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    Kananaskis > Moose Mountain > The Dust Bowl

    The Dust Bowl makes a great cold weather crag. With temperatures just above freezing, calm winds, and a little bit of sun, the Dust Bowl can be quite comfortable.

    Oceania > Australia > Pages Pinnacle

    The Sunny Gold Coasts, Premier Sport Climbing crag. A collection of different sectors to choose from with varied climbing. From pockets to slabs to steep pumpy walls- perched high up off the deck, whatever you're into, Pages has it. Entry Wall: The cliff face on the walk in, ending just before the start of all The Gold Coast sector. This covers ~150m of cliff. The Sun Bowl is visible above this area. The Sun Bowl is the crown jewl of pages. a large orange bowl of excellent water worn volcanic rock about 20m off the deck. Climbs are powerful pumpers all with hard boulder problem cruxes. This is the hardest wall of the crag and a true test of power, capped with wicked exposure over the valley below. There are two belays that routes climb from. These two belays are connected via a fixed rope. To do the routes on the left, ramble up the vegetated Valencia or climb Are We Dancer. To access the right belay, you can climb Tinka Extension, or carefully Traverse across from the left belay station via the fixed rope. The Gold Coast: Sector to the right of the Entry Wall. The most popular sector at Pages Pinnacle. And for good reason! This wall provides every grade with a slab intro section into steep headwalls on excellent quality volcanic stone. The wall tends to be over-bolted so please study topos carefully.... Summit Wall: The big obvious grey and orange overhang at the top, high above Ice Cream Wall. Should produce some nice routes in the 20s in a great position. Lots of potential up here for many more routes. Ice Cream Wall is ~100m to the right of the Gold Coast Wall on the obvious, black and white streaked, gently overhung wall 20m off the deck that comes into view after passing the slabs. Routes tend to be sustained and with bouldery cruxes. Good foot work tends to be the most important factor here! Yorkshire Wall: Walk a further 5 minutes past the previous sectors until you spot an obvious square-cut, left facing pillar. This vertical wall provides excellent on your feet climbing. The Western Wall: The wall facing west that you first walk in (from the lower access location). Shaded in the mornings.

    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.

    United States > Alaska > Ptarmigan > Hope Bowl

    Hope Bowl is an area that began being developed in 2020. Most of the boulders ae in the main talus field.

    Arrow Lakes > Cat boulders

    This area features agreat assortment of quality bouldering scattered throughout thebeautiful larch forests below the towering cliffs of the Cat Wall. There are a wide variety of gradesand most of the problems tend to be on steep, quality Gneiss involving big moves with good landings. There is certainly potential for more routes here and variations due to the nature of the rock; great holds everywhere! There are also many smaller boulders that have been climbed, but not recorded. A wide variety of wildlife is quite common in these parts including:black bear, wild turkeys, cougars, deer, & big horn sheep, and the forest is especially nice in fall when the larch’s needles change into a spectacular golden color; a truly magnificent little place.... [TOPO](https://www.dropbox.com/s/3jkyhs3ji0s92yi/Cat%20Boulders.pdf) - [source](http://justanotheroutdoorpage.blogspot.ca/p/bouldering-toposguides.html)

    Canada > British Columbia > Howe Sound > Anvil Island

    Massive cave and beautiful golden wall directly above the shoreline, on the southwest side of the Island. Best accessed by boat from either Porteau Cove or Britannia Beach. Almost entirely fixed draws on long, steep sport routes.

    Canada > British Columbia > Kelowna > The Boulderfields > Golden Hour

    One of the farther zones from the parking lot in the East Fields. There are three top 100's located in this zone: Jay's Pinch V5/V6, Spirit Bear Left V7 and 99 Problems

    United States > Colorado > Tiers of Zion

    This is just outside Golden and above clear creek canyon.

    Asia > Saudi Arabia > Makkah Region > Olympic Crag

    Olympic Crag in Al Shafa is the first professionally-developed sport climbing area in the Kingdom. Olympic is a homage to the future generations of climbers in Saudi Arabia. At 2,300m altitude and morning shade, Olympic Crag is a crag for all seasons. Weather changes fast in these mountains so it is advised to pack warm and for rain. The bullet golden granite with 38 routes from 4 to the 8th grade in both sport and trad styles at just 2.5 hours from Jeddah and 45 minutes from Taif Airport. The development of the work was funded by the Saudi Climbing Federation during the first phase of the Saudi Bolting Project. The trail, routes and base of the crag were created between November 1st and 12th, 2018 by a team led by the author, Read Macadam. More initiatives of the Saudi Climbing Federation can be found at climbing.sa Guide can be found at the link below. https://climbing.sa/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/Olympic-Crag-Alshafa.pdf

    Vancouver > Cypress Village

    Godman Creek refers to all boulder problems listed in Vancouver Rock Climbing (2015) that are WEST of the hairpin at the bottom of the Cypress Bowl Road. This zone is being commercially developed quickly and now called CYPRESS VILLAGE by the developer, British Properties. For clarity, the name of the entire area will be changed in the next guidebook to Cypress Village, with Godman Creek being a sub-sector.

    United States > Alaska > Hatcher Pass > Archangel Valley > Super Bowl

    New area found and developed by Ian, David, Stephen, and others. Loads of quality problems in a fairly dense area.

    United States > Alaska > Hatcher Pass > Sydney Creek Bowl

    Talus field w/ Rock Em Sock Em at the base. Mosquitos can get bad.

    Kananaskis > Moose Mountain > Black Flag

    The Black Flag Sector is a recently developed section of south facing rock established by a huge effort from Ross Suchy. It is located on the main wall on the north side of the access road roughly halfway between the two older sectors Dust Bowl and Moose Patch found on the sunny side of the main valley. Named after the obvious black seepage stain in the middle of the wall that resembles a big black fag hanging over the roofs. On either side of the steep wall there are fun 5.11/12 climbs. The routes in the steep section are burly and long, with rock that is well above average (for Moose standards).

    Vancouver > Cypress Village > The Talus

    There is a small talus field between Cypress Bowl Road and the quarry service road. The boulders are few and far between but dry quickly. Black Math is the most approachable.

    Vancouver > Cypress Village > The Tank Boulder

    The Tank is a huge boulder located about 5 minutes up the new Mountain Path trail from Cypress Village, at the base of Cypress Bowl Road. It's quickly gained popularity due to the high quality problems, convenience, and many possibilities for variations (which seem endless).

    Kananaskis > Moose Mountain > Moose Meat

    This little sub area is found about halfway between Black Flag and Dust Bowl. Routes start up on the ledge with a little cave in the back. The harder routes are short and punchy through the steeper section on very good rock. Most routes end where the wall slabs out with the exception of Moose Meat which continues to venture up to 70m if you want to pitch it out.

    Squamish V4 Circuit

    Taken from the August 2009 issue of [Squamish Climbing Magazine](http://squamishclimbingmagazine.files.wordpress.com/2009/08/summer-2009.pdf). This list uses 2 alternates: Tim's Sloper Problem and Tea Bag Undies in place of Fish Food and The Golden Bowl.