Home - Destinations - People - Partners - Forum - Photos - What's New
 ADVANCED
Central Wall
Show routes:
Select route...
Alice in Banana Land 
All the Nasties 
Banana Patch 
Divine Wind / All the Nasties 
Hueco Syndrome 
Indecent Exposure 
Malice In Bucketland 
Sea of Holes 
Uriah's Heap 
Walking on the Moon 
Window Pain 

Sea of Holes 

5.10 R

   

FA: Mike Head
Type: Sport
Consensus: 5.10- [details]
Length: 2 pitches, 350 feet
Views: 451 page views

Submitted By: Aaron Hobson on Aug 15, 2006


Add Photo  Add Comment 

You and this route  |  Other Opinions (7)
Your todo list:
Your stars:
Your rating: -none- [change]
Your ticklist: [add new tick]
 Printer Friendly View

  • This route has access issues. Please read the note available on the Hueco Tanks page.
  • This route has access issues. Please read the note available on the North Mountain page.

  • Greg Opland sailing the Sea of Holes


    Description 

    A popular route. Both pitches are long and with widely spaced bolts which makes it feel less like a sport climb. It is possible to supplement the bolts by placing large cams in some of the "holes", but this hardly feels necessary. The 2nd pitch traverses right to within 15' of the tree in the corner, before going straight up the steep headwall (crux).The entire climb is steep climbing up huge huecos. Pumpy, but not technically difficult.

    The good exposure and stinginess of bolts are what make this climb exciting. Take it for what it is.


    Location 

    The obvious pock-marked face immediately left of the large tree-topped corner.


    Protection 

    pitch 1: 150ft (5.9), 4 bolts to 2-bolt anchor.
    Pitch 2: 150ft (5.10-), 4 bolts and a small cam. 1 bolt anchor can be supplemented with mid-sized cams.



    Add Photo Photos of Sea of Holes
    Susan starting the first pitch

    Susan starting the first pitch

    Susan out on the second pitch, near the top.

    Susan out on the second pitch, near the top.


    Add Comment Comments on Sea of Holes
    Show which comments
    By Larry Earley
    Nov 5, 2006
    rating: 5.10 R

    Pitch one is 9+. Put cam on ramp start and another large cam at start of steep headwall. A #3 Camalot doesn't fit great and neather does a #2. Ten feet up is bolt one. Hard clip stance. The rest of pitch is steady 5.9 climbing. Don't push your luck. A leader should be solid 10 to try this one. I saw a terrible accident in 1998. A guy fell just trying to clip bolt 2. He fell 80 feet to the ramp. Blood all over. A National Guard chopper landed and took him away. Never found out if he lived. Pitch two also runout and is solid 10a. Awesome climb. A must climb at Hueco. The original pitch one had only one bolt half way. Megga Classic climb. Watch out for bird S@@t on pitch two. Some nice huecos are slimbed up. I seconded the climb three times and would do it any day.

    By Rob Dillon
    From: Leadville, CO
    Jan 20, 2007

    Onsight free soloed for the FA by Mike Head.

    Which begs the question: which came first, the name or the head?

    By Russ Walling
    From: www.FishProducts.com
    Oct 16, 2007
    rating: 5.8+ PG13

    With all due respect Larry, you must have been having a heavy gravity day. Protection is adequate for the angle and the available holds. I would venture to say that any 5.8 leader with a fairly solid lead head can float this thing. All buckets, all the time, and maybe not a loose hold on it.

    Pitch lengths are a bit off too:
    First Pitch: After going up the 3rd class ramp, there is probably 125ft of climbing max.
    Second Pitch: Maybe 115ft of climbing.
    We had an 84m rope and it went top to bottom with 30ft to spare.

    First pitch: 5.7+
    Second Pitch: 5.8+

    By susan peplow
    From: Phx J-Tree
    Oct 17, 2007
    rating: 5.9+ R

    P1 is easy enough to follow the bolts. P2 on the other hand is a bit tricker. There are so many holds and so far between the bolt line it is easy to get off track.

    P2 directly right of the anchor 4 feet is a mystery bolt that is not needed . I did note in my guide to head right towards the tree route after the 3rd bolt (p2) using the varnished well huecoed rock to find the 4th bolt.

    The single bolt anchor can be supplimented with 1 1/2- 2" cams. Look to create a small directional to keep the cord from running over small rocks that would bomb the people below.

    By Gilroy
    From: Boulderado
    May 30, 2008
    rating: 5.10 PG13

    This bee-you-T-full route is worth carrying a couple of large (#10 & 11) Hexcentrics for stuffing into huecos. They are bomber where no SLCD will fit and help raise the casualness factor considerably.