As Cheif said, there's some awesome stuff in these parts. Many abandoned open iron mines and adjacent quarries that were blasted out provide most, as do some of the walls they had to blast out of the rock for the rail lines to pass through.
The rock is absolutely rotten in places, very hard to find good holds even when drytooling and the ice that does form this season anyway, has been very thin if it forms at all in some places. Extremely heavy snowfalls earlier in the season have provided at least some sort of cushion to which I fall onto if need be.
There's absolutely no way that I would grade more then 3 or 4 sections of the walls (that I've found) at such a grade, but I am on them regularly as much as I can. There's one ridiculous mine, quite a ways out of town that I'm sure may offer more difficult rock. I only went out that far once or twice back in the fall - by far the deepest of the mines and it hasn't aged well, the majority of the higher parts of the walls are overhung by a substantial amount and a good 200 feet off the deck.
As for pictures, when I do head back out to the rougher rock, in probably 2 weeks since my leg needs to heal, I'll bring the camera along.
The only pictures that I do have are of the easier sections as they're closer to town and a friend comes on occasion for the walk. The second one in particular actually, the part that I am trying to climb, goes straight up above my head rather then following the slabs to the left.
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