitting 1-2 people per space.

P.8 (5.10b) From the pitch 7 anchors scramble across the 4th class bivy ledges, staying low, to another set of bolts under the obvious corner system. Short .10b section to 5.8 corner to the belay ledge. Bolted anchors. 150 ft.

P.9 (C2F or 5.10c) climb up an easy 5.7 chimney with many pins in the back and up to the C2 or .10c corner to the anchor. Bolted anchors. 90 ft

P.10 (A1 or 5.10c) The original aid pitch climbs up and right along an easy A1 Beak/Arrow crack to a pendulum into the 5.8 climbing to the anchor.

A much better option is climbing straight up off the anchor on 5.10c face climbing straight to the 5.8 climbing and anchor. 2 new bolts have been added in this section so it's not as runout anymore. 120 ft

P.11 (C2 or 5.10d) Follow the arching corner up and right on aid or .10d to a tension to the anchor. Bolted. 140 ft

P.12 (A1 or 5.12) A beak move off the belay gets you into a beautiful thin finger crack (C1 or 5.11+) that ends with a tension left to easier 5.9 climbing or a 5.12 "Improbable jump" from the crack 6 ft. over to the easier climbing. Bolted anchors. 140 ft

P.13 (A1 or 5.11d) Climb up a couple bolts to a C2 or .11d corner and either finish up the original A1 aid corner (1 LA move) with many fixed pins and tension to the anchor or face climb over to a .10a corner. Bolted. 140 ft

P.14 (5.10a or C1) Free climb a short .10a (or C1) section to easy but loose and sandy 5.6 climbing to the summit!

Descend by walking a half mile straight off the back towards the Clouds Rest Trail to Half Dome and Little Yosemite Valley and following it back to the Valley.

Location

The crux of the entire route is the approach. Although it's possible to do in 3-4 hrs if you know where to go, for your first time plan for at least 4-5 hrs and up to 6-8 if your unlucky or have huge bags.

Follow the approach for Watkins up Tenaya Canyon along the climbers trail on the north side of the riverbed. After passing Watkins on your left stop when the canyon narrows and you have to start scrambling up 4th class and cut up and right through the bushes towards Quarter Dome on your right. Trend along the base of the wall and up the path of least resistance up slabs to the base platform. GOOD LUCK! You will most likely get lost so don't feel too bad.

Protection

Standard doubles wall rack to #3 with a few extra small and offset cams and a single #4. Camhooks to pass the nailing sections and a couple beaks and stubby LA's incase the fixed pins are missing. Easily goes clean for many parties.

Photos [Hide ALL Photos]

North Face of Quarter Dome
[Hide Photo] North Face of Quarter Dome
Aiding the "All Time Nailup"
[Hide Photo] Aiding the "All Time Nailup"
Lower on the route, Lisa Coleman leads 1995
[Hide Photo] Lower on the route, Lisa Coleman leads 1995
Some of the climbing was similar to Half Dome. 1995
[Hide Photo] Some of the climbing was similar to Half Dome. 1995
Shows the start. John Healy getting ready to drag a haul bag up that crap. I do not recommend hauling on this route!
[Hide Photo] Shows the start. John Healy getting ready to drag a haul bag up that crap. I do not recommend hauling on this route!

Comments [Hide ALL Comments]

[Hide Comment] Old school ratings on this rig. Approach was tough also.
Lower half rock quality on the route is kinda So so.
Good day out. Jun 18, 2018
Jordan Collins
Atascadero, CA
 
[Hide Comment] This is a really fun adventure, we did it valley to valley this summer and it was epic day walking down the mist trail instead of death slabs. Epic. If you go up there you may find a green totem we dropped..... it’s worth it?? Maybe. Nov 12, 2019
Bug Boy
Boulder, CO :(
[Hide Comment] Attempted this route on June 16th. After chopping steps through the snowy approach and navigating icy 4th class slabs we were relieved to make it to the base of the route and start climbing rock. 1st pitch still required some scary nut tool in the snow-approach shoes on wet slabs-trickery.
Anyway, we made it to the top of pitch 7 finding the climbing to be more difficult than the topo grades would indicate. At this point it started raining/snowing/hailing but we could look down the valley and still see sun on el Cap so we assumed the storm would soon pass. I asked my partner if we should consider bailing but the route is fairly traversing and there are no in-situ anchors, so we decided to "bail up". My partner lead up one more pitch of sopping cracks and it was obvious we would be doing a lot climbing in the dark at this pace.

After talking to some friends who mentioned runout climbing on the upper pitches and realizing the storm was only getting worse, the prospect of scary climbing on a drenched rock in the dark didn’t seem all that appealing. Not to mention I was already saturated down to my underwear and cold enough to see decreasing motor skills.

Down we go. As the rain continued, the wall was now streaming with water and it went without saying we were going to leave as many of our fancy ultralight cams as we needed to make it down the 1,000 feet of steep granite . After reversing a few sketchy, snowy ledge traverses my partner decided that we should rappel a steep corner system that would provide a more direct line to the ground.

7 rappels, 8 cams, and 1 core shot-rope later, we had made it to the base. We were both relieved to be off the wall but neither of us liked the prospect of trying to reverse the steep snow slope and approach slabs in the dark. To get around this we fixed my rope to a tree hoping we would end up on the ground. The rope reached the ground but there was still a 25 foot cliff separating us from the (long) hike out. With darkness quickly approaching Tyler scoped a bush that we could use as an anchor to get down. We cut the last 20 feet off the fixed rope, hitched 4 slings together and finally we could begin the hike out. It was a huge relief to begin moving fast and warming back up. 18 hours after leaving the cars we were back and headed straight for warm showers. Apr 20, 2021
David Swanson
Sacramento, Ca
[Hide Comment] ^^^ Saw the GoPro footage of this adventure. Looked like some sketchy stuff, Glad you guys made it down safely. Apr 21, 2021
[Hide Comment] Lots of great climbing on this one. Linked this car to car with Half Dome to get Three Quarters Dome in a day. Sep 27, 2021