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Imaginary Voyage Formation
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Black Plastic Streetwalker 
Imaginary Voyage 

Imaginary Voyage 

5.10d

   

FA: John Long and Richard Harrison, 1977
Type: Trad
Consensus: 5.10d [details]
Length: 1 pitch, 80 feet
Views: 977 page views

Submitted By: Murf on Jan 1, 2002


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The Roof Move on Imaginary Voyage.


Description 

You are made to respect this route early, as you have to crawl to the base, located in an alcove. The exposure starts here, with the alcove 30 feet above the talus, and the valley spread out a few hundred feet below.

A stiff layback starts out the route, keep pulling until you feel the opposite wall at your back. Continue to the handrail, traverse into the light, and contemplate the move over the roof. The exposure is thrilling at this point, enjoy it. Pull the move, clipping the bolts, and clamber to the top.

Descend via a chimmney to the back (Wild Gravity) of the formation.


Protection 

Good range from finger sized to 3-4 inch, 2 bolts (1/4", 5/16").



Add Photo Photos of Imaginary Voyage
Imaginary Voyage (5.10d) as viewed from the Atlantis area ©

BETA PHOTO: Imaginary Voyage (5.10d) as viewed from the Atlant...

Pat Brennan, 1981, crossing back over the roof.

Pat Brennan, 1981, crossing back over the roof.

Me trying the pure OW Roof of Imaginary Voyage instead of the standard method.

Me trying the pure OW Roof of Imaginary Voyage ins...

Imaginary Voyage by Jean Luc Ponty.

Imaginary Voyage by Jean Luc Ponty.


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By Jeff Sewell
Dec 18, 2003

Back in the day, Dick Cilly TR'd the offwidth roof crack direct!!! Probably 5.HARD

By Gary Kleiger
Nov 29, 2004

We went out there Sunday to check it out. Seemed like it would be difficult/awkward to protect the roof move(s). I am wondering if people use a big cam at the lip, and if so, will a #4 camalot work or do you have to bring a #5 up there?

By Murf
Nov 29, 2004

Ran it out.

By Chris Miller
Administrator
Nov 29, 2004
rating: 5.10d

My recollection of the gear is this - after getting a piece in the horizontal rail (near the lip) you make some cool, airy moves across to the stance with the two bolts and then finish up the wide crack above. You may want a 4" piece (a #5 Camalot will most likely be too large) after the bolts, but if you've made it that far you shouldn't need it as it gets low-angled after a move or two.

By Russ Walling
From: www.FishProducts.com
Dec 5, 2006

Sorry Sewell... never happened. Cilley never tried it.

I tried it on toprope but it was too contrived as you bang into the walls with your head and back and whatnot. Got out a ways and gave up due to the fact you could probaby just chimney the thing. Here is a pic of the TR try.....

http://fishproducts.com/supertopo/name_it3.jpg

By Will S
Jan 16, 2007
rating: 5.10d

The most memorable route I've done in the monument. Five stars for the novelty value and position.

Chris's gear notes are right on the money. Largest piece we had was a #4 camalot and used that at the beginning of the roof. There's a large slung chockstone at the start of the roof about where we placed the 4, so you could potentially leave the big cams at home.

By John Dubrawski
From: Santa Monica, CA
Apr 9, 2007
rating: 5.10d

I placed a 4.5 after the chockstone.

By Scotty Nelson
From: San Diego
Feb 26, 2008

I wonder how people protected this route back in the day (without a big cam)? Did they tie off the chockstone, or just run it out to the lip?

By Ryan Kelly
May 14, 2008

If you can get up the lieback at the start then doing the traverse without pro really shouldn't be much of an issue; the edge is quite positive. However, there's webbing hanging off the chockstone, so why not.