Got up at 4:30am to get a good start on the climb. We hiked up to the upper S. Colony Lake and then waited for a little light to start climbing. The standard route ascends a 3rd class slab up to a ramp on the Needles' East face, then starts the 4th class arete. There is also a direct start, which adds two pitches of 5.6 climbing up to the 3rd class ramp. We ended up doing the direct direct start which started on the N side of the arete and added 6 pitches of 5.5/5.6 climbing up to the arete. Once we got to the 4th class section, progress was faster, but we still stayed roped up which made it slow going. The headwall section is the crux, which we did in 4 pitches. The climbing here was really nice, and the last, crux pitch was 150ft. of 5.7 up a nice crack. There was another group in front of us already on the standard 5.7 crack, so I took one to the right, which angled up and right for a bit, then went straight up to the belay. It was about the same grade 5.7ish and offered nice hand and finger jams with cobbled conglomerate rock for extra hands and feet.From here, it was about 200ft. of 3rd class to the summit. Key beta for the climb. We did 10 technical pitches (although easy) take time nonetheless. Plan on using a WHOLE day for this climb. You start at first light to make it off the mtn. before thunderstorms in the afternoon. Since we did it in Sep. the storm factor was less, but still present. Even so, we didn't make it back to camp until about 4pm. Take plenty of water, extra food and clothing, and definitely first aid gear.
Protection
Hexes, tri-cams, cams from 0.5-4 Friend, mid-large stoppers, many runners in the 24in. length. Twin ropes are useful.
This is a variation on the Ellingwood Ledges this climb starts from the town of Estes Park, drive US 34 for 28 miles to I-25 south. Once on I-25 drive south for 160 miles, take the CO-96 west for 60 miles to the town of Westcliffe, from Westcliffe go 4.6 mi S. on 69 then 5.6 mi on 119 to 120. Follow this road till it becomes a 4WD road, its a rough road, but I managed to do it in my Chevy Blazer in 4HI for the 4 miles, it took me about 45 minutes to drive the road as its not really that rough of a 4WD road. Hike to South Colony Lakes. Get up on the Arete, either the direct start or the ledges. We did the ledges. Once the ledges are over thats where we put on all of our technical gear. We simul-climbed the route until we reached the 5th class sections, there were about three pitches of techincal climbing. The crux was technical with a lot of exposure, to quote my partner Cab "The needle is sick dude"Once we got to the top we hiked back down to the bottom via the standard S. coulior route. The downclimb is not as tricky as all the descriptions I read stated, just make sure you take the second coulior and youll be all set. Enjoy this climb and camp out at the S. Colony Lakes, as this is one of the most magical and beautiful settings; abudant with wildflowers, wildlife, majestic peaks, and unparalled vistas. Joe E.
A classic combo continues from the Needle summit to the Peak summit (the "Needle-to-Peak Traverse") over lower 5th-class terrain, exposed in places, one short exposed downclimbing section may warrant a rope- be careful! Not a good place to be caught in an electrical storm. This traverse is one of the best (and hardest) between two 14ers in the State (also- in the southern Crestones, the Blanca to Little Bear traverse is longer and more committing, very exposed in places, and completely wild!). Having a camp in S. Colony may be a disadvantage for the needle-to-peak, as you will need to head back over the pass at upper Cottonwood (above the lake) to get back to your camp; although if you camp in Cottonwood its still a long day. For those of you into ADVENTURE BOULDERING, there is big-time untapped potential in the central Crestones, in S. Colony drainage, upper Willow creek, upper Spanish Creek, and many other areas. The boulders are conglomerate erratics, some as high as 40, usually 4-star stone with level landings (early season i.e. into mid-July may be wet and/or snowy). Some of these boulders would be famous if they were stuck out in the foothills of the Front Range. There is also a lot of potential for bolted sport climbing in the central Crestones, but you didn't hear it from me! Years ago Westword magazine had a cover photo of upper Willow; a very experienced alpine rock climber friend of mine saw it and was convinced it was Glacier Gorge.
Some advice for improving your chances for having a good time on Ellingwood Ledges:
1. If you camp at Upper South Colony Lake, you can reach the base of the route in just a few minutes from your tent.
Like S.L. says above, you can boulder yourself silly in the upper South Colony drainage. Just watch out for marmot s**t on the holds. A few of the boulders overhang on every side and therefore have marmot-proof summits. These make nice hiding places for your food while you're on the Needle.
2. Wear a helmet. I've never seen so much falling rock! I almost got creamed at least three times.
3. Bring mostly old-school pro - hexes, tricams, and nuts. Leave the big (#2.5 and up) Camalots at home. One each #0.5 - #2 Camalots might be worth the weight. The #0.5 is nice for the crux pitch.
4. Simulclimb whenever possible. A running belay with 2-3 pieces of pro between the leader and second is a safe way to climb 80% of this route. My buddy and I belayed every pitch, and it took us 6 hours from the tent to the summit. Light and fast we were not. Bad, bad alpinists!
5. Memorize the topo. The two crux pitches of the climb have several variations each. Study the topo so you can plan ahead and avoid routefinding problems.
6. Be careful on the downclimb. My partner and I had never been on the peak before, and we were lucky to get down without getting lost. A rain or hailstorm would make the downclimb suicidal. If you get rained on during the downclimb off the upper part of the Needle, it might be best to pull on your raingear and wait it out.
This is a great, satisfying route. Its mostly very easy, but make sure you can safely lead 5.7 cracks before you go. Keep one eye on the weather and the other eye looking out for hurtling boulders with your name on them.
Have fun. Take lots of film. Matt White. mwhite@mines.edu
In response to Matt W. - for what its worth, I have a friend who worked for several years at Mtn. Chalet in Colorado Springs who told me of a guy he knew there who had climbed Ellingwood Ledges several times in full on winter conditions as training for big time alpine stuff in Alaska, etc. I know its just a "friend of a friend" story, but at least it SOUNDS like its been done.
Well, after reading the comments here, and both Roach's & Dawson's guide descriptions, I was still confused. So after having done the climb yesterday I thought I would add my two bits and muddy the waters further.
Drove to the end of the 4WD, which left us with 1.5 hours hiking to what I believe was the base of the direct start. The crux of the approach is surmounting the large band of rock- aka apron- which blocks the base of the ridge. We climbed this on the right, slightly to the right of the arête, which I believe is the direct start. Follow the main trail to the upper lake, branching off and traversing around the south side of the upper S. Colony lake where the trail starts to head up Humbolt. Hike up steep grass to the base of the apron and traverse right to the apex of a scree field below a large open book (12,500ft- see 'Direct Start' waypoint). Easy 5th class moves get you into the book up to where a light colored horizontal dike intersects the book (120ft). At this point we exited up and to the left via an awkward 5.5 move and ended up on the grass above the apron- I believe the actual direct start continues up the book. Once on the grass we traversed left, and then meandered up 3rd/4th class grassy ledges, sometimes following the ledges, sometimes climbing directly up easy, knobby conglomerate. We continued in this manner until we reached the base of the headwall (13,500ft- see 'Headwall' waypoint). Look for an obvious R facing dihedral at the base of the headwall, to the left of the arête proper. We climbed the headwall in three 60m pitches.
P1: Climb the L facing corner which is about 20 feet to the right of the dihedral. First over blocks, then stem out of a small chimney (5.6) to a nice hand crack in the corner. After 50ft in the corner, continue on easy ground to a broad dirt path/ledge with a pin in the crack above and belay- 180ft.
P2: Move left 15 feet (exposed), then head up a R facing corner system (5.6), again with easy terrain for the last half of the pitch- 180ft. Belay at blocks in a grassy area below the final steep section, even with and just to the right of the base of the huge notch in the top of the peak which is obvious from the hike in. The notch has a large chimney exiting the back.
P3: Rather than climbing left into the notch & chimney, climb up and to the right over blocks to enter a R facing corner system with a nice hand & finger crack with several old pins. The crux is the steep section of the corner about 30ft up (5.7). As the climbing eases off, continue up and belay where the chimney exits from the notch to your left- 180ft.
After P3, scramble up a 4th class gully for 200ft to the summit ridge, then 50ft north to the summit.
Descent: About where the gully from Ellingwood hits the ridge, there is a couloir going down the opposite side. This is not the couloir heading directly down from the summit, but the second one to the south. Many cairns mark the descent down the couloir, and eventually you will exit left and traverse through towers to Broken Hand Pass, from whence a well marked trail leads down to the lower S. Colony lake.
As of August 2002, can anyone offer a little insight into the condition of the 4x4 road leading up to the parking lot for the Crestone/South Colony Group. Thanks.
A buddy of mine who climbed it last month reports: "The road in sucks big time." I doubt it is getting any easier with time. Without a pack, I think you could easily jog up the road faster than most 4x4s grind up it.
The road in is one of the worst roads I've been on in Colorado. However, after hiking all the way up the road, I was shocked to see a VW bug at the top. Anything is possible.
I was up there a few years back and the road was bad and getting worse with traffic. On this road you need EITHER a small vehicle with tight turning radius or lots of ground clearance. This is one of the most beautiful places in Colorado.
I climbed the route last Saturday (my second time) and it really is a fantastic route. We did the direct start this time which I would recommend. The GPS coordinates below we found to be accurate.
Both times I have gotten confused and off-route just below the base of the final headwall. The area leading up to this is very easy and grassy, but you then run into a steep mini-headwall. You may think this is "the headwall" but this is incorrect. There is now a fixed piece in this section with a purple sling (vertical to overhanging here), if you go up past this piece it is probably at least 5.8. If you go up about 20' left of this piece, you can climb steeply up the mini-headwall at about 5.6 or so, this is what I have done twice now. However, if you are smart like the team below us, you will simply traverse right (north) 50 feet or so, bypassing the mini-headwall completely, and reaching the base of the real headwall with no big problems. It is a fun pitch to climb the mini-headwall but it will slow you down and confuse you into thinking you just did the first headwall pitch.
We also had enough time and good weather left to continue with the traverse to Crestone Peak. Highly recommended!!
Did this classic on 8-19-2002 with perfect weather....here is some added beta.
Survey the route the day prior to climbing it from somewhere on the Humboldt trail. The Ledges route runs almost directly up the Arete before you. To do the direct start, look for a large, right-facing dihedral at a high point on the lower cliff band. The direct start runs at about 5.6 for two pitches. Scramble up and right from the top of the dihedral until you can traverse right along the face. See the below descripion for the rest....The alternative is a non-technical (but exposed) walk up. To find this, look at the far left side of the lower cliffs for an obvious grassy ramp ascending from right to left that cuts through the black cliff face. It looks very narrow but is generally secure. Walking up this band will deposit you on a steep grassy slope. Walk up and to the right on this slope to the lowest of three deep, parallel cuts that ascend left to right. The walk up this loose ramp will place you on the grassy ledges that bisect the face of the Needle. Traverse to the right across these ledges, following the path of least resistance. Eventually the traverse will reach a dead end where the ledge abruptly drops off. A good start to the route is about 40' to the left of this drop-off. Begin 4th class scrambling here, trending slightly left. A few hundred feet above is a giant horn; climb to the left of this feature. Continue upwards as the climbing gets more technical and more exposed. There are a few exposed 5-easy moves upon which some may want to rope up. There are many paths upwards, few of which exceed 5.2 in difficulty. Choose whatever looks most exciting! Reach a mini-headwall with a slice left of center--going around the right side of this feature provides the easiest ascent. Eventually, find yourself at a comfortable ledge beneath a headwall. Albert Ellingwood's original route followed a crack in a large, lower angle, right-facing corner which trends slightly to the right. A 60m rope and about 40ft of simul-climbing can breeze through this 5.2 pitch. Set the belay at a large ledge next to a set of boulders--above and slightly right should be a right-facing dihedral that starts about 30ft. up, past a couple of small, easy bulges. This pristine corner is the crux of the route--the Head Crack. The climbing is aesthetic and fun 5.7 stemming. Climb out of this 100ft. corner and run it out, aiming to the right of an obvious gully--you have to stretch a 60m rope to reach the good belay under a roof. Breeze up on easy but loose climbing up the gully and enjoy the superb view from the summit.
Good info Chris, but the finish you describe does not sound to me like the Head Crack. What you describe sounds more like the normal finish these days (it has several fixed pitons and a fixed wire, right?). I have never heard anyone describe the Head Crack as "aesthetic 5.7 stemming". I believe the actual Head Crack lies about 100' left of the aesthetic 5.7 stemming corner . Although I've not done it, I hear the Head Crack is an awkward and physical chimney and a #4 Camalot is recommended if you go that way.
By Ron Olsen Administrator From: Boulder, CO Aug 20, 2002
My partner and I did the route on 8/17/02. The best beta for the final technical section is in Mark Robbins' comments above; the guidebooks (Roach, Dawson, Green, Roper and Steck's 50 Classic Climbs) are very inaccurate. Roach and Green have copied their Ellingwood route descriptions almost verbatim from Roper and Steck; I wonder if any of them has actually climbed the route? We did P1 and P2 exactly as described in Robbins' comments above. P1 was about 180', and P2 took the entire 60m rope to get to the grassy area with blocks; I could have belayed 30' lower on a small ledge with a fixed pin. As George Bell surmises, P3 in Robbins' comments (and the final technical pitch in Chris R's comments) is not the Head Crack. To get to the Head Crack, you go around a corner to the left and up a low-angled ramp to a belay anchor with two old fixed pins on the right wall. There is another fixed pin about 15' up and right from the belay that protects the 5.7 crux move. Do not climb the ugly chimney at the back of the ramp! Instead, climb up and right, clip the pin, make a delicate stem right, work up into a right-angling wide crack, and clip a second pin. Continue 15' up to a ledge. Do not go left on this ledge to the ugly chimney; there is no protection and some hard climbing to surmount this obstacle. I saw a tattered back-off sling in this chimney. Instead, climb the short headwall to the right, clipping another fixed pin. Gain a large ledge and continue up on easy ground to a belay just short of the top. An easy scramble up a 4th-class gully leads to a cairn at the top of the southeast ridge. A short walk north gets you to the true summit. The guidebooks' comments about "stemming the wide crack" on the Head Crack pitch are completely inaccurate, unless you do the ugly runout chimney described above, which to me seemed clearly off-route. Done the way I described, the Head Crack pitch does not need any large pro, and the entire climb can be done with nothing larger than a #2 Camalot.
Ok, my bad on the beta, the finsh I described above is not the original "Head Crack". George Bell has the info. correct in his comment--the actual Head Crack starts about 100' up and left of the corner I thought was it. That said, I compared notes with some guys who have done the route the original way and followed the Head Crack, and came away with the impression that my finish up the corner was a heck of a lot more fun. Don't take my word for it, though--get up there and check it out for yourself. I'm still riding high from topping out that line.......
By Peter Franzen Administrator From: Portland, OR Sep 7, 2002
Did this route on September 7, 2002 in truly specacular conditions. I'm not sure I can add much to the good beta already provided, but here are some random comments:
The road to the trailhead is horrible. I did it at night (!) in a stock Nissan Pathfinder and although we made it up, there was a constant fear of flat tires and bottoming out on rocks. Make sure you have a 4WD-Low gear or some sections may be impossible.
We started at the lower lake at around 4:30, and waited until dawn to do the direct start. Being the speed deamons we are, we decided to simul-climg the ds- probably not a good idea. There is little pro, and what there is seems to be pretty spread out which made the simul-climbing really sketchy.
We only climbed 2 pitches at the top of the route. I highly recommend skirting around to the right of the "mini-headwall" that lies at the top of the 4th class arete. Using a 50m rope we were able to do 2 comforable pitches and then scramble the last 60m or so to the summit. We did move the belay at the top of the first pitch to the ledge system about 40ft to the left and about 25 feet up.
Round trip took us about 7 hours. We made the summit at 10:00am, and the descent seemed to go on forever. Great route overall!
As Franzen said, simulclimbing the direct was a tad sketchy, but if you do decide to rope up, it is only nessesary for the first 100 meters. The rest is pretty cruiser. Many fixed pins/pitons. The road in SUCKS and it might just be faster to hike in.The descent is, well, horrible.The route makes up for it however.
I happen to know that it was climbed in the "dead of winter" by John Rosholt and Bob Dickerson sometime in the late 70s. They both got a little bit of frostbite from the adventure. Had some harrowing stories of frozen mitten on rock handholds (although the stories get more harrowing as the years go by!) I have a summit shot, from their ascent, looking towards the Blanca massif hanging in my office. I personally have done the route 3 times, first time on the 4th of July 1976 Bicentennial. I think the most important thing I can impart is to get off the top before the afternoon lightning storms start to hit. I've seen rivers of hail washing down the gullies. Believe it or not I drove a '69 Datsun all the way to the top of the road! When I got back to Gunnison, my toe-in on the car was out 2 1/2 inches and my tires were ruined. I'm an old fart and don't climb any more but I like reading all stories from you young bucks. This is a great route, I always 3rd classed the bottom section until the last two pitches (although I had a run-in once with some Texas Sierra club members that admonished me for being "off route"!). Keep up the good work, keeps me interested in life before kids and job and achey old bones.
2nd time up the arete on 7/20/03. I worked in this basin for an entire summer (1998) and drove the road many times. It is definitely in declining shape, but any 4x4 SUV/truck in stock condition, driven wisely can make it. I've seen a minivan at the top, by which I was amazed.
I did the headwall in only two pitches (stretching a 60 m rope all the way for each). You can avoid the first technical pitch (which I did accidentally) by climbing 4th class terrain to the right of the arete. The next two pitches were made for 60 m ropes. Each 60 m progression lands you squarely on a *phat* belay ledge. Both times I climbed the right facing dihedral to the right of the head crack proper and this is recommended (although I haven't climbed the head crack itself). Beautiful 5.7 climbing (though my partner/girlfriend who is about a 5.7/5.8 climber downrated it to 5.6!!!).
I agree, bring old-school pro. Lighter, sufficient, more fun. The crux is easily protected by pitons, anyway. Heck, might as well solo it.
I have been thoroughly lost both times on the descent. There are extraneous cairns (ducks) everywhere. Be careful and double check your descent line by climbing out on viewpoints and picking your line. Also, it has hailed on me both times I climbed this, right as I topped out (noon last time and I don't remember what time it was in '98).
This is more of an alpine/mountaineering route than any rock climb I've done in Colorado. Do it.
I wrote the previous commment about the winter ascent. I have to admit I have been confused by some of the descriptions of the route. I just posted my beta photo as best I could. I 3rd classed up to this point on the "ledges" and then belayed the 1st pitch to a little coffin shaped indent just before the big ledge so that the rope drag was minimized. Scrambled up and set up the next belay for the final pitch. As I recall it, the crux was a small roof that was on lower angle rock and a number 8 or 9 hex (yes, this was before Friends) protected right at your chest. You pulled the roof and then stepped right on to some wonderful 5.5 low angle slabs to the top, looking at the lake between your legs! Great Stuff. Does any of this make sense?
Just returned - 8/9/03 Couple comments some might find helpful, in addition to the above.
1) I rented a SUV. 80 bucks for the 1 day that I needed it - less than the price of 2 lift tickets. No brainer, IMO. Saved us a lot of time, energy and stress.
2) Printed Mark Robbins' description, and added in G. Bell's comments. "Ellingwood Express" was the result. No direct start, cut right at the "mini" (?) headwall and 3rd class up, then 2 60m pitches. Worked well. The original "choss-width" last pitch was unapealing to me. The picture in 50 Classics and the area topo map in Dawson were my other info.
3) The approach described in Dawson is worth noting. Take a right over the fat log just before crossing the river to the upper parking lot, and head past all the camping to find a trail leading to the lake. Walking though the gate and up that road adds maybe a 1/2 mile or so plus a lot of people. I did the shorter up, then the latter down. I'll avoid the gated road in the future.
A fun route in yet another spectacular place in Colorado that I hadn't even seen before. Thanks to all for the above beta.
The trail that's shown on the USGS topo which avoids the last part of the old mining road is posted as being closed (I was just there on 9/3/03). I believe this is the trail mentioned in the previous post--unless there is another trail that I'm unaware of.
By Brian Espe From: Fort Collins, CO Aug 1, 2005 rating: 5.7
I did this route on 7/30/05 exactly as Mark Robbins described it. It is one of the best, it not THE BEST climb I've done to date. I took a look at the "true head crack", best decided to climb the one Mark Robbins describes to the right instead because it look much more fun. Stellar!!!
Just from reading all the beta on this site, I was able to stay on the route the whole time. Here's what we found: Heading almost straight up from the red tower, you reach a small bulge with an old piton at about eye level. Our first pitch went over the bulge with one 5.7+ move, and then angled up to the left at about 5.4 to a nice ledge below the obvious headwall chimney/crack. This next pitch was hard! about 55 meters of SOLID 5.7 at roughly 13,700 ft. with a pack. The pitch is broken into 3 sections. about 45 feet in the steep corner will bring you to a nice rest below a few chimney moves. If you're good with your feet you can keep it at 5.7 but if you arm it it'll feel like 5.9. The moves (3 or so) in the chimney are protectable with an old piton that's hammered into dirt and a variety of backup possibilities. Once you grab your way up a few big nobs (I laybacked the knobby flake at the top of the chimney) to pull out of the short chimney, it's relatively easy (5.5 or so) to the end of the pitch at a big cozy ledge. For the next pitch we moved the belay up and headed up the obvious finger crack that angles right just a few feet right of what I imagine is the original route. This offered some airy and scary but protectable moves (felt like at least 5.7 with 35 lbs. on my back) for the first 40-50 feet before heading up around the corner to the left on slightly easier rock. The rest is a short scramble directly up the obvious gully above. The last move is a little harder than 4th class so be carefull, It's Crestone conglomerate and you never know what might pull off!
I don't lead any harder than 5.8 on gear and this is how I felt on the route. Although mostly 4th class there's still 2000 ft. to be gained and it can be tiring! Remember, these reports are highly subjective. Prepare for a challange and if it comes you'll be ready. If it doesn't, good for you...you're strong...go climb the Casual Route.
Does anyone know how early in the year the trailhead for this area can be accessed? Would a late May climb be considered much more difficult of an approach? Not sure how much snow they've had out there this year.
I did this route yesterday and here is my beta FWIWs.
We slept at lower S. Colony Lake and bivied where they standard route connects back to the lake. And, yes, the road is horrible:).
We started at 6am and hiked straight across to the base of the climb from the lower lake. We climbed the entire route up to the headwall free. The only move of any consequence was the one 5.7 move over a bulge with the pin in it that Ben mentioned. We only roped up for 2 pitches total and they were the final headwall pitches, and they went exactly as described by the other posters. We had a 70M rope and I ran both pitches the to the very end of the rope. This left us with one final pitch of low class 4 for about 100 ft to the top.
There are a lot pins in the first headwall pitch as the OP suggests. They are all really old ring pins that are being over run by moss and it looks like the ring pin will break. We hit the top at 10am - 4 hours total from Lake to Peak.
The descent can be scary and hard if you get off route. You descend down the gully off of alternately loose rock and solid conglomerate. Continue down the gully until you can break left (looking down the mt). You can also spot the path from the top of the peak and use that as guidance. We got back to the packs at 12 noon.
All in all, great route. If you feel comfortable making 5.6 and the occasional 5.7 move without gear or rope, this route can go really fast. If you need to rope up for the entire thing, then give yourself a full day.
Anyone know the current conditions for this route? I'd like to climb it in early June, but I know Colorado got a ton of snow this year. I don't mind the occasional bit of snow and ice in a crack, but I'd like to be able to do the entire route in rock shoes and protect it with rock gear. Possible?
From what I've read about the 4WD road, my car stands no chance. So we were going to hike in and basecamp somewhere. Recommendations for a nice place to camp?
Thanks!
By Ron Olsen Administrator From: Boulder, CO May 11, 2007
Jeff,
Here is a photo posted on www.14ers.com; it was taken from the summit of Mt. Humboldt on Sunday, May 6th. Crestone Needle is on the left; the Ellingwood Ledges route goes up the bulging buttress that's just in the sun. Still lots of snow up there.
There is a good campsite at Upper South Colony Lake, elevation 12050', about a 1.5-hour hike from the trailhead at the end of the 4WD road. Of course, the hike will be a lot longer if your vehicle can't make it that far.
I think early June is pushing it for a snow-free ascent. The descent down the South Couloir can be tricky, with route-finding, downclimbing and some loose rock. Also, there is likely to be some snow on the loose descent below Broken Hand Pass. Not something I'd want to attempt in marginal conditions. Personally, I'd wait and do the route in July or August.
Thanks Ron! Yeah, I figured early June was out of the question. It is possible that I'll be back in Colorado in August, so maybe I'll get another shot at the climb.
I would like to go up there this weekend 6-16, 6-17. Any idea on the conditions? Last report from early May with picture above shows loads of snow. Any idea how much conditions have improved?
Also, should I expect snow on backside scrambling descent even if no snow is seen on the climb from below? I have been up there years ago-midsummer, so I am familiar with the terrain. I was thinking approach shoes and light axe would suffice.
gotta admit, not extremely impressed with this route. lots of exposed 3rd/4th class leads to 2 pitches of rock and a cool summit but the authors of "50 Classics" must have never been to Eldo or Lumpy.
I don't know Ryan, it's an alpine route, not a rock route. As far as scenery and location, it can't be beat. Camping at South Colony lakes and bouldering in the alpine flora with those huge faces surrounding you makes it one of the most magical places I know of. Sure, the rock climbing is not 5.severe, (but I can assure you if you want to, there are routes up that thing that will blow the hardest man away), but climbing up the last two pitches looking at S. Colony lakes between your legs and then topping off and trying to find your way off before the lightning and hail epic you, is the quintessential mountain experience. I think it definitely deserves to be in the 50 Classic Climbs!
Did this route about 20 years ago. When we got back down to S Colony Lake, we were offered a ride back to the trailhead in an Army Chinook helicopter (a search had taken place earlier while we were on the peak, for an injured climber, who was located). The helicopter ride made for a full adventure.
I understand its an alpine route and I totally agree the sights and surroundings make it memorable. I'm just saying I expected more out of a "classic."
The only other "classic" in Colorado is the Diamond. I did that last summer with the same partner so maybe my standards of a classic (2000 feet of vertical, beautiful, solid granite) were already inflated.
I don't want people's first impression to be mine, let it get lost at the bottom of the page so no one is discouraged from trying this route. Do it yourself and form your own opinions, it is a good climb.
Cool Ryan, you're right, they're apples and oranges. Like the Black Wall on Evans and Wham Ridge on Vestal, both classic, but two completely different experiences.
Climbed this two days ago (7-12-08) using the direct start and a 54 meter rope. Found the first pitch of the direct to be 5.4 due to a traverse to get into the open book at the start the pitch. The rest of the first pitch is simple low angle crack with some loose rock on a wide belay ledge. The second pitch was a bit tougher with a 5.6 traverse to get back on route after climbing left to avoid a steeper manky section of the crack. After that, easy fun and solid 5.4 crack to another huge belay ledge. Finally, 150' of 4th class gets you out into the open area where the walk up route meets the arete.
We 3rd classed the section between the direct start and the headwall difficulties. Stay left as you approach the red tower to stay on 3rd class ledges then head back right and start climbing right on the arete above the red tower which provides a few 5.4 moves. You can stay out left here and keep it at 5.2. As stated above, the first headwall pitch can be avoided to the right with a stiff 4th class traverse and then solid 4th class climbing.
For the first of the two headwall pitches, we opted for the 5.5 right-facing corner to the right of the obvious 5.9 chimney. The 54 meter rope was just enough to get to a boulder to sling for the anchor. Good pro on this pitch. Several old pins, a shady bolt plate, and many good hex/tricam placements.
After moving our anchor up 20' to a bomber belay ledge, we climbed the 5.7 crack. Really good protection, especially around the crux (#1 Camalot) move which is a small roof. Stemming out to the left was how I found my way up it. A pin is just above the crux. The remaining 50 feet of climbing is fun 5.6 crack. Just as you reach a ledge there is a good pro for an anchor, only needed 45 meters of rope here. Remaining terrain is stiff 3rd class up a wide gully.
This route was a blast! Medium hexes and tricams were very useful. Dont need anything bigger than #2 Camalot. Took us 4.5 hours with the direct start and I have been leading trad for less than a year. Pretty straightforward.
Does any one have any beta for the traverse to bag Crestone Peak after summiting the Needle? Am I correct that the descent is about halfway between the two peaks? Doing this traverse, would you summit Crestone Peak and then backtrack to the same descent as for the Needle?
We continued with the traverse after our 7-12-08 climb. Rap The Needle and then follow the fairly obvious class 3 traversing terrain to a notch next to a large tower (crux of the traverse route, aside from the rappel, is getting into the notch). Follow the gully down west away from the ridge line to the base of the tower and then stay low on easy ledges and gullies to around 13,300' in the red couloir of Crestone Peak. Use the Red Couloir to finish Crestone. Descend the Red Couloir and return over broken hand pass (or descend the North Couloir which is loose and potentially icy to the Bears playground then down gullies back to S Colony Lakes).
The traverse stays very low, avoiding the difficulties of the upper ridge. If you find yourself in class 5 terrain your off route. Here is a tr from a trip I did which has good beta for the traverse in the opposite direction, Peak to Needle.
I free soloed this route yesterday morning. Started from the jeep (end of road - South Colony trailhead) at 3:45am. I did the direct start and the "head on" finish up high. I watched the sunrise from below the upper headwall while I ate my power gel breakfast. I reached the summit by 6:30am. (1 hour and 20 minutes from lake to summit - such are the advantages of not burdening yourself with a bunch of gear) Got back to the car by 9:15am. I hung around on the summit for a while taking pictures of a friendly marmot. The route was very dry, and the rock was solid all the way up. This is definitely a classic!
P.S. I found a hanger with a bailer biner on it. If it turns out to be convenient I can return it to whomever claims it. Otherwise I call it Karma... I've lost plenty of stuff in the mountains in the past! :-)