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East End, 5.6-5.10c
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East End, 5.6-5.10c 

Page Type: Mountain/Rock

Location: Alberta, Canada, North America

Lat/Lon: 51.12361°N / 115.11667°W

Activities: Trad Climbing

Season: Summer

 

Page By: Dow Williams

Created/Edited: Feb 9, 2009 / Feb 9, 2009

Object ID: 487977

Hits: 479 

Page Score: 88.79% - 15 Votes 

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Overview/Approach

 
 

There are over 130 published routes on Yam’s southern face as of 2009 with more being developed every year. Will Gadd spent seven hard fought years completing Yamabushi, an 8 pitch 5.13a route. The complexities of the differing walls, corners, roofs and features on Yam’s limestone make it a popular climbing area with a world reputation. Albeit the rock at times is quite suspect. The “East End” of Yamnuska (Yam) is chock full of less committing routes.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Three of the more popular east end routes are Smeagol, Gargoyle and Dickel. A route that ranks above Dickel in my opinion is Flight of the Bumblebee which is a relatively new route at the east end (2004). On the opposite end of the spectrum, one of the older routes at the east end is Dick’s Route, aptly named for Dick Howe and Dick Lofthouse who established the line early in Yam’s history in 1970.

The purpose of this beta page is to catch the many shorter and/or easier routes that obviously do not deserve their own write up. The great thing about the east end is that you can leave your bags at the base and run laps up the wall walking off to the east back around to the base of the wall without rappelling and worrying about knocking rocks down on any other unsuspecting climbers.

As you traverse eastward below Yamnuska’s southern face, it diminishes in height which forms the “East End” section of shorter climbs. The 32 published routes at this end range from one to five pitches. The best approach is to follow the main climbers trail up to below Kahl Wall which is close to the center of the wall. Traverse right along the base of Yamnuska. Left of the prominent corner system known as Gollum Grooves is an overhung yellowish wall with three exit cracks/chimneys. Smeagol follows the left most crack slicing through three overhangs for one of the steepest and best pitches on Yamnuska for the grade. Gargoyle takes the next exit west, up a steep corner, which is also quite entertaining. As you keep following the wall, it turns up the hill and there you will find quite a few single pitch routes, not the least of which is a really fun crack pitch called A-Crack. (photos)

Route Description(s)

East End Routes, Left to Right as you Face the Wall

  • Freak Out- 4 Pitches- 5.9+/


  • Pangolin- 5 Pitches- 5.10b/


  • Boomerang- 4 Pitches- 5.10c/


  • Gargoyle- 3 Pitches- 5.10a/
  • Gargoyle was put in by Joe Josephson and company in 1996. He mentions that the “rock quality suffers a bit at the start” and unfortunately that does include the crux climbing at the start of the 5.10a 2nd pitch. The 3rd pitch has an interesting traverse out left.

  • Smeagol- 3 Pitches- 5.9/
  • Smeagol is one of the straighter lines you will find on Yamnuska and is fairly easy to identify once you are below the east wall. Right of the prominent corner system known as Gollum Grooves is an overhung yellowish wall with three exit cracks/chimneys. Smeagol follows the left most crack slicing through three overhangs for one of the steepest and best pitches on Yamnuska for the grade.

  • Dick’s Route- 3 Pitches- 5.9/
  • One of the older routes at the east end is Dick’s Route, aptly named for Dick Howe and Dick Lofthouse who established the line early in Yam’s history in 1970. The first two pitches were pretty much junk in my book, but the last pitch was enjoyable.

  • Dickel- 3 Pitches- 5.8/
  • Another route put in during 1970 by Dick Howe and Dick Lofthouse. It is a pleasant enough route through three relatively easy pitches to the top of the East End. The 2nd pitch (an open book corner) is the gem of the route.

  • A Route- 3 Pitches- 5.7/


  • Flight of the Bumble Bee- 3 Pitches- 5.9/
  • This is a relatively new route that cost Andy Genereux a broken ankle trying to put it in, thus the name “Flight of the Bumblebee”. In fact Brad Warne and Pierre Champness finished his idea for this route in 2004 whilst he was recuperating. It is relatively sustained in that each pitch has moves at the grade, but the route is not that sustaining overall. The first two pitches are excellent and the first half of the last pitch has the crux move of the route, but the finish gets quite chossy. As would be typical of any young route at Yamnuska, the 2nd and 3rd pitch could both use some more cleaning (2008).

  • A Crack- Single- 5.9/
  • Real fun steep hand crack through a squeeze of sorts, then the ground eases up to a fixed rappel up and left. (photos)

  • Iron Monkey- 3 Pitches- 5.9/A1/


  • Grond- 3 Pitches- 5.10b/


  • Alphabet Soup- 2 Pitches- 5.10c/


  • B is for Billy- 2 Pitches- 5.9/


  • C-Plus- 4 Pitches- 5.7/


  • C Route- 3 Pitches- 5.8/


  • D is for Dog- 3 Pitches- 5.10a/


  • Old Style- 2 Pitches- 5.7/


  • Traditional Values- 2 Pitches- 5.6/


  • Thanksgiving Day Special- 2 Pitches- 5.7/


  • Come Down Before You Die- Single- 5.6/


  • Ben’s Route- Single- 5.7/


  • Bombshell- Single- 5.8/


  • Eastern Portal- Single- 5.7/


  • East Ender- Single- 5.9/


  • Learning Crack- Single- 5.7/


  • Morning Star- Single- 5.10a/


  • Rats Nest Crack- Single- 5.9/


  • Raven’s Flight- Single- 5.10c/


  • Crimping and Jamming- Single- 5.9/


  • Eastern Jam- Single- 5.9/
  • External Links

  • Alpine Club of Canada

  • DowClimbing.Com

  • Environment Canada

  • Images




    ""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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