Mountain Project Logo

Suggested Page Improvements to Outside Corner


Sam Cannon
Feb 17, 2016
An anchor has been added to the top of the last pitch (a welcome addition!).

Huxley OoO
Jul 13, 2016
Length is 450', not 300.

johnny utah
Jul 7, 2019
Description Suggestion
If you park at the "Remnants of an Ancient Sea" pullout, hike up and angle left toward the wall via a beaten path through the scree field. You are heading for the main arete between the East Face and the North Face. Start the climb on the east side (left side) of the arete. Use care not to send rocks down onto the highway.

Pitch 1: Climb up the clean and crack-laden east face of the main ridge to a wide crack, then the arete itself and a small ledge. The pitch traditionally ends here. ~80', 5.6. Belaying here will help with communication, otherwise probable rope drag and ensuing stuck walked cams than if you continue further.

Pitch 2: Follow the right side (north side) of the arete and then the ridge crest until you come to a BIG ledge. ~90,' 5.6.

Pitch 3: Start to the right of the belay on a varnished face (crux) and climb up through cracks staying on the north side of the arete until you reach a feature some call "the cave." It is an obvious ledge to belay from, now you are on the arete again, with better exposure. ~140', 5.7+

Pitch 4: Step out of the right side of the cave  out onto the north face and climb upward through a series broken diagonally running cracks. The pitch splits the roof at the top by a step to the right onto an apposing dihedral. Anchor from cracks back from the cliff edge a ways using gear ~140' 5.7

Descent: Hike up slightly and then right (west) where you'll find a great trail that leads down oak riddled the sub-ridge. Just past the parking area - near where the highway bridge crosses the creek, turn east (up canyon) and follow a moderate trail/scramble down through the purple shale layer. Please do not short-cut this descent via the scree slope directly above the parking area as erosion there has reached epic proportions.

This is a great route for the moderate traditional leader.

johnny utah
Jul 7, 2019
Pitches: 4

johnny utah
Jul 7, 2019
Protection Suggestion
Cams: 0.3-#4- Doubles 0.5-#1, Set of nuts, Plenty of slings

(unknown user)
Jul 29, 2019
Route Name: Kelner's Corner (AKA Outside Corner)
First Ascent: c. 1953 Harold Goodro, Dan Lynch. As was the custom at the time, they did not give this route a name. Alexis Kelner's epic 1955 ascent changed that. Legend has it Alexis, Dick Bell and Cal Giddings took shelter in the cave belay for 2 hours during a storm. Local climbers all knew the route by the Kelner's Corner name until John Gottman popularized the name "Outside Corner" when he published Wasatch Quartzite in 1979.

jawshoe uhh
Nov 16, 2019
Pitches: 3

jawshoe uhh
Nov 16, 2019
Description Suggestion
The Outside Corner, AKA: Kelner's Corner, First Ascent: c. 1953 Harold Goodro, Dan Lynch. As was the custom at the time, they did not give this route a name. Alexis Kelner's epic 1955 ascent changed that. Legend has it Alexis, Dick Bell and Cal Giddings took shelter in the cave belay for 2 hours during a storm. Local climbers all knew the route by the Kelner's Corner name until John Gottman popularized the name "Outside Corner" when he published Wasatch Quartzite in 1979


If you park at the "Remnants of an Ancient Sea" pullout, hike up and angle left toward the wall via a beaten path through the scree field. You are heading for the main arete between the East Face and the North Face. Start the climb on the east side (left side) of the arete. Use care not to send rocks down onto the highway.

Pitch 1: Climb up the clean and crack-laden east face of the main ridge to a wide crack, then the arete itself and a small ledge. The pitch traditionally ends here. ~80'. Belaying here might help with communication and/or rope drag, but isn't really necessary. Follow the right side (north side) of the arete and then the ridge crest until you come to a BIG ledge. ~ another 90,' 5.6.

Pitch 2: Start to the right of the belay on a varnished face (crux) and climb up through cracks staying on the north side of the arete until you reach a feature some call "the cave." It is an obvious ledge to belay from, now you are on the arete again, with better exposure. ~140', 5.7+

Pitch 3: Step out of the right side of the cave  out onto the north face and climb upward through a series broken diagonally running cracks. The pitch splits the roof at the top by a step to the right onto an apposing dihedral. Anchor from cracks back from the cliff edge a ways using gear ~140' 5.7

Descent: Hike up slightly and then right (west) where you'll find a great trail that leads down oak riddled the sub-ridge. Just past the parking area - near where the highway bridge crosses the creek, turn east (up canyon) and follow a moderate trail/scramble down through the purple shale layer. Please do not short-cut this descent via the scree slope directly above the parking area as erosion there has reached epic proportions.

This is a great route for the moderate traditional leader.

Matthew Carr
May 22, 2024
Description Suggestion

The Outside Corner, AKA: Kelner's Corner, First Ascent: c. 1953 Harold Goodro, Dan Lynch. As was the custom at the time, they did not give this route a name. Alexis Kelner's epic 1955 ascent changed that. Legend has it Alexis, Dick Bell and Cal Giddings took shelter in the cave belay for 2 hours during a storm. Local climbers all knew the route by the Kelner's Corner name until John Gottman popularized the name "Outside Corner" when he published Wasatch Quartzite in 1979



If you park at the "Remnants of an Ancient Sea" pullout, hike up and angle left toward the wall via a beaten path through the scree field. You are heading for the main arete between the East Face and the North Face. Start the climb on the east side (left side) of the arete. Use care not to send rocks down onto the highway.


Pitch 1: Climb up the clean and crack-laden east face of the main ridge to a wide crack, then the arete itself and a small ledge. The pitch traditionally ends here. ~80'. Belaying here might help with communication and/or rope drag, but isn't really necessary. Follow the right side (north side) of the arete and then the ridge crest until you come to a BIG ledge. ~ another 90,' 5.6.


Pitch 2: Start to the right of the belay on a varnished face (crux) and climb up through cracks staying on the north side of the arete until you reach a feature some call "the cave." It is an obvious ledge to belay from, now you are on the arete again, with better exposure. ~80', 5.7+


Pitch 3: Step out of the right side of the cave  out onto the north face and climb upward through a series broken diagonally running cracks. The pitch splits the roof at the top by a step to the right onto an apposing dihedral. Anchor from cracks back from the cliff edge a ways using gear ~140' 5.7


Descent: Hike up slightly and then right (west) where you'll find a great trail that leads down oak riddled the sub-ridge. Just past the parking area - near where the highway bridge crosses the creek, turn east (up canyon) and follow a moderate trail/scramble down through the purple shale layer. Please do not short-cut this descent via the scree slope directly above the parking area as erosion there has reached epic proportions.


This is a great route for the moderate traditional leader.

Welcome

Join the Community! It's FREE

Already have an account? Login to close this notice.