Home - Destinations - People - Partners - Forum - Photos - What's New
 ADVANCED
Hallett Peak
Show routes:
Select route...
Anderson-Magill 
Better than Love 
Center Route 
Collins Donn 
Culp-Bossier 
Direct Second Buttress 
Englishman's Route 
Finch Route 
Great Dihedral 
Hesse-Ferguson 
In Between (aka Right Dihedral) 
Jackin' the Johnson 
Jackson-Johnson 
Kor-Van Tongeren 
Love Route 
Northcutt-Carter 
Second Buttress Tour 
Standard Route aka 1st Buttress Route 
Storm Riders 

Storm Riders 

5.10+ R

   

FA: Eli Helmuth / Scott Rennak 8-26-06
New Route: Yes
Type: Trad, Alpine
Consensus: 5.10+ [details]
Length: 6 pitches, 1000 feet, Grade IV
Season: summer
Views: 643 page views

Submitted By: Eli Helmuth on Aug 30, 2006


Add Photo  Add Comment 

You and this route  |  Other Opinions (1)
Your todo list:
Your stars:
Your rating: -none- [change]
Your ticklist: [add new tick]
 Printer Friendly View

Start of P1.


Description 

This recent addition to Hallett's North Face involves 6 new pitches just left of the classic Direct Second Buttress route. Four of the six pitches were done as 60m rope stretchers. The fourth pitch ascends the striking right facing dihedral which is the right side of the "Big Yellow Flake" which the Jackson-Johnson climbs on its left side.

P1- 30m, 5.9+. Climb the perfect finger crack in a small left facing dihedral then after 40' step left above a small ceiling into the next left facing dihedral. Traverse left (crux) at the end of this corner for 30' to reach a slung horn anchor which can be strengthened in the crack behind.

P2- 30m 5.10+. Head right out of the belay up a featured slab into a small right facing corner which is followed through steep ground up and left until reaching an alcove from which a right leaning crack (.5 Camalot)(crux)emerges and takes one to the sling anchor(1 pin, nut, horn)-60m rappel to the ground.

P3- 60m 5.9. Climb a splitter finger crack out of the belay up and right, stepping right after 30' into a shallow dihedral which heads straight up on steep juggy large flakes (mostly attached)into the very large R-facing corner of the yellow flake- worth stretching the rope here as it brings one to a very large, comfortable ledge on the white band.

P4- 60m 5.9+. Climb the striking,right-facing dihedral of the yellow flake and hold on tight! On the FA this was done as 5.9+(X). A few large Camalots would bring this down to an (R)rating. After a ledge, continue to the top of the Yellow Flake Tower which has another spacious ledge system on top.

P5- 60m 5.9 Step down and right off the top of the Yellow Flake and follow a crack system up for 50' into a white quartz crack. Step right out of this crack onto a right leaning ramp which is followed 50' right until a steep but featured face takes one up into another prominent white quartz crack system to a small belay stance.

P6- 60m 5.9+ Follow this crack system straight up and a little left and belay from the top of the Second Buttress.

A sustained blizzard hit the FA party on this pitch making for a Patagonian type experience!


Location 

This route starts approx. 50' left of the Direct Second Buttress route and stays about that far left for the first 4 pitches. The most prominent feature climbed is the right side of the big yellow flake from which it then heads a little right and straight up to the top. Recommended descent is to the east with 2- half rope rappels and an easy scramble down.

The start is reached via a short 4th class climb up a stepped corner for 50' to reach a large sloping ledge. Two dihedrals- the left with much grass and the right (splitter fingers)start from this ledge- if you went all the way up the right one it meets up with the regular start to the DSB.


Protection 

This is an "all natural" route except for one piton which was put in on the second pitch rappel anchor. Retreat in very bad weather was made three times from here before the route was completed.

A standard rack with an emphasis on doubles and triples of all Camalot sizes from 0 to #1. On the FA, a #3 Camalot was the biggest size taken although this necessitated a 50' 5.9+ runout on pitch four -which would have been a very ugly fall. Perhaps one #5 Camalot would protect this wide-crack crux which the leader laybacked and the second off-widthed. The tops of P1, P2, and P4 have sling rappel anchors.

Three or four 72" slings and many shoulder length slings will help reduce rope-drag which is very much an issue on P2.



Add Photo Photos of Storm Riders
Crux of P1.

Crux of P1.

Start of P2.

Start of P2.

Heading into the crux on P2.

Heading into the crux on P2.

Start of P3.

Start of P3.

P4. Bring the big gear for this one-  middle of the Big Yellow Flake dihedral.

P4. Bring the big gear for this one- middle of th...