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Canadian Rockies Alpine Climbs
Area/Range
Canadian Rockies Alpine Climbs 

Page Type: Area/Range

Location: Alberta/British Columbia, Canada, North America

Lat/Lon: 51.39750°N / 116.29417°W

Activities: Mountaineering

Season: Summer

 

Page By: Dow Williams

Created/Edited: Jan 9, 2008 / Nov 9, 2009

Object ID: 371653

Hits: 6215 

Page Score: 89.4% - 23 Votes 

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*** = Suggested Routes

Based on my broad experience, the Canadian Rockies offer the finest collection of “true” alpine climbs in the world due to the extensive alpine climbing environs of glaciers, icefields and rock. This is my third Canadian Rockies grouping, the other two representing Canadian Rockies ice and Canadian Rockies scrambles. Together, these three beta pages covering the central Canadian Rockies would offer even the most avid alpine climber a lifetime’s worth of varying experiences and objectives.

Several books have been published showcasing several hundred alpine rated climbs from Waterton National Park on the US border to Jasper National Park to the north. This entire section of the Rockies straddles the continental divide which also serves as the border between British Columbia and Alberta. The most popular of these guide books is Sean Dougherty’s “Selected Alpine Climbs in the Canadian Rockies” (often locally referred to as the “Book of Lies”) and Bill Corbett’s recent publication (2004), “The 11,0000ers of the Canadian Rockies”. Bill’s book is far more comprehensive regarding peaks exceeding 11,000’, but of course many alpine climbs in the Canadian Rockies do not meet that criteria.

Listing routes with no first hand experience available is not what this page is about. Rather, the listing involves “first hand accounts only” by climbers in the Canadian Rockies. The climbs will be listed via their respective “areas” (i.e. Banff). The areas will be listed in descending order of East to West. The order within the specific area will be maintained alphabetically. I can assure you that this listing only scratches the surface of what is available the entire summer and winter seasons up and down the central Canadian Rockies. I personally attempt to climb 40 technical Canadian Rockies routes every year and still have plenty more to experience.

Kananaskis Provincial Park


 


Mount Birdwood, II, 5.5

Mount Blane, II, 5.6***

Mount Brock, III, 5.7***

Mount Fable, II, 5.5***

Mount Indefatigable, II, 5.5***

Mount Joffre, III***

Mount Kidd, III, 5.7

Mount Lorette, II, 5.4***

Mount Lougheed, III, 5.5***

Mount Nestor, II, 5.5

Mount Sir Douglas, III, 5.5***

Wasootch Tower, II, 5.7

Banff National Park (Banff Area)


 

Mount Assiniboine, II, 5.5***

Mount Rundle Traverse, III, 5.5***

Castle Mountain (via many routes)***

Mount Cory, II, 5.9***

The Finger, Board Route, II, 5.6

Mount Ishbel, II, 5.4

Mount Louis, Gmoser Route, III, 5.8***

Mount Louis, Homage to the Spider, III, 5.10***

Mount Louis, Kor-Fuller, III, 5.10dRX

Mother's Day Buttress, II, 5.7

Banff National Park (Lake Louise Area)


 

Mount Aberdeen, II***

Haddo Peak, II

The Mitre, II, 5.5

Pinnacle Mountain, II, 5.6

Grand Sentinel, II, 5.9***

Mount Temple, IV, 5.7***

Mount Victoria, II

Unnamed Peak, II, 5.4

Banff National Park (Lake O’Hara Area)


 

Mount Huber, II***

Watch Tower, II, 5.7

Wiwaxy Peak, II, 5.6

Yoho National Park


 

President and V. President, II***

Takakkaw Falls, II, 5.6

Icefields Parkway (Banff and Jasper National Parks)


 

Mount Alberta, Japanese Route, V, 5.6***

Mount Athabasca, II***

Mount Hector, III (winter; summer-II)***

St. Nicholas Peak, II

Jasper National Park


 

Mount Brussels, III, 5.7***

Mount Fryatt, II, 5.4***

Mount Lowell, II, 5.5***

Mount Olympus, II***

Roche Miette, IV, 5.10RX

Robson Provincial Park


 

Mount Robson, Kain Face, IV***

Images

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""You cannot stay on the summit forever; you have to come down again. So why bother in the first place? Just this: What is above knows what is below, but what is below does not know what is above. One climbs, one sees. One descends, one sees no longer, but one has seen. There is an art of conducting oneself in the lower regions by the memory of what one saw higher up. When one can no longer see, one can at least still know.""   --Rene Daumal   

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