| Climbing the Sentinel, Sandia mountains Album |
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| Climbing the Sentinel, Sandia mountains   | 
| Page Type: Album Image Type(s): Rock Climbing | Page By: Liba Hardekopf Created/Edited: Sep 16, 2009 / Sep 16, 2009 Object ID: 554210 Hits: 278  Loading... Page Score: 87.93% - 9 Votes  Loading... Vote: Log in to vote |
SandiasThe Sandia Mountains are a mountain range immediately to the northeast of the city of Albuquerque in New Mexico, and practically in my backyard. (I live at its foothills).
Sandia means watermelon in Spanish, and is popularly believed to be a reference to the reddish color of the mountains at the sunset. However, the most likely explanation is that Sandia Indians grew squash and the Spaniards thought that those were watermelons.
Most of the rock is limestone, nice for climbing. There is a multitude of trad climbs. There is also a sport climbing area - Palomas Peak (I have posted a couple of photos from there on SP previosly).
Because of the approaches to the climbing areas, you will typically find solitude while climbing. And despite the fact that you are climbing in New Mexico, you can get cold. Most of the climbs are above 9,000 feet.
The SentinelThe Sentinel is a picturesque granite summit on the ridge between upper LaCueva and Chimney canyons. Climbs on the Sentinel tend to be in 5.7-5.8 range (all trad). Lost Edge seems to be the classic here, starting with a beautiful and smooth dihedral. There are no bolts along the route. Standard rack with camalots from 0.4 to 2.0 is plenty (0.5, 0.75, and 1 doubles). I also used my new DMM alloy offsets just to test it out. It is a 2 pitch climb, some people make it a 3 pitch climb. Images
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