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Kolob Canyons, 5.9-5.12+
Mountain/Rock
Kolob Canyons, 5.9-5.12+ 

Page Type: Mountain/Rock

Location: Utah, United States, North America

Lat/Lon: 37.45139°N / 113.16056°W

Activities: Trad Climbing, Sport Climbing

Season: Spring, Summer, Fall

Elevation: 6000 ft / 1829 m

 

Page By: Dow Williams

Created/Edited: Jun 15, 2009 / Jun 15, 2009

Object ID: 521741

Hits: 562 

Page Score: 88.66% - 15 Votes 

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Overview/Approach

 
 

In my opinion, Kolob Canyons, which encompass the three forks of Taylor Creek, is one of the most beautiful climbing locations in all of Utah, much less Zion National Park. Kolob is the lesser known climbing destination within the confines of Zion. As remote as it might seem at times once you are off the park road and en-route, this section of the park does have its own visitor center and entrance, just off of I-15 allowing easy access. Wind, Sand and Stars, IV, 5.12, put in by Jeff Lowe in 1991 and freed by him in 1992, put the steep Navajo sandstone walls of Kolob Canyon on the climbing map. Charlie Fowler, Steve Johnson and Ron Olevsky later added Sunlight Buttress, IV, 5.11b, to the same wall and because it was Charlie’s favorite climb ever, it made Mark Kroese’s “Fifty Favorite Climbs: The Ultimate North American Tick List” in 2001. Conrad Anker established my favorite sport routes thus far (2009) in the canyons, Namaste (5.12a) and Huecos Rancheros (5.12c) in the early 90’s as well.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

There are three forks of Taylor Creek (north, middle and south) that create Kolob Canyons and run from snow melt chocked up in slot canyons to the east as you enter the park from the west. The south fork runs between Paria Point and Beatty Point and this is where the majority of the established climbing routes can be found in Kolob. Some of the climbing routes start at 6000’ or higher and thus make for good summer objectives in comparison to the St. George area. Although the south fork of Taylor Creek appears to be currently unaffected by raptor nest closings, we witnessed and heard quite a few raptors in the area.

There are two Kolob sections in Zion National Park; Kolob Canyons located near Cedar City and the Kolob Terrace Road near Virgin. It is easy to get confused on these two areas as their access is quite far apart from each other. For the Cedar City option and where most of the established climbing is located, take exit 40 off of I-15. They require you to pull into the ranger station to show your park pass. Then drive up the red road for approximately 3.2 miles to a parking lot on the right. Cross the road and find the trail that heads up the south fork of Taylor Creek which is straight off the bend in the road. Sunlight Buttress and Wind, Sand and Stars are on the left at the mouth of the canyon. Rooster’s Pinnacle is on the right side. Huecos Rancheros, Namaste along with many other sport routes are about a mile or so up canyon via a very pleasant trail.

Route Description(s)

Route Listed Left to Right, North Canyon Wall

  • Spiderfingers- 5.12a/


  • Peristalsis- 5.10/


  • Sunlight Buttress- IV- 5.11b/


  • Wind, Sand and Stars- IV- 5.12a/


  • High Noon- 5.11b/


  • Compulsive Obsessive- 5.10c/


  • Without a Doubt- 5.9/


  • Protect the Dream- 5.12b/


  • Pins and Needles- 5.11b/


  • Pulp Fiction- 5.10c/


  • Sand Surfin- 5.10b/


  • Self Abuse- 5.9/



  • Route Listed Right to Left, South Canyon Wall

    Rooster Pinnacle

  • Southern Comfort- 5.11/


  • Center Route- 5.10c/


  • Tail of the Cock- 5.10b/


  • Rest of South Wall up Canyon

  • Last Rites- 5.10d/


  • Hall of Smears- 5.11d/


  • Frosted Flakes- 5.7/


  • Static Cling- 5.10/


  • Life of Brian- 5.9/


  • Huecos Rancheros- 5.12c/


  • Namaste- 5.12a/
  • A fantastic route in a fantastical place. This Conrad Anker route goes down as one of my all time favorite sport routes anywhere in North America. A long sustained 150’er that requires double ropes for the rappel. It starts out way overhung and really never cuts much slack on the gravity situation until the last 20’ or so. The first bolt is off the ground a bit and until you reach the ladder like sandstone rungs, the beginning is the crux of the route. When you rap, you practically end up 40’-50’ away from the wall, which defines how overhung the route is. However, the holds are almost all huge jugs making the actual moves themselves no harder than 5.10. There is a finger hold or two, but the real crux is getting the route clean without pumping out, if you are human. Sun never hit the wall in June. Tons of birds and vegetation, offering kind of an alpine flare this deep in the canyon with lingering snow in June. 14 bolts to a three bolt fixed anchor. Dow

  • Half Route- 5.10+
  • As the name implies, this route is half the length as Huecos Rancheros and Namaste. Same character though, just not as overhung for as long. Huge jugs the whole way. One small rest before the last bolt as you can slide into a huge body sized hueco. Otherwise a pump fest for the grade to be sure. Keep it moving is what worked for me. Single rope will make the rappel, no worries. Dow

    Essential Gear

    Double ropes are essential for many of the routes at Kolob Canyon. Some of the sport routes are quite long, 150’+, so plenty of draws if going after them. A topo for Sunlight Buttress can be found in Mark Kroese’s “Fifty Favorite Climbs: The Ultimate North American Tick List” book.

    External Links

  • Zion National Park
    trail conditions or closures, wildlife notices/closures, weather conditions, camping permits, canyon water levels, etc.
  • Bo and Tanya’s Website

  • DowClimbing.Com

    Images

    [ View Gallery - 13 More 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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