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Massachusetts Crags
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Massachusetts Crags 

Page Type: List

Location: Massachusetts, United States, North America

 

Page By: nartreb

Created/Edited: Apr 28, 2008 / Nov 17, 2009

Object ID: 399577

Hits: 1053 

Page Score: 86.48% - 2 Votes 

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About this page

This page started with my intention to create a Rock page for Quincy Quarries. I wanted a place to put my photos while that page was under construction, so I created an album, which soon expanded to "Massachusetts Crags". It became a peculiar album, with text descriptions of various climbing areas. I decided it made more sense as a List,and I'm thinking of expanding it to cover all of New England so it can link to more existing SP pages.

Quincy Quarries

Quincy Quarries is arguably the largest, best and best-known climbing area in the immediate vicinity of Boston.
Many climbs are slabby, but you can also find finger cracks, laybacks, sustained overhangs, and a big roof. Routes range from 5.2 to 5.12 and V4, but beware: ratings at Quincy, like those at the Gunks, have a reputation for being sandbagged.
Located in Quincy, next door to Boston.

For more information, please see the Quincy Quarries page.


Quincy: K Wall

Rattlesnake Rocks

Located very near Quincy Quarries and therefore sometims overlooked. More info on the Rattlesnake Rocks page.

The Playground

Hammond Pond

Quincy's closest rival for the title of "best climbing area in the Boston - route 128 area", though it lacks verticality. Scattered through the woods are multiple large (and some small) boulders, most with multiple toproping routes. The rock is Roxbury puddingstone, allowing for a variety of routes: face climbing on tiny dimples, muscular overhangs on jugs, and some cracks. The "lower wall" in particular has a number of cracks that are great for new leaders, and the "alcove" has some highly overhung bouldering. Located near the Chestnut Hill Mall, in Newton near the Brookline boundary.

Lower ("main") Wall

Middlesex Fells

 
Cascade Falls


An also-ran in the "inside route 128" category.

A number of boulders scattered about, and a couple of decent-sized crags (Black and White Rocks). Generally the landings aren't great and the climbing is so-so. But noteworthy for the closest ice climbing to boston: Cascade Falls. Located just north of boston, straddling interstate 93.

Crow Hill

 
main face

A willingness to travel outside the rte 495 ring has its reward: big, clean faces (relatively speaking) make this a fun place to climb. Mostly toproping, with some trad-leadable routes. Located in Leominster State Forest, near Fitchburg.

College Rock

 
college rock
Positives: roadside access, mostly easy toprope setup from trees (bring static line or very long webbing), surprisingly interesting climbs (considering the crag tops out at only forty feet), mostly good landings for bouldering. Negatives: untrustworthy climb ratings, large amounts of litter and broken glass.

Located in Hopkinton, better known as the starting point of the Boston Marathon.

Purgatory Chasm

I haven't been, but _Boston Rocks_ lists climbs from 5.5 to 5.11 scattered along "a chasm [that] runs for a quarter of a mile with walls of Milford Gneiss that rise as tall as 50 ft" in this state park located south of Worcester. The state's attitude toward climbing has evidently changed since the 1970s.

Images

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