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Necromancer Wall
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Hop Route 

5.7

   

FA: Dave Hop, Joe and Betsy Herbst, 1975
Type: Trad
Consensus: 5.7+ [details]
Length: 3 pitches, 250 feet
Views: 749 page views

Submitted By: Orphaned on Jan 1, 2005


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This is the belay station at the top of Hop Route....


Description 

This is route "A" in the picture.

The Hop Route is found on the left side of the wall and starts one of two ways: 1) In the prominent right-facing corner system (5.7+) or 2) in a nice looking hand crack (5.7) fifteen feet to the right of the corner that sort of arches up and left to join the corner. Either way, climb up to the top of the corner where there are some chockstones. You can rap from here off slings (most do), or continue up another couple pitches via cracks. If you do this, descent is supposed to be walk off towards the road.


Protection 

Standard rack. Small to #3 Camalot or so.



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By L. Hamilton
May 13, 2004

Descent is not a walkoff -- mixed downclimbing/tree rappel down a steep gully system behind the left side of the crag. Be careful.

By Matt Faust
Feb 24, 2005
rating: 5.7+

Both times I've done this climb I've found the wide section early in the crack to be brutal. But nobody else ever mentions it so I guess it's not that bad. The anchor on top of the first pitch is an amazing nest of multicolored slings around chickenheads and through natural threads. Close inspection, however, reveals that none of these features look like they could hold much more than bodyweight. We climbed up a bit to the left and belayed on a large ledge. The second pitch is good, definately worth doing. 5.6-ish crack climbing. The third pitch is just a short scramble, and the descent gully is kind of nasty. We did a couple raps.

By Larry DeAngelo
Administrator
Feb 24, 2005
rating: 5.7

Word of warning- the right-hand crack (the "normal" start) is clean, beautiful and aesthetic. The left-hand crack, in the corner, is dirty, loose and hard to protect. This could limit its popularity...

By George Bell
From: Boulder, CO
Apr 20, 2005

Where the variations join there is a block with slings, it was not clear to me if this was supposed to be the end of the first pitch or not. Swain says P1 is only 100' long so I think he is thinking so. Anyway, I decided to continue to the anchor you can see from the ground that is mentioned above. Here I found a giant ledge with two chopped bolts, and above this a mass of slings wrapped around and jammed in every crack in sight. It is true that some of the knobs look pretty bad, but other parts of the anchor looked good to me. Anyway we rapped off it (but did back it up with gear for the first guy).

By Gigette Miller
From: Vegas
Aug 4, 2005

I totally agree with Matt Faust re; the brutality of the early wide crack section. This was one of my first few trad leads a while back and I almost peed my pants on the beginning, as I found it difficult to protect and too "off-widthy" for comfort. Once I surpassed the wide crack section, my behavior instantly changed from the classic horror movie, terrified, shaky, cry baby, "I almost got eaten by a zombie," demeanor , to a euphoric, smiling, pleased, "I just shot and killed the zombie," expression. I loved the rest of the climb though ,as it was a reminder that, "Wow, leading trad is fun!" One thing for sure....This climb will stick to me like a bad Red Rock tick would like to do.

By Christa Cline
Oct 20, 2005
rating: 5.8-

The wide crack start was indeed not easy. Even higher up going up the thinning crack the route kept me focused. I'd say this route is more aesthetic and harder as well as more sustained than "Fold Out" (two route over to the right).

By John Hegyes
From: Las Vegas, NV
Jul 4, 2006

The webbing sling anchors at 100 feet and 175 feet have both been removed from this route sometime in the last year. This leaves no option for descent other than climbing to the top of the feature and walking off left.

I don't know why they were removed, perhaps they were unsightly (see picture), but they weren't unsafe. Climbers are now commited to climb less-memorable and more-junky rock to the top. John

By vegastradguy
From: Henderson, NV
Mar 19, 2007
rating: 5.7+

well, some kind soul has replaced the rap anchor at 150' or so (maybe 175'- two ropes get you down comfortably)...it had a carabiner and a hollow rap ring- i added a locker to make it more equalized....the webbing and cordlette are very new.

really good climbing- the spooky start felt much more relaxed since the first time i did it a few years back, but my partner was pretty stressed leading it!

also, the left hand corner seems to be semi-decent- my friends did it today and didnt complain about a lack of gear or bad rock, but i think the right hand start still is the way to go- it's pure joy after the first 20' or so!

By Bart Fay
Mar 20, 2007
rating: 5.8+

'Thought the version of the first pitch that stopped before pulling up above the roof line (160ft?) was excellent. ****
Entry moves may well be 5.9, and a large cam (#5?) would make the wide start much easier to protect.