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Aires Butte, 5.6, 5 Pitches
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Aires Butte, 5.6, 5 Pitches 

Page Type: Route

Location: Utah, United States, North America

Lat/Lon: 32.84000°N / 113.91°W

Route Type: Trad Climbing

Season: Spring, Summer, Fall

Time Required: Most of a day

Rock Difficulty: 5.7 (YDS)

Number of Pitches: 5

Route Quality: 
 - 2 Votes
 

 

Page By: Dow Williams

Created/Edited: May 30, 2006 / Apr 26, 2007

Object ID: 197120

Hits: 1179 

Page Score: 87.93% - 8 Votes 

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Overview/Approach

 
 

This is a 2300’+/- ascent day. The ideal time to climb Mount Ariel is in the summer when it is drier. We climbed it on a spring day as an opportunity to clear our heads after a failed attempt on a big wall climb back in the canyon. Weather was an issue in March of 2006 and Mount Ariel is not near the commitment that the big wall climbs can be. You will not find this route in any of the local or state-wide guide books or even on line for that matter, or at least I could not. The only reason I knew of it was because I was climbing with a local. It is a very aesthetic looking mountain, similar to Ferns Nipple in Capitol Reef National Park, but does not take near as long on the approach. Like Mountain of the Sun directly to the west, Mount Ariel has a very scenic and laid back approach.

 
 

Once you are down into the wash from the road, follow it along for a short distance until you have to descend deeper into it and rise back up onto the left bank bypassing a slot canyon on your left. Continue hiking along firm rock rising onto a large plateau that overlooks Mount Ariel to the northwest. The barren lava type landscape continues directly to the base of the mountain on the southeast side. Top out here and move around to your right until you are right below a huge slabby line that is the route. There is just enough flat ground here to change out shoes and rope up. There are no gear placements as you head up to the first bolt and in fact most of this route is run out quite a bit. Due to the ease of the climb I never had problems with it, but I have partners who definitely would have.

Route Description

The first pitch leads straight up and then looks confusing as you try to find the pitons/bolts. It traverses up quite a bit to the right. The middle three pitches seemed really tame, but avoid dropping loose rock and sand down on your partner. I don’t remember placing much gear at all or really having the opportunity for it. The last pitch is short, but uneventful. That being said, my partner said the last time he was out on it, his partner would not complete the pitch because he thought it was too run out. I found it to be just above scrambling grade.

 
 

You top out onto a multitude of loose ledges. Scramble to the actual summit which, like many of the peaks in Zion National Park, is just a huge flat top summit where the sheep actually go to graze. Another common phenomenon that is really apparent on Mount Ariel is the burnt out patches of trees due to lightning strikes. When one of Zion’s peaks is surrounded by deep canyons on all sides, i.e. Mount Ariel, it becomes a lightning rod. There was a summit register in 2006.

You rap the whole route on descent. I don’t remember the exact raps, but you can rap to existing stations with two 60 meter ropes. Return the same.

External Links

  • DowClimbing.Com
    Mount Ariel, Zion National Park
  • Zion National Park
    trail conditions or closures, wildlife notices, weather conditions, camping permits, canyon water levels, etc.




Essential Gear

2- 60 meter ropes. Few Cams, a few nuts, several draws, some long slings. Climbing shoes. Sandstone colored chalk. Helmet.

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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