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Attitash Crag
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Flying Jib, The 
Lost Boys 
Seasonal View 
Short Fuse 
Spinach Arete, The 
Three Gems 
Torch 
Trepidation 

The Flying Jib 

5.10

   

FA: Jason Seaver & Paul Rowe May 28, 1999
New Route: Yes
Type: Trad, Sport
Consensus: 5.10 [details]
Length: 1 pitch, 60 feet
Season: summer and fall
Views: 129 page views

Submitted By: jason seaver on Jun 2, 2009


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Description 

Angle up the dirty slab from the right to reach the base of the obvious flake. Clip a bolt, then pull up into the flake and follow it to two more bolts which protect the final, crux face moves.

This thing was thoroughly cleaned ten years ago; dunno what it looks like now.


Location 

The Attitash Crag has a few distinct and somewhat separate sections:

- Lowest on the hillside, and to the left as you face the cliff, is the low-angle slab where Seasonal View, Three Gems and several other good pitches are found. This slab is bordered on its right (uphill) end by a bulging buttress with a steep, bolted arete (The Spinach Arete).

- Around to the right from here you pass a broken section of cliff before you arrive beneath a short, low-angle slab leading to a vertical wall with a right facing flake running up its center. This is The Flying Jib.

- 50' right of the Jib is a steep buttress jutting out from the main wall; The Torch Buttress. The front face of this formation holds two short pitches: one is still an open project, as far as I know, and the other a bolted corner/arete/roof pitch, Torch.

- 25' right of Torch, on the overhanging wall extending back right from the front face of the Torch Buttress, is the crack line of Short Fuse.


Protection 

Three bolts, stoppers, and some medium cams will get you to a two-bolt LO anchor.