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Northwest Ridge
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Northwest Ridge 

Page Type: Route

Location: Colorado, United States, North America

Lat/Lon: 39.07000°N / 106.95°W

Route Type: Hiking, Mountaineering, Bouldering, Scrambling

Season: Spring, Summer, Fall

Time Required: Half a day

Rock Difficulty: Class 4

Grade: II

Route Quality: 
 - 0 Votes
 

 

Page By: skasgaard

Created/Edited: Sep 2, 2007 / Sep 2, 2007

Object ID: 331862

Hits: 618 

Page Score: 88.54% - 10 Votes 

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The Approach

Leave the Maroon Lake trailhead (9,600ft) and start down the well-maintained trail. A little over half way past Maroon Lake, there is a small resting area off to the right along with a couple of trail signs and the “Deadly Bells” plaque. Launch out here up the Crater Lake trail as it gradually ascends the valley. There are surprisingly few switchbacks.
 
Pyramid's Imposing North Face

After 1.3 miles, look for a thigh-high cairn located on the left side of the trail. This is the start of the CFI trail that will take you up into the rock amphitheater under Pyramid’s imposing North Face. This relatively new trail switchbacks frequently and is a staunch and wondrous improvement over the old climbers trail which, thanks to the CFI trail crew and the mountain itself, has all but disappeared back into the terrain. Once in the cirque, continue hiking over large talus and boulders straight towards Pyramid. The general path is cairned but it is nigh of impossible to get lost at this point. Start to glance up at the Northwest Ridge once you’re roughly half way across the cirque. A prominent notch and a wide, scree covered gully should now be quite apparent. In the late summer months, this gully is frequently vegetated lower down.
Leave the comfort of the cirque floor at around 11,800ft. or at points
39° 04.745N, -106° 57.365W.
This is where the Northwest route begins.

 




Route Description

Scramble up the wide gully on exceptionally loose terrain for 945ft. The terrain is composed of aggravatingly loose rock on hardpan dirt, traction is difficult and this is probably the least fun part of this route. There are no cairns and past footprints are scarce. However, it is fairly apparent on where you need to go. Once the top is reached, the first of two small surprises awaits you. The top, when viewed from the cirque bottom, isn’t actually the ridge itself! It’s the top of a small eastern-protruding fin. Finish it up with a short but exposed ascending traverse to the notch (12,745ft.) on the NW ridge. The rock on this short traverse is questionable in places and a slip from here would produce dire consequences.
Once the notch is reached (39° 04.535N, -106° 57.391W), the route is only visible from the immediate vicinity. Absorb the magnificent views of the Maroon Bells from here. There are often in view from this route. The view back down the wide gully looks steeper than what it is.
Continue to follow the scant climbers trial as it plays with the ridge crest but often just below and to the right (west).
 
Looking up towards the Northwest Ridge

These first portions of the route are marked adequately with small cairns. The trail only stays near the ridge for the first few hundred feet at best before it starts to veer towards the West Face and the first of two very loose gullies.
After rounding a slight convexion, the “Keyhole Couloir” will come into view, angle up into the couloir. As you climb up this impossibly loose and steep couloir, stay to the sides if possible as the center is a loose mess. If you care to climb to the Keyhole itself (13,280ft.), keep initially to the left. It’s a short climb to this small notch with huge exposure on the other side.
 
Looking out across the North Face from the Keyhole

There actually is a scant trail leading to the Keyhole. The coordinates of the Keyhole are 39° 04.408N, -106° 57.171W. Be careful, this small notch is often windy and as said, exposure on the other side is extreme. Down climb ~20ft. back into the couloir and do a short traverse next to the rock face to gain the right hand branch. Cross over to the right side of this upper branch and continue your climb up into the narrowing couloir for an additional ~150ft. This tight upper portion will top out on a small notch marked with a cairn. Up to now, all the climbing has been either class-2 or loose class-3. The routes technical crux must now be negotiated, a short ~25ft. class-4 headwall directly to the right (south).

 
The narrowing right branch of the Keyhole Couloir.


(short video from the notch)
The holds on this wall are a bit small and narrow but long. The rock is solid and secure. A fall to the right, back down into the Keyhole Couloir would result in numerous cuts, bruises possibly a broken bone or two but none the worse for wear. However, a fall to the left, off the North Face; I seriously doubt you’d ever touch the cliff face before you hit bottom. I only mention this to impress upon any climber the exposure at this particular section.
Once the headwall has been climbed (13,573ft.), keep to the right. There is a small rocky crest that you have to scramble over. A few cairns will come into view and the climbers trail picks back up again for a short ways. Begin (39° 04.319N, -106° 57.279W) a series
of southern traverses interspersed with up-climbs. Once in this second gully, DO NOT be tempted to traverse around (horizontally) to the top of the cliff band immediately in front of you. This is NOT the route. Keep to the ascending climbers trail (nothing more than scuffled rock and dirt really) and follow the cairns when available. This second gully is confusing. About half way out into the center of this gully, the trail completely disappears as do the cairns. If you need to, explore. The terrain here is steeper and much looser. It is very similar to the terrain on the west side of Maroon Peak or the rock inside of “The Remarkables” on McClellan Mountain.
About 15 feet past the center point of this gully, look up. On the rock face above you, there will be two small fluorescent orange CFI trail tags clinging to the rock. They are difficult to see unless you retrace your steps back to the entrance point for this gully and actively look for them. Climb this short, loose rock wall (class-3) to a flat perch where a cairn is there to greet you. Just remember, these gullies cliff out at the bottom.
 
The small notch at the top.

The cairns pick up again with slow but increased frequency and others’ exploits, scuffed rock, kicked steps in the dirt are now apparent again. Keep the ascending traverse going on the climbers trail up into the heart of Pyramid’s upper West Face Amphitheater
(39° 04.345N, -106° 39.965W). The route in this small bowl is a little ambiguous. The pitch lessons also. Angle up towards a large cairn located on the other side on a flat area.
Congratulations! You are now on the South Ridge. The traverse over to Thunder Pyramid is partially visible from here. The summit is only ~360ft. to the north.

Walk towards the rock pinnacle. Feel free to explore a little and have a peek on the other side. I wouldn’t recommend climbing to the summit ridge from this vantage though. I felt that the steep& short and a trifle awkward climb was borderline 5th class due to the exposure over your shoulder. Retrace your steps back to the South Ridge through the pinnacle and look up towards the summit ridge. This is the second little surprise. There is a class-4 chimney that must be climbed. The rock is really good and holds are great. Climb the ~30 feet topping out on the southern end of the summit ridge. You’ll see a creatively place cairn near the chimney towards the top. Scramble the remaining distance on blocky plate rock to Pyramid’s rewarding summit! Of Colorado’s 14ers, Pyramid has one of the best summits to be had. Either descend your ascent route or continue on down the standard NE route to make a grand Tour de Pyramid.
 
South Ridge Chimney

Last thoughts

While I never felt like I was in danger of falling and the Keyhole Couloir wasn’t as steep as I was expecting, this route is loose with traversing steep gullies and time MUST be spent on determining the correct path. This route will test your route-finding abilities.
All the gullies on the West Face cliff out near the bottom. I wouldn’t necessarily say this route is exposed but in the places where exposure is imminent, it is extreme.
I also wouldn’t feel comfortable down-climbing the class-4 headwall unless I had my climbing shoes with me due to the exposure.

The upper West Face Amphitheater



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