Brer Rabbit
5.11b A3+ R,
Trad, Aid, 700 ft (212 m), 10 pitches, Grade VI,
Avg: 3.6 from 8
votes
FA: Ed Webster 4/1978. Second ascent: Les Ellison, Mark Smith 1980.
Utah
> Southeast Utah
> Fisher Towers
> Cottontail Tower
Access Issue: RAIN, WET ROCK and RAPTOR CLOSURES: The sandstone around Moab is fragile and is very easily damaged when it is wet. Also please ask and be aware of Raptor Closures in areas such as CAT WALL and RESERVOIR WALL in Indian Creek
Details
WET ROCK: Holds rip off and climbs have been and will continue to be permanently damaged due to climbers not respecting this phenomenon. After a heavy storm the rock will remain wet, sometimes for several days. PLEASE DO NOT CLIMB IN MOAB during or after rain.
RAPTOR CLOSURES: please be aware of seasonal raptor closures. They occur annually in the spring.
Description
Route begins on the NW ridge of Cottontail Tower right off the trail.
P1- Follow the obvious feature straight up past one old bolt and a difficult roof mantle until you reach a large ledge and 3 bolt anchor. All clean, gear up to 4 inches (5.10+ C1+)
P2- Continue up and right past a poorly protected wide slot, continue via mixed free and aid to a 2 bolt station at the right edge of a small roof. Belay can (and should) be backed up with a .5 inch cam. (5.10 C2)
P3- Engineer moves right to the base of an old bolt ladder, follow this straight up to a new 3/8 inch bolt and negotiate the final move onto a great ledge with a 3 bolt anchor. (A2)
P4- Head around the corner and traverse the West face on run out moderate terrain, drop into an amazing bivy cave with a 3 bolt anchor, continue another 20 meters along the traverse past two old bolts on the "sidewalk" until it is possible to clip another 3 bolt anchor. No gear, two bolts. (5.8)
P5- Hoist your satchel, free climb left and up to an old bolt, mantle onto a shelf, mantle again, follow a sustained and discontinous crack system straight up passing 3 more old bolts. Continue slightly left into a crack to a great stance at a 3 bolt anchor. This pitch is requisite of numerous sawed angles, and a range of cams to 3 inches. Amazing pitch. (A3+)
P6- Follow the wide crack to the summit ridge and build a natural anchor. Take a couple larger cams and save a 3 inch for the belay. (5.9)
P7- Follow the ridge past a gap and fixed gear to a bolted belay.
P8- Head right of the belay, follow old bolts and new bolt studs up to a difficult and run out mantle move. Gain the shelf and find much needed gear. Continue up to a spectacular ledge with a 3 bolt anchor. (5.11R A2)
P9- Exit the right side of the ledge and negotiate your way right into a wide fluting, alternate aid moves and free moves past many old bolts to the summit ridge. Contemplate how Webster drilled this on lead. Locate and estrablish a great thread belay.
P10- Climb around to the east to gain the ridge or crawl through the hole (preferable), continue along the exposed ridge well around the east side of the summit block. Locate a wide right leaning crack. Follow this up to an old manky bolt, aid the lip and step onto the summit. The anchor consists of one good hangerless bolt, one pin and an old 1/4 inch. It is directly above the rap stations. Take a four inch cam. (5.6 C1)
Protection
Brer Rabbit is an excellant line comprised of mostly solid rock. The protection bolts are mostly all star drives and many are worn far out of the rock. A full range of gear is requisite. Double TCU's to #4 cams, and an extensive pin rack with emphasis on big sawed angles and regular angles up to #6 or #7 but some small iron as well. Nuts of any size proved fairly useless. Keyhole hangers and or regular hangers would be a great addition for some new bolt studs on the 8th pitch. Most anchors are bolted and contain at least one good 3/8 inch bolt amongst a pile of old mank, exceptions are the top of pitches 6 and 8,and the summit block which are all fairly old hardware. The natural anchors require some creative threading but are solid.
[Hide Photo] Can you name the 7 formations in this photo that have routes up them? By the way, if you see this when you're on the summit of Cottontail, be prepared to rap in the dark!
[Hide Photo] Ben Kiessel on the traverse on pitch 4. Though the climbing on this pitch isn't terribly hard, it's pretty spicy with the sandy rock and ancient star drives for protection!
[Hide Photo] Pitch 4 traverse. Third or fourth ascent of Brer Rabbit. Photo by Chip Wilson.
[Hide Photo] Ben on the other side of the hole you have to shimmy through near the summit. It's a tighter squeeze than it looks in this photo!
[Hide Photo] Trying to sling a horn on the crux pitch so I don't have to do the mantel. (it didn't work i had to mantel) (Photo taken by either Amber M. or Matt P.)
[Hide Photo] Pitch one of Brer Rabbit. I always find the first pitch to be a rude wake up call when I climb in the Fishers. This was no exception.
[Hide Photo] Bill Grasse getting started on Pitch Two. Looks just like an IC splitter doesn't it?
[Hide Photo] Pitch 4 bivy "cave"
[Hide Photo] It's a looooong way down! Chip Wilson on third ascent of Brer Rabbit. 1992..
Palo Alto
Great effort by Ed, solo, in the 70's sans modern gizmos...
All the rap stations down road kill need revamping. From the anchors
at the end of pitch 4 you can fix down and right to an old station
on a slab w/2 stardryves,then to the ground(2 60m ropes). That station
is directly below the bivy cave.
-Miles Newby & Marcus Garcia Mar 9, 2006
Recommended gear:
1x set small cams
3x Camalots #1 - 3, 1x #3.5 - 5
A few stoppers and large HB off-sets
Rivet Hangers
Lots of shoulder lengthers
Jeremy used some large Peckers and a few sawed-offs on the 5th pitch
Bring a bolt kit - we had to replace one sheared bolt on the last pitch to the ridge
There are good anchors dropping straight down from the shoulder / ridge(end of pitch 7) Don't go to the side, just 3 raps straight down.
Paul
Apr 4, 2009
Durango, CO
-This was my favorite route I have done in the fishers thus far.
-We fixed 5 pitches on day one and then climbed the rest on day 2.
-On pitch 3 it says to engineer moves straight right off the belay then climb up a bolt ladder. Bill led this pitch and followed the description and had some troubles. I would suggest trying to free climb straight up 10' to a new 3/8" bolt and then traverse right to the bolt ladder. If you manage your rope drag and climb up like I suggest you should be able to link pitches 2 and 3 no problem.
-Bill also led pitch 6 and says the wide section was the hardest thing he has ever climbed. I call bullshit he had just finished jugging 500'. That being said bring a #6 camalot and pull on it.
-Jumping the gap on pitch 7 is sweet!
-Brad found out that you can aid through the 11R mantel on pitch 8 if you are willing to place some peckers.
-We climbed a pitch between pitch 8 and pitch 9 that is not described. We will call it pitch 8.5 to keep the confusion down. I traversed way right off the belay on what I thought was pitch 9 and had to climb back all the way to the anchor. Pitch 8.5 goes as follows: Climb a hand crack above the belay for 10' walk along the ridge to a window. Sling the window with a long cord. Traverse another few feet to a bolt ladder consisting of two 1/4" bolts. Aid the bolts to a mantel and 3/8" stud. Free climb past the stud to a ledge and an anchor. The pitch is only 50-70' long but the rope drag was horrid. Possibly Brad was supposed to skip the anchor that he stopped at?
-Pitch 8- Again DON'T traverse right off the belay. Free climb another hand crack in a dihedral above the belay for about 40' to a slung horn. Tension traverse right off the horn to a hidden fixed pecker. Lower off the pecker into a gully with the bolt ladder. This was pretty simple and will avoid the scary 50' traverse right off the belay.
-We added one 3/8" bolt to 3 of the belays.
-We fixed a line on pitch 9 for the rappel, and don't know how we would have gotten back to the anchor without it. (you only need one rope for the last pitch.)
-The route is sweet! Do it. Apr 21, 2009
Grand Junction, CO.
-While it may not really be the hardest thing I have ever climbed, it WAS the hardest thing that I have every climbed with a summer sausage in my pocket! May 6, 2009
Estes Park
Cheers,
Brad Jul 11, 2009