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Romulan Territory 

5.10a

   

FA: Scott Kimball, Carl Harrison, late 1970s
Type: Trad
Consensus: 5.10b [details]
Length: 3 pitches, Grade II
Views: 1,993 page views

Submitted By: Charles Vernon on Jan 1, 2001


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Note, some of these cliffs are often closed (Mar 3 - July 31) for raptor nesting. MORE INFO >>>

Near the end of the first pitch.


Description 

A classic thin corner climb, quite representative of Lumpy Ridge. Hike to the Bookmark, and walk around to the east of a massive, 100 ft. high "flatiron" that leans up against it. The route is identified by a very large, right-facing dihedral/roof on the uppper third of the face.

P1-the goal is to achieve a much smaller dihedral down and slightly right of the larger dihedral. Pick a groove (5.9) or a wide, brushy crack (5.7), both of which are up almost behind the flatiron (right of an impressive wide flake), and which lead into easier flakes that in turn [achieve] the desired location. A better but longer start is to do the first 2 pitches of Backflip to the right.

P2- starting from a good ledge, lieback a sustained, flared right-facing corner (not to be confused with the corner of Backflip 20 ft. to the right) which first jogs right and then back left. Stretch the lead all the way into a ledge in the bottom of the upper dihedral (crux, with enough pro to keep you going--save a medium Friend for the 5.10 bulge halfway up).

P3-A full ropelength up the very flared crack (tricky pro) in the large dihedral; undercling out to the right at the end, or turn the 5.10 roof and go to the summit (full rope-length either way). Sustained 5.9.


Protection 

Lots of small stuff!



Add Photo Photos of Romulan Territory
Romulan Territory

BETA PHOTO: Romulan Territory

Ivan leads the crux on P1 (the first pitch off Library Ledge, sometimes refered to as the second pitch).

Ivan leads the crux on P1 (the first pitch off Lib...

Luke leads the undercling on second (third from the ground) pitch. The 10a variation is the crack to left of climber.

Luke leads the undercling on second (third from th...

Dean following the intimidating 3rd pitch...

Dean following the intimidating 3rd pitch...


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Comments displayed oldest to newestSkip Ahead to the Most Recent Dated Jul 21, 2008
By Tony Bubb
From: Boulder, CO
Nov 6, 2001
rating: 5.10b

You know, I just want to add that this is one of the nicest cragging routes I have done in a long time. It's one of the better routes at Lumpy, in my book.

By Anonymous Coward
Apr 14, 2002

If [combined] with the direct start described in Klingon [certainly] in the Lumpy top ten . I did the 1st ascent of this route in the late 70s then I climbed it last year. I would rerate the crux pitch closer to 5.10c [than] a. The final pitch is 5.10a and a little "ballsy" with small RP pro.

By Charles Vernon
From: Tucson AZ
Apr 15, 2002

Aha! A sandbagger speaks! So, which one are you? ;)

By Joe Huggins
May 1, 2002

He must be Kimball, Carl is very unlikely to read this. I have to agree though, the crux pitch is burly for 10a.

By Joe Collins
Jul 14, 2003

This is a great climb. One of the two or three best for the grade that I've done in the Front Range. I think 10a is pretty much right on as a technical grade, though the gear is tricky and not overly abundant... basically not a climb for someone breaking into 5.10. Be prepared for long sections of sustained 5.9 liebacking where you'll find that it's much easier to run it out than try to dick in marginal gear from poor stances. The direct finish protects, but the pro is not exactly where you might want it... be solid if you try this variation since you'll probably smack the slab below if you fall.

One of the best 10a's in the Front Range (and elsewhere for that matter).

By David Conlin
Oct 9, 2003
rating: 5.10c

One of the best climbs I've done!

We were in fact just breaking into 5.10 when we got on this route, thinking 10a. My partner, Mike Flannagan, on-sighted the crux pitch in impeccable style and somehow I managed to clean it without hanging, too! But it was definitely harder than we anticipated and I would agree with a 10c upgrade. Strenuous fingertip liebacks with tricky gear placements (RPs, Aliens) from strenuous stances. I then led P2 and would rate that sustained 5.9+, but I don't think it warrants upgrade to 10a.

By Ivan Rezucha
Jun 6, 2004
rating: 5.10c

Hard for a Gunks climber used to horizontal holds! No move harder than 10a, but much harder to lead. Good, but small rests on the crux section until the last few moves where you have to go for it, but it eases off quickly. The first of the two crux dihedrals is very well protected. Bring a 2.5 Friend for the one place the crack opens up. Plus brass, microcams, some big nuts. I got the smallest micro Camalot (red) straight up prior to the last hard moves. I also got the yellow micro Camalot higher than that, but that was really dumb and way too much work.

I was surprised that there was more hard climbing in another dihedral after the crux bulge. A bit easier, but smoother with no real rest, and the gear is a little further apart and not quite as good as the first dihedral. Once again, I stopped in the wrong place, prior to the last few moves, and expended way too much effort getting a piece in.

For the belay, bring some hand-sized cams to place in the corner to the left. Else the gear would be marginal.

Thought P2 was hard, following that pitch. Some bad rock and runouts. Maybe tired.

We carried and used most of this nuclear arsenal: Triple micronuts including Astros, HB offsets, steelRed and blue Ballnuts. Single bigger nuts, Triple microcams to finger sized including hybrid Aliens and offset Friends. Doubles above that to hand-sized.

By Ross
From: Lyons, CO
Oct 6, 2004
rating: 5.9+

Did the climb 3OCT04 using [Kimball's] guide so I had the expectation of it being 5.9 and felt like it was 5.9, but the pro was thin. Didn't have the correct size cam for middle of P3 I think a green Camalot would have worked, so I threw in a 1 or 2 HB near by. Nice route.--Ross

By Guy Humphrey
From: Fort Collins CO
Oct 10, 2005
rating: 5.10b

Another good approach pitch for this climb is a new mixed route just left of Virgin Springs. Following a thin flaring crack until it ends, then step left to 4-5 bolts on some fun slab/face climbing (5.10c). You will need to do some 5.4 down climbing to the right to step up the belay for the second pitch.

Make sure you have a triple set of small nuts for the second pitch. There is a no hands rest right before the crux.

By Brian Weinstein
Jan 16, 2006
rating: 5.10b

This route is a three-pitch gem. P3 has a 15-foot flared runout (very nice climbing) with great gear below and above...definitely not an "s" but a little heady nonetheless.

By Eric Goltz
From: Boulder, CO
Sep 12, 2006

A really great way to increase the quality on the first pitch is to do Bellyflop (10c)... you can either clip the bolt anchor and continue to the base of the second pitch (rope drag) or belay from the bolts and move the belay (short 5.easy pitch). Highly recommended, a good way to get 'warmed up' for the runout climbing above!

By Danno
From: Lyons, CO
Oct 22, 2006

Two words: green Camalot!

By climber73
From: Fort Collins, CO
Mar 29, 2007
rating: 5.10a

This route is fantastic!! I dumped half a set of pee-nuts into the crux pitch along with small cams. Well protected, aesthetic, beautiful route.

By Kateri Ahrendt
From: Boulder, CO
Jul 20, 2008

Phew. I'm glad people agree about the tricky pro on P3. It's a thin, flared crack that has some small nut placements but it's hard to fannagle while in a lieback position, with your feet precariously smearing the rock, and then it starts raining on you... I wouldn't give it an "R" or "S" by any means, but "tricky pro" is an appropriate description.

This is a great route.

By Danny Suter
From: Boulder, CO
Jul 21, 2008

Excellent climbing. Certainly P2 is a hard 5.9 ... tricky thin gear ... a little scary for me.