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Cerberus Gendarme, 5.7-5.12
Mountain/Rock
Cerberus Gendarme, 5.7-5.12 

Page Type: Mountain/Rock

Location: Utah, United States, North America

Lat/Lon: 37.27389°N / 112.94333°W

County: Washington

Activities: Trad Climbing, Sport Climbing

Season: Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter

Elevation: 4400 ft / 1341 m

 

Page By: Dow Williams

Created/Edited: Apr 30, 2007 / Nov 7, 2009

Object ID: 289406

Hits: 1967 

Page Score: 88.64% - 14 Votes 

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Overview

 
 

According to Alex McAfee’s old guide book, “Zion Rock, The Finest Climbs of Zion National Park”, he labels Cerberus as “cragging in Zion doesn’t get better.” The Falcon Guide calls the Cerberus wall base climbs the “best selection of one pitch free climbs” of Zion Canyon. One thing I can attest to is that access cannot get easier (well unless you are stuck riding the tourist shuttle in season). Cerberus is just 200’ off the park road behind the Big Bend Overlook pullout. Ron Olevsky put up one of the first big wall routes in Zion Canyon called Touchstone, IV, 5.9, C2 that ascends Cerberus Gendarme to its summit. Aton/Allison/Stern is another route that goes to the top of Cerberus. To the right and towards Weeping Rock along the base of Cerberus are no less than 14 additional published routes, mostly trad and a few sport.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

The name "Zion" meaning "place of refuge," was given to the canyon by Mormon pioneers in 1919. The park is comprised of 229 square miles of protected wilderness and is home to Kolob Arch, the world’s largest. Cerberus, via Greek Mythology, was the hound of Hades, a large three-headed demon dog. Cerberus guarded the gate to Hades and ensured that spirits of the dead could enter, but none could exit.

Route Description(s)

The Routes are Listed Left to Right

  • Touchstone Wall, IV, 5.9-C2/ 8 Pitches-
  • Olevsky put Touchstone up in 1977. I was in town in 2007 when they filmed the 30 year anniversary. I attempted the route in 2006 but was “blown off” by bad weather after five pitches. Touchstone is a Zion classic aid route and everybody along with their aunt wants to do it. It is a full outing and it is not unusual for parties to pass each other on it. Way too much congestion for me, thus why I attempted it in suspect weather, which I don’t advise. The winds can blow your ropes to oblivion if you have to rap the route.
  • Cynthia’s Handjob, 5.9/ 65’-

  • Cave Route, 5.7-
  • I guess this common route was used in one of my favorite movies and what many consider the first real climbing movie, “The Eiger Sanction”. This route ascends the obvious right-facing corner on the far left side of the wall. Off width to hand and fist crack to the cave above and bolt belay. You can use your #4 BD on the lower section. Despite what the Falcon Guide suggests, you can rap the route.
  • No Holds Barred, 5.8/ 40’-

  • Squeeze Play, 5.10a/ 60’-
  • Fun varying route. Starts out in perfect (a bit small for me) hand crack like the first pitch of the Headache. Then onto a ledge below a block/pillar of sorts. Climb up left of it originally, then as it becomes off-width, move back right and place small gear in crack as you make awkward transition. This route is on the left side of a protruding section of the wall, where Fathedral is on the other side. Bring your crack skills for that first section.
  • The Fat’hedral, 5.10d/ 150’-
  • Tough route. You can place a ton of gear on this route and will want several .5's to .75's. The start involves quite a bit of awkward stemming. Eventually you have to make a bold move above a rest spot and climb a thin crack to the finish, either lie backing or crack climbing if you can. Everybody concurs this is a pretty stout route. Offers quite the varied climbing. On the right side of a buttress that separates it from Squeeze Play. Fails of Power if the corner crack through a roof just to the right.
  • Fails of Power, 5.11b-c/ 70’-

  • Scarlet Begonias, 5.11a/ 65’-

  • Tails of Flails, 5.9/ 100’-
  • Excellent fun overhanging crack lead. Start up chimney to jamming thin hand to finger crack with good gear placements up black dihedral to chains. Continue past three bolts (5.10a) to another anchor (130’ total) if you don’t mind two raps or have double ropes.
  • Electrica, 5.11c-d/ 120’-
  • (a Conrad Anker route)
  • Dire Wolf, 5.12a-A0/ 120’-

  • Cherry Crack, 5.10c/ 140’-

  • Intruder, 5.11c/ 65’-

  • Aton/Allison/Stern, IV, 5.9-A0/ (top of Cerberus)-

  • Flip of the Coin, 5.10d/ 80’-

  • Coconut Corner, III, 5.11a/ 4 Pitches-
  • Getting There

    Drive 5 miles, from the left hand turn over the bridge heading down Zion Canyon, to the Scout Lookout parking area behind Angel’s Landing on the left. I believe you are supposed to drive to the road's end and turn around to access this parking area. Walk across the road back towards the Cerberus Wall on the opposing side. There are several trails, one that heads straight up to the Cave Route and at least one further east that takes you towards the middle of the wall at Tails of Flails.

    Red Tape

    You do not need a climbing permit but you will have to pay a National Park fee to access the park. During tourist season, you will only be able to access the road by shuttle. I always purchase an annual pass to US and Canadian National Parks. If you are going to make more than 4 visits per year, I advise this option.

    Zion National Park will have manned kiosks on Highway 9 and you will be required to pay a US National Park fee ($20 per vehicle for a day/week pass, $50 for an annual pass-2006) if you drive by them. Backcountry permits are required for all overnight trips in Zion National Park, including climbing bivouacs. Climbing bivouac reservations are available for Moonlight Buttress, Lunar Ecstasy, Prodigal Son, Spaceshot and Touchstone climbing areas. The permit fees are based on group size: 1-2 people: $10, 3-7 people: $15 and 8-12 people: $20. Reservations are available for many backcountry trips in the park. A reservation does not guarantee that you will receive a permit. Reasons that a permit will be denied include high water, flash flood warnings, and wildland fires. Depending upon the backcountry zone, 40%-60% of the total number of backcountry permits are available through reservations. The remainder of permits are available as walk-in permits.

    Some rock formations and routes are closed to climbing from March 1 to mid-July each year to protect nesting peregrine falcons. Some areas that are routinely closed include the Great White Throne, Cable Mountain, Court of the Patriarchs, and the Streaked Wall.

    My favorite place for dinner in Springdale is the outdoor patio at Oscars. It also appears to be the local’s favorite. Most of the staff is into climbing as well, so it is a great place to plan your next climbing day and maybe even pick up a partner. Ask for Zach. The Mean Bean across from Oscars is one of my favorite independent coffee houses period. Ask for Joe.

    When to Climb

    Summer days are hot (95-110°F), but overnight lows are usually comfortable (65-70°F). Climbing in the middle of the day during the summer in southern Utah is not recommended. Carry plenty of water regardless. Afternoon thunderstorms are common from mid-July through mid-September. Storms may produce waterfalls as well as flash floods. Sandstone is weak when wet, so avoid climbing in damp areas or right after a rain. Winter in Zion Canyon is fairly mild. Winter storms can bring rain or light snow to Zion Canyon and much heavier snow in the higher elevations. I attempted Touchstone during the winter months and the cold and wind turned us around at pitch 5. Needless to say the rappel was not a joy. Clear days may become quite warm, reaching 60°F; nights are often in the 20s and 30s. Zion roads are plowed, except the Kolob Terrace road, which is closed in winter.

    Camping/Lodging

    There are two great campsites inside Zion’s south entrance. I have stayed at the South Campground just inside the gates. The scenic spots are on the North Fork of the Virgin River. This is a first come, first serve campground via self registration of $16 per night in 2005. This is a popular park however and I advise booking a site ahead of time at Watchman Campground if you think you are going during a popular period. Facilities include restrooms, drinking water, picnic tables, fire grates, RV dump stations. No showers are available at these park campsites but are available at an in town private facility for a fee. There is also a 6-site primitive campground called Lava Point, no water, no fee, and it is not open all year.

    Springdale has tons of lodging options as well including a privately owned campground right before the entrance to Zion National Park. If you demand the luxuries of town, I recommend Majestic View Lodge. I have stayed here on several occasions and the rooms are first class with great views. There is also the privately run Zion Lodge which is in the heart of the park.

    It is actually “illegal” in Zion to camp at the base of a climbing wall or in your vehicle.

    External Links

    The Zion National Park website has most everything you need including trail conditions or closures, wildlife notices, weather conditions, camping permits, canyon water levels, etc.

    DowClimbing.Com-Cerberus

    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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