(0)
(11)
(0)
(4)

Search Filters

Climb Name:
Areas:
    Min # Sends:
    0
    Min Rating:
    Canada > Ontario > The Crag Next Door > Mystery Machine Boulder

    Mystery machine boulder and surrounding boulders will be in this section. This cluster is the furthest west and the longest hike from the start but it is one of those best of last kind of areas!!

    Canada > Ontario > The Crag Next Door > Hookers Arete

    Incline ceiling and arete boulder just under mystery machine

    Canada > Ontario > The Crag Next Door > Mystery Machine Boulder > Lazarus Pit

    A hole in the ground with a couple of boulders that you can climb to get out.

    Canada > Ontario > Lion's head

    Some of Ontario's nicer limestone climbing located right on Georgian Bay. Awesome views and a range of route difficulties from 5.10 - 5.14-. Requires knowledge of natural anchor building, rappelling, and multi-pitch belay techniques. Not beginner friendly. The few sport moderates on the Latvian ledge were removed June 2020.

    Canada > British Columbia > West Kootenay > Pass Creek

    The Rock: Ranging from slab to overhangs, this rock represents more of the Castlegar goodness you know and love. Lots of unique features allow for steep overhanging routes to go at reasonable grades. The climbing sits about 350m higher in elevation than the Castlegar valley bottom, lending to crisp morning temps even on the hottest days. You can expect the sun to come around at about 1:30 PM. Recent Climbing History: We are still gathering info so we can document past work done by the pioneers. Folks like Gord Lindsay, Shawn Tasker, JT Croston, Cam Shute, Ian Macdonald and Mark Senyk (among many others) have been climbing here for decades. Please contact us with all info that you have. There is significant evidence of prior climbing ranging from old webbing & anchors, to bolts of various vintage. It’s safe to assume that any clean cracks have been climbed. Access has always been the limiting factor until recently. Stephen Senecal and I took a renewed interest in the area in the Fall of 2018, and plans were made to request access. Trail Building to the bluffs began in earnest in Spring 2019, with Castlegar locals Andrew Osnach and Greg Mooney joining to explore the area and route the trail up to the Launch wall. The first new modern sport routes (Arms race 11a and Facepalm 11c) were added to the area a few weeks after. The quality and quantity of the area was immediately apparent. Nic Williams, Jarrad Monger Andrew Osnach, Greg Mooney, Liam Barnes and Keith Story joined the action. Always searching for futuristic lines, Nic Williams discovered the loft in the fall of 2019 (and its amazing horizontal roof flake), and dropped everything to establish this ultra-classic hard sport climb. Much to our surprise, the loft gave way to the highest concentration of moderate climbing at the bluffs (so far). 2020 brought the addition of the Picnic Bluff crags (Hawkeye, Craftbrew and Shadetree Crags). Allen Rollin and Jarrad Monger turned their attention to the obvious mixed lines at the Launch wall. Keith Robine and Nicolas P.I. added some great multipitch climbs. Lots of new sport and gear routes are in development, stay tuned!

    Kananaskis > Moose Mountain > Spider Brook

    This is a delightful shaded little box canyon that lies 30m beyond where the trail heads right up to the rising wall for Morning Side Crag from the creek drainage. The small venue is named after a very “BIG” spider and it’s web that were hanging out back in 2016 just left of what Andy Genereux thought would to be the first climb established at this newer venue. Turned out the route might actually one of the oldest climbs at the Moose Mountain Crags? During the early fall of 2016 the first four routes were established by Andy. Initially out of the gate, was the obvious water polished groove, done on lead with a power drill via rope soloing techniques. The line climbs the right side of the obvious polished water chute. It’s called Itsy Bitsy Spider. According to Allan Derbyshire this climb was actually first climbed on marginal trad gear (graded 5.8, “old school” with a possible ground fall potential) back in the late seventies. There was a lone badly hand-drilled self drive bolt with a homemade hanger at the belay (still in place). Andy thought this ugly badly drilled bolt was a residual anchor leftover from passing ice climbers. Allan also mentioned that the wide moss covered chimney/crack on the left side of the bay was also climbed on gear to reach a two piton anchor at roughly 30m, located below a small roof. Details on this line are few but this wide crack line for now is called Trad Special and is included for a more complete picture of the available climbing at this venue. If this wide gapping dirty crack/chimney appeals then bring a well stocked trad-rack. The remaining climbs established at this venue all went in top down requiring extensive cleaning. The routes were then rope soloed by Genereux while building these lines over two seasons at Spider Brook. All the routes at Spider Brook are located in a shady mostly north facing recessed pocket for much of the year this shady sector sees virtually no direct sunlight. This makes for a good venue to avoid the heat of mid-summer. It houses some nice moderate climbing and is a great place to hang out if one is waiting for the nearby east facing Morning Side Crag to come into shade on blistering hot summer mornings. This is usually around 1:30 pm.

    Vancouver Island > ƛ̓əpustoʔas (place to climb up)

    ƛ̓əpustoʔas is the Lik̓ʷala name for "place to climb up", and was kindly offered as a name for this cragging area by the local Ligwilda’xw people. Just 20min north of Campbell River, these lovely andesite cliffs (hard, grainy basalt), offer climbs that are mostly near vertical or tilted a little bit either way. The majority are fully bolted lines, but there are some worthwhile gear lines too. There are over 30 pitches of climbing so far, from 5.6-5.12, with the majority being in the 5.9-5.11 range. There are many 2-pitch climbs, as the crags are each around 50m in height. They face SW, so are excellent Spring/Fall and cooler summer day cliffs. Thanks to the Ligwilda’xw people; the We Wai Kai, Wei Wai Kum, and Kwiakah First Nations. We are grateful for the opportunity to recreate on your lands (the crags are located on "Crown" land). Thanks go out to the many climbers who have lent a hand in route work, trail work, sign-building, and route testing ;)

    United States > Ohio > Chippewa Creek

    Was once a quite and secluded area from the main populace where you could find quiet and not many climbers ... ... Chippewa Creek Gorge was formed by glacier movements thousands of years ago. These glaciers exposed outcrops of Shale, Berea Sandstone, and Euclid Bluestone. In the late 1800s the Berea Sandstone and the Euclid Bluestone were quarried for use as building materials. This ended in the early 20th century due to a decreased demand for natural stone for construction. Brecksville Reservation was declared a public park soon after. In the late 1990s the first information about climbing in the park was posted to another rock climbing website. Problems were put up and documented by that generation of climbers, but not everything was posted back then, and the website ended up becoming defunct. Legal access to the park for climbing was problematic. There was a high risk of getting your gear confiscated by park rangers. Around this time, Jeffery Bonatti created a series of hand drawn “Ruff Guides” for the park, but they weren’t highly accessible. Due to this lack of organized information, each subsequent generation of climbers claimed FAs and gave names to lines that have likely been claimed and named multiple times before throughout the years. To add to this, the moss and lichen covers boulders that don’t see much traffic and makes it look like they’ve never been touched. The creek changes the sand bars and covers or reveals footholds and washes away evidence of being climbed. Currently, the park is more accessible and more developed for climbing than recent history. There is a trail being made by the park system going from the main Gorge Rim trail down to the creek where Pinch Arete and Keyhole are. Due to the volume of climbers that have been recreating in the park, it no longer feels sketchy to walk in with pads for a session due to power of the masses. On any pleasant day you can fully expect to see other people climbing. Work is being done to organize the lines into a definitive list with proper photos, names, locations, and grades. On the topic of conditions, many problems have had holds broken off in recent years due to being climbed when the rock is still wet. The boulders in the creek itself are much more tolerant to this due to many years of water erosion, but the rock higher up on the cliff line isn’t used to this kind of stress and breaks surprisingly easy. Surprising like, wow I’m falling but the hold is still in my hands, surprising. It usually takes a solid three days of dryness and wind to get back into shape after a good, longer in the spring and winter. The main parking area for climbing access is the Pavilion area at the East end of Chippewa Creek Drive. It isn’t the first lot by the waterfall, it is ~1000ft down the road, where there are four parking areas grouped together with a swing set and a pavilion. If you walk straight North from the swing set you'll find the chained entrance to the climbing trail with a sign that states “Stay on the designated trail.” Stay on designated trails. Check out climbchippewa.com for more assistance and this WIP map of problems/info/location ----> https://www.google.com/maps/d/edit?mid=1n3KipMBR1zOSon5n8RcScCqQkjStPMV7&ll=41.31983427452158%2C-81.6170396062424&z=17

    Kananaskis > Moose Mountain > Moose Cove

    This small sector has nine shorter bolted routes (initially mostly 5.10), located roughly 200m west (left) of the climb Larry’s Groove (for now the left most completed route found at the Dust Bowl). This little venue houses over a half dozen fun warm-up lines and two, 5.11’s, with short cruxy bits to keep it interesting. The first two routes were established over 16 years ago by Andy Genereux and Richard Melville during a one-day effort. In the spring of 2024, Andy returned building seven more routes, giving this venue a bit more appeal. The west facing cliff further west seem to hold significant potential for some more moderate entry level climbs in the sun to be established, maybe adding some much needed lower-end diversity to the mostly harder fare found in the Dust Bowl. Moose Cove is located just a few minutes westward along this southwest facing wall from the Dust Bowl.

    Harry's Bins - Skip Bins Hire

    Harry’s Bins offers both residential and commercial skip bin hire to meet a range of requirements. From straightforward home clean-ups to large-scale needs of construction waste, our Skip Bins Hire are the most suitable solution to your waste problems. With an assortment of skip bin sizes to pick out from, our bins are bound to fulfil all your requirements. We are the most popular and a leading company which has been offering a variety of big bins Geelong since a long and servicing the residential, industrial, and commercial and government sectors. While we possess the speciality in skip bin hire, we additionally provide a host of environmental waste management services that you can receive to make your task of waste removal and management easy and convenient. Below Our More Services. - Building Waste skip bins hire - Heavy waste skip bins hire - Mixed heavy waste skip bin hire - Building waste skip hire Geelong - Skip Bin Dimensions - Green Waste Skip in Melbourne - Best commercial rubbish removal in geelong Call us on +61 423 337 012

    Geyik Bayiri

    building the base, well the rain and a finger injury have thwarted the plans so ill revise...

    Krishna Outsourcing

    Krishna Outsourcing is a BIM Consulting Services firm is Complete building Solutions outsourcing providing Drafting, Designing, BIM services, MEP outsourcing services, CAD drawing services, Energy modeling & simulation for various disciplines. We have highly experienced and trained staff having expertise in buildings like hospitals, schools, colleges, universities, clubs, hotels, offices, malls. We work on a wide range of drafting, MEP modeling & BIM modeling, software as per the client’s need. Krishna outsourcing has offices in Ahmedabad, located in the western part of India. Krishna outsourcing has a primary customer base from the USA, Canada, Australia. https://krishnaos.com/