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Left Book
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Hiatus 

5.7

   

FA: ?
Type: Trad
Consensus: 5.7+ [details]
Length: 4 pitches, 600 feet, Grade II
Views: 2,609 page views

Submitted By: Charles Vernon on Jan 1, 2002


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This route has access issues. Please read the note available on the Lumpy Ridge page.

Ryan Keller on variation approaching 1st belay.


Description 

A superb, moderate route, as good as White Whale. Like that route it is actually on the Left Book, which, although it is part of the Book, requires you to follow the turnoff for the Bookmark (situated in front of the Book) and scramble around west of that rock to the base of the slabby Left Book, which could perhaps even more accurately be termed the "west Book". Confused? If not, you might yet have trouble finding the exact line of the route. The belays are all shared with White Whale, hence the first pitch heads up to a small tree.

P1-Start right of the continuous crack of White Whale, directly below a roof band. climb up a thin dead end crack, make some moves up and left across the slab (sparse pro), go around the left end of the roof, and belay at the tree.

P2-go right from the tree to an obvious pillar with a wide crack that tapers to nothing. When that ends, head up and left to make a belay (full rope-length).

P3-climb a short crack, then traverse off left, or head straight up nebulous 5.7 terrain to the walk-off ledge (avoiding at all costs a water-worn groove which appears easier than it is).

P4-addendum: Move right, and continue up 5.9 to a topless tree to a small, triangular roof.


Protection 

Standard rack; the second pitch has an easy wide crack for which one bigger piece such as a #4 Friend might be nice. Make sure you have at least a normal allowance of small gear.



Add Photo Photos of Hiatus
P3 near topping out, guess it's really the Dog finish?

P3 near topping out, guess it's really the Dog fin...

The line with options.

BETA PHOTO: The line with options.

Me starting the route... the dreaded roof can be seen in the distance.

Me starting the route... the dreaded roof can be s...


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Comments displayed oldest to newestSkip Ahead to the Most Recent Dated May 22, 2008
By Leo Paik
Administrator
From: Westminster, Colorado
Mar 13, 2002
rating: 5.7+

Agreed that this is a great route. However, it's harder than White Whale despite sharing belays. The 1st pitch has 2 solid cruxes for a 5.7 leader. The P1 variation going straight over the roof is very intimidating for the 5.8 described Rossiter's guide. Big hexes are very useful for the 1st belay because you might like some bigger cams for the start of the 2nd pitch. A #4 Camalot is oh so nice. Definitely worth the effort.

By Charles Vernon
From: Tucson AZ
Mar 14, 2002

You don't need gear for the first belay as you can sling a solid tree.

By Leo Paik
Administrator
From: Westminster, Colorado
Mar 14, 2002
rating: 5.7+

A few disadvantages to slinging the tree: 1) you are in the way for those doing White Whale, 2) it is less comfortable to belay there, 3) you'd have to depend upon a tree - known to be less than reliable over the years, 4) it lengthens 2nd pitch (can be a rope stretcher with a 50m). Plus, a big hex isn't that heavy.

By Gary Schmidt
Jun 19, 2005

The fact that White Whale and this climb have the same rating points to the nebulous nature of ratings. This climb imho is significantly harder along with some not so easy runouts. Protecting the second pitch (which is great climbing, the best part of the climb) undercling crack is a bit problematic, even too big for a 4 Camalot until you are a significant way above a nasty ledge. It begins to take good pro about half way up but then it fades away to nothing and again you are forced to run it out. Good climbing but not for the faint of heart.

By Bill Morris
Jun 26, 2005

I agree with Leo. Don't sling the tree for your first belay fellas. Speaking from a guide's point of view (used to guide this route) and 29 years of climbing, you'll only plug up the way for guys coming up White Whale. Two parties can easliy fit on this ledge simultaneously without gettin' in each others' way if you move your belay to below the start of the dihedral.

By craggin carl
Aug 2, 2005

Climbed this again today, Pitch one and two can run with a little simul climbing,

Also found a stopper on P2 at the belay, post to identify and I will get it back to you.

By Charles Danforth
From: L'ville, CO
May 22, 2006

Nice route. We belayed from the spatious ledge above the White Whale tree, then headed up the dihedral (great!). Instead of heading left under the roof and joining White Whale, we went right and joined up with what turns out to be Beelzebub. Belay at the right edge of the "second" of two eyebrows/roofs in a precarious stance, then pull the roof (crux) and wander up 40' of 5.8s slab to Paperback Ledge. Walk off. If you've already done White Whale, this is a different, significantly harder variation well worth your time. The second pitch is fantastic!

By Jodie Bostrom
Sep 11, 2007

Moving left from the roof w/ little protection is somewhat scary. Pitch 2 was definitely the fun pitch!

By AKIRA KENDE
From: LOS ANGELES, CA
Sep 13, 2007

What is the approach for this climb like?

By David Hodges
From: Parker, Colorado
Sep 14, 2007

From the new parking lot the approach is close to 2 miles. The first 1.5 miles are extremely enjoyable and pretty much rolling and the last .5 mile is uphill. Elevation is probably around 9500 or so this could make things more difficult if you are not used to it. Usually takes me between 30-40 minutes.

By tooTALLtim
From: Boulder, CO
May 22, 2008

Better P2 than White Whale, no question.