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Springbok Arete

5.11a, Trad, Alpine, 1200 ft (364 m), 13 pitches, Grade IV,  Avg: 3.6 from 10 votes
FA: Barley, Cheesmond, Lacey, Lomax 1981. SCE Direct start added in 2006 by Kruk/McGee/White
International > N America > Canada > British Columbia > Fraser Valley > Anderson River… > Les Cornes

Description

Stellar, long, committing on mostly impeccable rock with the usual alpine characteristics. The climbing tends more towards the burly than the technical, though there's a little of both.

The original start followed moderate climbing up the prominent, left-trending orange ramp. Since the addition of the raunchier variation with the raunchier name (Sprung C*ck Erect, 5.11), the original start is normally skipped in favor of the excellent first three pitches of SCE, so that's what I'll describe here.

From the talus, you'll see pitch 3's beautiful fists splitter shining in the sun. Look for a right-facing corner about two pitches below - this is pitch 1. In early season, expect the first half of this pitch to be buried in snow. Once it's melted out, a single bolt and boulder problem mark the start.

P1 - 5.10b, 30m. Clip the bolt, bust a few moves and climb the thin, shallow right-facing corner on the right side of a pillar. Sustained 5.9 thin hands take you to a bolted belay on top the pillar.

P2 - 5.10b, 30m. Move out right on quartz holds, clip a bolt and make a few thin moves (crux) to surmount a flake. Ignore the dirty corner far to your right. Make some more face moves above your pro, aiming for the large left-facing flakes above (wet in early season). Belay at bolts on top of the wild jutting flake, past a dead tree.

P3 - 5.10c, 30m. Incredible. Move left up the steep finger-hands crack, pulling the bulge on cupped hands to the long #4 sized splitter up the slab. At the end of the crack, move right past 2 bolts (crux) to another bolted belay. The original start joins from the right here.

P4-5 - 5.6, 110m. Follow the broad ramp to it's end, where the corner steepens again. The cracks on the left offer the best pro past many trees, the climbing is easy, but the rock is kitty litter. At the top of the ramp move right across the unprotected slab to a slung horn belay.

P6 - 5.10-, 30m. Move up the steep, fingery stem corner. Dirty and a little bit of a jenga tower at the top, but fun fun down low. The upper half of SCE breaks right here.

P7 - 5.9, 20m. The token 5.awkward pitch traverses left, more horizontal than vertical, through a weird OW-thing (blind small-medium pro in the back), then past chossy edges and a couple loose flakes. Previous descriptions mention a slung block belay, which wasn't there, but there were signs of recent rockfall... There is a large block to maybe sling at the end of the ramp, but with the nearby choss I didn't quite trust it and climbed about 10 feet higher to the base of the splitter cracks.

P8 - 5.10+, 40m. The burly pitch, and possibly the crux. Climb the great splitters to an OW pod and the orange roof at the base of the intimidating orange headwall. Pull the roof on cupped hands or fists, and continue up steep, awesome and pumpy climbing, past the large ledge, ending in an alcove belay next to a dead tree.

P9 - 5.8, 10m - wild juggy flakes traverse due left below an overhang, ending at a flat ledge with a couple trees.

P10 - 5.11a, 40m. Originally rated .10c. Fun fingercrack in a corner to short, reachy crux. Mostly 5.10- climbing above on juggy flakes, moving right to a 2-bolt belay on a slab.

P11 - 5.9, 40m. Traverse right and follow awesome cracks and shallow corners up the slab to a flat perch out right, with great exposure below.

P12 - 5.9, 60m. This pitch felt stout at the end of the day. Bust a couple steep moves, then follow the low-angle, blocky corner with the bulk of the face dropping to your right. The corner steepens again and takes thin gear before mellowing out in 3rd class terrain. There is an unnecessary belay bolt on the slab, with better belay options just past.

P13 - 5.7, 100m. Unrope or simul the narrow, blocky ridge through mostly 3-4 class terrain for approximately 60m. The ridge narrows again and becomes 5th class. Scoot or hand traverse down the incredibly exposed and airy au cheval/knife edge, ending at the first rap station to the left. Classic finish.

DESCENT - Follows the waterfall gully between Les Cornes and Ibex. 2 60m ropes recommended, though a single 70m is possible. We used a 70, and between early season snow choking the gully and impeding darkness, had to improvise a few stations. Bring tat/cord and a knife.

Beta for rapping with 2 60s, according to Cascade Rock: From the first rap station (slung block and nut/piton), make a 50m rap to anchor of 3 fixed nuts. Make 30m rap to large ledge, and scramble down and left to a small tree. This can be tricky if snow-covered in early season, but other trees are available to facilitate intermediate raps. Make another 30m rap to the large terrace below, and scramble again slightly down and left to a small tree tucked behind a large white block. Make a 50m rap down the waterfall slabs, moving hard skiers right across the stream to a large slung block. In early season, you can make a 30m rap off this block to moderate snow below (plunge-steppable if soft, we rapped off a bollard for the first steep part as it was frozen). In late season, the rap off the block will be a full 60m down to talus, then an optional 10m rap off a pinch point on skiers left.

We generally followed the same rap line with our single 70m, finding intermediate stations on the raps longer than 35m. Often rope stretchers. Don't rap in the dark. 

Location

The first pitch begins uphill and left of the prominent orange ramp (the original start). 

Protection

Nuts, doubles from tips to #4 C4. A hefty alpine rack for sure, but we placed both #3s and #4s on P3 and P8.

Photos [Hide ALL Photos]

Good morning
[Hide Photo] Good morning
5.9 splitters high on the route. Photo by Ben Johnson.
[Hide Photo] 5.9 splitters high on the route. Photo by Ben Johnson.
NB spreadin' em on p1 of the SCE. Note: this photo was taken from the snow just off the belay; if compared with the other SCE p1 photo here, it looks like the snow was covering the lower 20 feet or so of the route in mid July.
[Hide Photo] NB spreadin' em on p1 of the SCE. Note: this photo was taken from the snow just off the belay; if compared with the other SCE p1 photo here, it looks like the snow was covering the lower 20 feet or…
Following P3's beautiful fists splitter. Photo by Ben Johnson.
[Hide Photo] Following P3's beautiful fists splitter. Photo by Ben Johnson.
NB preparing to pull over the bulge on the epic 3rd pitch
[Hide Photo] NB preparing to pull over the bulge on the epic 3rd pitch
5pm sun showing Les Cornes left, Ibex middle, and Steinbok right shadows
[Hide Photo] 5pm sun showing Les Cornes left, Ibex middle, and Steinbok right shadows
Dan getting cozy at our campsite the night before our climb
[Hide Photo] Dan getting cozy at our campsite the night before our climb
Start of route. Orange flagging tape on bolt on first pitch.
[Hide Photo] Start of route. Orange flagging tape on bolt on first pitch.
First good view of the climb. Steinbok on left, Ibex in the middle, and Chamois on right (which has Springbok Arete)
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Line takes the left most arete
[Hide Photo] First good view of the climb. Steinbok on left, Ibex in the middle, and Chamois on right (which has Springbok Arete) Line takes the left most arete
SCE -pitch 1
[Hide Photo] SCE -pitch 1
Chaz Langelier on Pitch 8
[Hide Photo] Chaz Langelier on Pitch 8
The face moves to end P3. Photo by Ben Johnson.
[Hide Photo] The face moves to end P3. Photo by Ben Johnson.

Comments [Hide ALL Comments]

Matthew Tangeman
SW Colorado
  5.11a
[Hide Comment] The road is still washed out and will probably stay that way - check out my description on the main Anderson River Group page. Aug 20, 2018
Don Saugstad
Squamish, BC
 
[Hide Comment] We climbed the route a couple of weeks back..just before the rains of September began. We cleaned up some of the loose stuff on P.7 My partner had a fearful lead getting past the big flakes near the base of the off-width. I only needed a foot to wobble them out of the crack and send them down.. the bigger of the two was probably 3-400 lbs. This could change the grade of this pitch possibly, but at least its safer now.
One more thing - on the approach, dont be silly and think that you can muscle your little 4x4 around and through the washout like i did.. further on we came upon a low overhanging fir tree, and a sinkhole. Just get on the bikes and dont waste your time (**btw, if you find my Nissan lug nut caps, could you bring em back to me? thx).. also, the log crossing mentioned is not there, perhaps could be an issue during high water.
Amazing place, such a gorgeous cirque.. I could envision this place one day protected as a park, access road rebuilt, and a nice trail free of the alder schwacking and devils club. Lets talk to our local clubs, and govt officials etc and make it happen!

PS. Thanks Matthew Tangeman for the beta.. pretty spot on I would say, very helpful Sep 18, 2018
Alex Weber
Vancouver, BC
 
[Hide Comment] Fantastic description of pitches Aug 31, 2021
Alex Weber
Vancouver, BC
 
[Hide Comment] Aug 2021: the bridge is no longer. Park and hike from here Aug 31, 2021
Dan Kluskiewicz
Index, WA
 
[Hide Comment] This route is great, but there are two hanging blocks at the end of pitch 7 that are loose and shifted under the combined force of my belayer's foot and my hand jams as I finished following the pitch. Likeā€”tons of granite literally moving around in my hands. I let go and jugged up the line without incident, but I think it's fair to call that pitch a death trap right now, and there isn't a way around the blocks if you want to climb pitches 7 and 8. So I strongly discourage climbing this route until something major changes! Jul 3, 2023
DrewK Katz
Winthrop, WA
[Hide Comment] Anyone else have experience with the blocks at the end of pitch 7 that Dan mentioned? Wondering if there is a way around them or a variation of the 7th/8th pitch to bypass? Thanks! Jul 15, 2023
[Hide Comment] Hey Drew. I climbed the route with Dan the other day. There is no way around sketchy blocks if you climb Springbok Arete or Voodoo Child. You could climb Sprungcock Erect instead - it parts ways before the loose section. Jul 21, 2023