Home - Destinations - People - Partners - Forum - Photos - What's New
 ADVANCED
Hemingway Buttress
Show routes:
Select route...
976 
A Farewell to Poodles 
Astropoodle 
Coyote Bait 
Death In The Afternoon 
Dung Fu 
Easy As Pi 
Feltonian Physics 
For Whom The Poodle Tolls 
Funky Dung 
Fusion Without Integrity 
Golden Years 
Head Over Heals 
Hernie, Hernie, Hernie 
Importance Of Being Ernest, The 
Layaway Plan 
Mind Over Splatter 
Moveable Feast 
Old Man and the Poodle, The 
On The Nob 
Overseer 
Pig In Heat 
Poodle In Shining Armor 
Poodle Jive 
Poodle-oids From The Deep 
Poodles Are People Too 
Poodlesby 
Prepackaged 
Ravens Do Nasty Things To My Bottom 
Roadrunner, The 
Rock Wren 
Route 182 
Scary Poodles 
Smoke-A-Bowl 
Space Walk 
Spoodle 
Such A Poodle 
White Lightning 

Overseer 

5.9

   

FA: Dan Ahlborn & Tim Powell 4/77 Direct Start: Jonny Woodward et al - 1/83
Type: Trad
Consensus: 5.9 [details]
Length: 1 pitch, 120 feet
Views: 1,241 page views

Submitted By: Mike Morley on Oct 11, 2002


Add Photo  Add Comment 

You and this route  |  Other Opinions (50)
Your todo list:
Your stars:
Your rating: -none- [change]
Your ticklist: [add new tick]
 Printer Friendly View

Geoff at the crux. He was kind enough not to plac...


Description 

Start up the hollow-sounding expando flake to gain the main crack above. After regaining composure, continue on 5.8 terrain that sucks up nuts until it is possible to cut up and out left onto steeper ground. This is the crux, and protects well with a .75 size cam. Pull through exciting and exposed crux and traverse left to easier ground. Gear anchor. To descend, walk to climber's right and rap from farther set of bolt anchors.


Protection 

Pro to 2", many nuts.



Add Photo Photos of Overseer
 Sheryl enjoying the airy crux section of the classic Overseer (5.9).

Sheryl enjoying the airy crux section of the clas...

Standard start of Overseer. One can get a piece behind the hollow flake on the left before stepping over to the crack on the right. Once in the crack the gear is good.

BETA PHOTO: Standard start of Overseer. One can get a piece be...

"Overseer".<br />Photo by Blitzo.

BETA PHOTO: "Overseer".
Photo by Blitzo.


Susan on a twilight lead, 8/25/07

Susan on a twilight lead, 8/25/07


Add Comment Comments on Overseer
Show which comments
Comments displayed oldest to newestSkip Ahead to the Most Recent Dated Mar 29, 2008
By Josh Beck
Dec 3, 2002

The Direct Start is 10a R. Crux is 8-10' above some not so wonderful very small nut placements with solid gear another 10' below and 5' to the side of that - yikes! Fun and stimulating climbing however make it excellent, just don't fall. To me Overseer Direct felt harder than Poodles are People Too, but maybe it was just the lousy gear :)

By Chris Miller
Administrator
Dec 14, 2002
rating: 5.9

Having done both starts I would recommend the direct start as it offers better and more continuous climbing. The pro on the direct start seems adequate, just make sure you're solid at the grade to fully enjoy it.

By Anonymous Coward
Jan 6, 2003

I didn't find the crux to be all that dangerous. It seems like before you commit to the left leaning crack that you can place a couple of small cams. I took a fall about seven feet above the cam i placed and it was very graceful on overhanging rock...i would recommend this climb to anyone solid at 5.8 or higher. Have fun, it is a great climb. Although i did see someone come off upside down after trying to lieback the crux moves for some reason...don't do that and you should be ok.

By Josh Beck
Jan 7, 2003

The crux of Overseer is very well protected and a clean, slightly overhanging fall as Anonymous Coward mentions. The direct start is definitely more difficult and not well protected for a fledgling 5.10a leader. I haven't fallen on 10a in a long time but it definitely got my attention and a fall wouldn't necessarily be pretty. I somewhat disagree with Chris on the adequacy of the pro but do agree that it's good, stimulating climbing for the competent leader.

By Tony Bubb
From: Boulder, CO
Apr 14, 2003
rating: 5.9

The hollow flake at the bottom can be protected by a good #8 or #9 stopper about 2/3 of the way up where a "pod" is in the crack behind a fat spot. In this place and in this place only, you'd have to snap off about 3-4" of rock to pull the piece, whereas other places you'd pull about anything you placed when the 1/4" thick flake of rock breaks.

Really one of the more enjoyable routes at J-tree. A great lead!

Fairly mellow at it's grade, and easier for people with small hands who can hand-jam the upper crux.

By Jamie Silliman
Apr 14, 2003

The flake down low has adequate pro (wires) and after moving up and right a bit, one can get very solid pro in. The roof is really cool and solid 5.9, I thought.

By Steven Powers
Oct 2, 2003
rating: 5.9+

make sure you know how to jam as the upper crux is thin hands, it was my first encounter with a "splitter" crack, i was leading 10+ at the time and i remember my sphincter muscles tightning up when i got to the crux but the pro is WAY bomber up there.once again this route is good but not that good.

By namascar
Nov 5, 2003
rating: 5.9

I climbed the route last fall and took a wiper at the crux. Can certify that the protection is good.

By Joseph Lee
Oct 10, 2004

Excellent climb. The direct start involves technical moves with thin gear. To avoid rope drag, I would run out the upper section of the lower wall. It's pretty secure. Put in bomber gear up high and then crank through the short crux. Rappel over by White Lightning.

By Dustysdawg
Dec 5, 2004
rating: 5.9

Climbed this route on Saturday, Dec 4. I thought it had very interesting moves and was a lot of fun. The protection was good the whole way. Once you step up to the stance below the crux, you can reach high and protect it with a red Alien. Then you can pull through the crux with pro above your head.

By Duke
Mar 22, 2005

To me the 10a Direct Start seemed easier than the 5.9 Overseer crux on top.

By Woody Stark
Mar 23, 2005

I've led this route twice; and you're right: the 10a direct is easier than the 5.9(?) at the top.

By mschlocker
From: San Diego, CA
Apr 10, 2006
rating: 5.9 PG13

The bottom half of the climb up past the flakes is a little runout, but easier than 5.9. Consider slinging the first hollow flake. I did and felt it was much safer than using nuts. Climb protects very well at the crux with the aforementioned .75; bring more than one.

By Dr. Evil
From: Boulder, CO
May 4, 2006
rating: 5.9

Nice climb. Crux is short and has fun exposure.

By Will S
Dec 27, 2006

On the non-direct regular start, in contrast to mschocker's recommendation, please do not sling the flake. A fall there would almost certainly rip the top half of the flake...I considered slinging it until I saw how much you can flex it with your hand. Similarly, nuts behind it wouldn't be the best idea. You can place a very solid hand sized piece near the leftside base of the flake, in a sort of horizontal trough . Crux bulge takes bomber thin hands cam you can place from a rest position. Fun, varied route with some length and an exciting crux.

By caughtinside
From: Point Richmond, CA
Mar 30, 2007
rating: 5.9

One of my favorite climbs at Josh. I'd heard from a friend after I did it that she was steering clear cause she'd heard it has bad fall potential. Not true! You can place the crux gear from a very relaxed rest stance, and the crux is overhanging, and will eat more gear if you want to place more. Totally safe. I also saw someone fall at the crux while snacking on chips n' salsa in the parking lot, nothing but clean air.

By ben kenobi
From: Portland, OR & Olympia, WA
Dec 22, 2007

Try climbing the beginning half of dung-fu and linking it with the second half of overseer. the moves out of the chimney and onto the face below the overseer lip are pretty fun. this method of climbing these routes links the best of both.

By Rich Graziano
From: Atascadero, CA
Mar 29, 2008

Absolutely brilliant when combined with the direct start (.10a R)