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Orangutan Wall

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Angel's Share 
Full Moon Monkey 
Monkey Duodenum 
Primate Grooming Procedures 
Unknown on Far Left 
Unknown, Pink Bolts, Black Streak, Left Side 
Unknown, Pink Bolts, Black Streak, Right Side 


Orangutan Wall

Submitted By: 46and2 on Jul 16, 2006
Administrators: Andrew Gram, Perin Blanchard
Latitude: 39.5538  Longitude: -111.6885 
Aerial photo/map | Weather
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Description 

Excellent moderate sport routes that get excellent early morning shade and afternoon shade as well. Good rock quality with routes a bit longer by Maple standards


Getting There 

Left Hand Fork in Maple Canyon: Pass the Petroglyph Wall on your right (with the chain-link fence covering the actual petroglyphs), The Pipeline on your left, Engagement Alcove on your right, go around a corner, under a log that lies across the trail and the streambed, then cross the streambed and find the long routes facing east.


The Classics

Mountain Project's determination of some of the classic, most popular, highest rated routes for Orangutan Wall:
Primate Grooming Procedures   5.7     Sport, 1 pitch, 70 feet   
Full Moon Monkey   5.8     Sport, 1 pitch, 70 feet   
Monkey Duodenum   5.9     Sport, 1 pitch, 100 feet   
Unknown, Pink Bolts, Black Streak, Right Side   5.10b     Sport, 1 pitch, 90 feet   
Unknown, Pink Bolts, Black Streak, Left Side   5.10b     Sport, 1 pitch, 90 feet   
Browse More Classics in Orangutan Wall

Comments on Orangutan Wall Add Comment
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By Texaswall
From: West Jordan, UT
May 30, 2008

Walked right past it on my first visit to Maple today. It is truly only a few hundred yards up canyon from the bridge that begins the Left Fork trail. There is currently a large fallen tree hovering over the trail; look right and where the streambed touches the low angle wall, you're looking at the Pink Bolts. Note that the routes do not appear as long as they really are from the trail, in part because the start of many of these are low angle ramps for 25 feet.

By Stanley Hall
Jul 1, 2008

There are chains now at the tops of most of the orangutan walls now. So rapelling is no longer necessary on at least two of them that I saw and climbed.