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Donnelly Canyon
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crack just to left of Drainpipe, The 
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Dos Hermanos 

5.12-

   

FA: not sure
Type: Trad
Consensus: 5.12a [details]
Views: 1,305 page views

Submitted By: Andrew Wellman on Mar 9, 2002


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Roy Leggett on Dos Hermanos. Photo by Jimmy Hawk.


Description 

This climb is truly incredible. The greatest part is that its nice hard climbing that varies incredibly in size, its not the same move all the way to the chains. Dos Hermanos is located to the left of the Drainpipe Corner and to the right of the Elephant route and chocolate corner. Just look for the sweet looking crack busting right through the middle of the huge roof. Start by heading up a system of twin cracks. Actually the left one is a crack, but you can't really get you're feet into it cause it has an edge pointing away from you, and the right crack is really only a rail you can slap and lieback and heelhook your way up. The feet are mostly smears on the face. The first crux comes right before you hit the low angle section, trying to get your feet up on a ledge. You can rest here as long as you want, its no hands. Next, head up the steep heros handjams to a rest right under the roof. Reach out as far as you can and place a #3 camalot, then jam out the roof, keeping your feet in the crack. Depending on hand size the roof is either easy(large hands), hard(cupping, normal hands), or highly improbable(womans hands). Look for crimpers on the left side to help you pull the lip. The last move is literally the crux of the whole climb. Super good fun.


Protection 

The first bit starts with yellow/red aliens and .5 camalots till you're through the first crux. Then throw in a .75 camalot or two. The crack leading to the roof is #2 camalots, so really you don't need any(or so they say). Through the roof two #3 camalots will get you to the chains.



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Trying not to fall on Dos Hermanos

Trying not to fall on Dos Hermanos

Bennett starting up the fine line, Fall 2006.

Bennett starting up the fine line, Fall 2006.


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Comments displayed oldest to newestSkip Ahead to the Most Recent Dated Jul 20, 2008
By Tony Bubb
From: Boulder, CO
Mar 25, 2002
rating: 5.12a

The Crux is lower for small-fingered people- but the move up through the roof can be hard too.
For a small man-hand size, you'll find it's just plain too small to get a fist in. The hand will go in sideways, but will be so bent that the fingers can't flex. The hand can go in the "flat" way- try folding your thumb as if to touch the base of the pinkey finger with the tip. This gave me just enough purchase to hang on, although I'd already hung on the route anyway.

By Andy Johnson
Sep 29, 2003

Just to set the record straight, this route is yet another creation by the Man, the Myth, the Legend... Steve Hong.

By Max Schon
Nov 18, 2003

I would have to disagree with the comment that the last move is the crux of the climb. Although a little difficult, you get a great rest before the final bulge. I think the crux is about half way up in the finger section.

By Joe Collins
Nov 21, 2003

For me, the last roof is undoubtedly the crux. I have skinny hands, so the jams out the roof at the end are just too big. I've climbed the lower crux clean a couple of times, but always fail to pull the last roof.

By Kirk Woerner
Apr 1, 2004

I want, I want. Such an aesthetic line!

By Brian Weinstein
Sep 22, 2006
rating: 5.12a

By far my favorite route in Donnelley. If you want a change from the long splitters or corners, this great route offers a whole lot of diverse climbing in 90 feet. There are new anchors below the roof, but that takes away part of the fun.

By chris Kalous
Nov 8, 2006

The anchors (lower and upper) got replaced last year. Thanks to Climbing Magazine's ARI. Just a note for you desert rats that still like drilled angles - I funked both the top angles with a light yank on the funkness. These were not the first ones I cleaned that way. I have NEVER been able to clean an expansion bolt this easily.

Chris Kalous

By adampeters
From: Golden, Colorado
Apr 25, 2007
rating: 5.11+

I thought this was a Ruckman Bros route? hence the name Dos hermanos. Correct if wrong. Great route.

By Michael Sokoloff
May 27, 2007

Steve Hong did the FA of this route with his brother.

By Greg D
From: denver/steamboat
Jan 5, 2008

I'm a bit confussed by the two sets of anchors. Why would anyone place a set of anchors just before the crux, or in this case, one of the crux's when an anchor already exist above? Shoud we place anchors before the crux on every climb? Perhaps we should remove the first set of anchors. Anyone know the history here?

By Ben Kiessel
Jan 8, 2008

I agree Greg, pretty silly to have a set of anchors before the roof. When I first climbed this route in 2002 I think there was only one bolt before the roof now there is a full blown anchor. Sorry but I have no idea why any bolts were placed below the roof there is bomber gear.

By -mn
Jan 10, 2008

I believe the anchors below the roof were the original ones. Then at some point the upper ones were established and the lower ones chopped. Then again the lower ones were put back in....hmmm

By Tony Bubb
From: Boulder, CO
Jan 11, 2008
rating: 5.12a

I believe I recall 2 sets present in 1995.

By chris Kalous
Mar 5, 2008

I agree w/ tony. I recall that there were two anchors back in the mid 90s. I replaced them both (see above comment) because some people would use the bottom one whether I did or not, the webbing was ugly, and I generally think chopping bolts is more about ego than conservation. In a place like Donnelly, where so many people cut their teeth, and there is very little hard climbing, it doesn't seem like that big of a deal. If you have small hands, I imagine that the top could ruin your day pretty quickly. If you do decide to pull that low anchor, please consider using the chains to replace another anchor in the creek, as they were donated expressly for that purpose.

Those upper bolts should be able to be tightened since they are Rawls.

By Nathan Furman
From: Salt Lake City, Utah
Mar 26, 2008

I loved this climb! Interesting, fun, challenging, varied--maybe the best climb I've done in Indian Creek. I have bigger hands; the roof was very mellow (#3 camalots) with great feet, but the finger section down low was hard. Being able to fire in .5 camalots off a pumpy stance seems pretty key.

By Drewsky
Jul 20, 2008

Upper anchor bolts were very loose as of 4/08.