This is the premier mountaineering route on the Piz Badille - a long, moderate journey up the ridge along the left margin of the west face. The route is obvious in George Bell's photo. The hardest part of the route is gaining the ridge crest - a route finding quandary - but these early difficulties are inconsistent with the remainder of the climbing, as you'll enjoy easy climbing with good protection on decent rock for the remaining three or four pitches.
P1 (5.6 - 5.8). The first pitch of the Ridge is the psychological and technical crux, as you'll be tested on placing protection and on your route finding skills. The [Gillett] guidebook suggests there are a number of options, supposedly from 5.6 - 5.8, but questionable rock and protection seemed to narrow the choices. We chose to begin just left of and 50' up the ridge bottom, traversing right out on a good ledge to gain a finger crack that splits the broad face of the lower ridge. There were two distinct cruxes on this variation. The first is right off the good ledge up thin edges and smearing while placing good pro in the thin crack. The second is easier technically but a mindful psychologically. After the edges and smearing, the crack approaches a small roof that is passed on the left to a good stance. Above the stance, a smooth face must be negotiated. This face is capped by another small roof and the best option seems to be to follow the very thin crack up a small, left-facing dihedral on the right, and escape right from under the roof above the dihedral. This is not terribly difficult climbing, but the pro leaves something to be desired. An ancient bolt (remnants of the first ascent party?) lies in the middle of the face and can be strung with a long sling, but the rust and loose manner of the hanger suggests this protection is more for show than usefulness. RPs, the smallest stoppers you have (and maybe a stick of gum) can be placed in the thin crack of the dihedral to back up this "bolt," 70m, passing several pins.
Once you have a small nest of pro in the crack, charge up and step right above the dihedral, and climb a small bulge. Tension mounts. You can find a small crack above the bulge that took a marginal Alien, but your best bet is not to fall on it and climb a little higher to thank God cracks. Easier climbing leads to a large ledge system.
P2 (5.4). The second pitch is a long moderate stroll that follows good cracks along the narrowing ridge. Stay to the climber's left along the edge for the best rock and exposure. A huge ledge appears after a rope length - 40m with a bolted anchor (per Kurtz).
P3 (5.4). Another long moderate pitch, almost a mirror of the last, leads to a good ledge system.
P4 (5.5). This pitch surmounts the headwall at the top of the ridge, attaining the summit plateau. Begin with some good cracks and stay to the climber's left above the large ledge to find the easiest route to the summit. Mind your rope drag with long slings on this pitch. At the top of the headwall, you'll be standing on a flat summit plateau, the top of the Piz Buttress, but not the end of the climbing. The summit plateau narrows to a rocky ridgeline that snakes its way back to the forested hillside. Move your belay across the summit plateau to the edge of the ridgeline where it narrows.
P5 (5.0). This was a wonderfully exposed traverse along the ridge crest with 300' drops on either side, it reminded me of the classic ridge climbs in the high mountains and broke up the monotony of the last couple pitches. Scramble down off the summit plateau on easy rock, and then work your way along the ridge crest, placing pro as deemed necessary. After a full rope length, you'll be on hiking terrain. Scramble left down a talus slope along the mossy north face of the Piz back to your pack.
A standard rack. Per Kurtz: bring extra finger-size cams.
Fort Collins, CO
Louisville, CO
I attempted to follow the path of least resistance on pitch one and followed the same path outlined in Ivan's photo below. It's definitely a little sketchy after the overlap with a runout, a couple loose holds and shakey RP's for protection after lauching up the left facing corner. All the bad things converge at the worst possible point. I believe the old bolt can be found by climbing straight over the first major overlap, rather than traversing left underneath it as shown by the dots. We belayed at a set of new camo bolts on the first major ledge. The rest of the route is a breeze in comparison.
Incidentally, the old topo from Hubbel's Front Range Crags guide book shows the route starting in a dirty, broken major corner system to the right of the nice slab on the Ridge. I doubt it's much fun climbing in that corner. Aug 14, 2005
Denver, CO
I shot a short movie of our climb. You can find it on my website at leachfam.com/securearea/1st… Oct 10, 2005
Nice video, one comment, be sure to "protect the traverse" of your 2nd. I am not trying to be a buzzkill, but Julie would have hit the ledge at about 50% when the she climbs into the sun, if she had popped off. Better safe than sorry especially in that location.
Oh, just watched the end, be ready to dump your pack on a stream crossing. I usually wear the pack with only one arm.
Nice editing and sound too.
AC Oct 10, 2005
Boulder, CO
Glade Park, CO
P1: If you are with a beginner, or prefer to avoid the runout first pitch, there is a way to traverse in from the left directly to the bolt anchors at the top of the first pitch. Look for the path of least resistance a short scramble up from the first belay.
P2: about 50 feet up, head right, to the very edge of the arete. There is a sort of double arete in the shape of an "L", and by staying on the bottom of the "L", one finds nice exposure. The climbing is easy and there is pro.
Last pitch, approaching the top of the route: you are forced right about 175' from the top. If you then veer left, and then straight up, there is a nice variation that involves a short vertical face with an angled "fin" sticking out. Fun. Jun 18, 2009
Pagosa Springs
Boulder, CO
Silicon Valley/Boulder
If you do go right, you will encounter several fixed pitons on your way to the first belay ledge. Note that the pins are hard to locate, so keep your eyes peeled. May 15, 2013
Eagle, CO
Bruce offers great advice concerning the first pitch. As he mentions, we traversed right at the roof and then up a steep and broken corner system with good (at least better) pro and 2 fixed pins. Looking down from the belay, the 5.8 variation looked fun and pretty clean but definitely R rated. Once you're past the first pitch, the rest of the climb is a breeze, enjoy it!
Also, crossing the creek right now is quite.... Exciting? Jun 13, 2013
Silicon Valley/Boulder
NoCo
P1 to bolted anchors at 40m; P2 to just past the big pine at 60m; P3 to the false summit at 50m; P4 along the ridge and into the trees, a 70m+ run, most of which is 4th class.
The walk-off is really crappy. Do yourself a favor and take the time to find the rap bolts near the top of the route unless you really like bushwhacking through thorns and sharp, dead pine branches. Sep 5, 2015
Nederland
Boulder
Glade Park, CO
Little Rock, AR
columbia, mo
Pitch 1: 40 meters from the start to next belay. (3) Three pins / pitons are present for permanent protection. A range of small cams, nuts, and a larger cam can protect the line. As mentioned in other posts, head a few steps left at the small roof, using smears and good hands. Remember to use a longer runner below the roof to reduce rope drag. The climb starts from a small ledge scooped out of the boulderfield along the left edge of the exposure. The first pitch ends at the next ledge and a two bolt anchor system with a rap ring. I climbed using a 70 meter rope.
Pitch 2: 40m. Climb to the next belay ledge. Two pins exist along the right edge of the slab, following the climb straight up from the anchors. Long runners or a section of the climbing rope required to establish belay stations from here on up. If you like protection every five or ten feet, The Ridge is not the route for you to lead.
Pitch 3: 35m. Climb to the belay ledge just right past the next obvious pine tree. Good protection can be placed just below the next small roof and crack.
Pitch 4: 50m. The climb is the longest pitch which could easily consume up to 60m of rope depending on your path. A belay anchor exists at the top, just past the obvious ridge line and up and left. The path of least resistance will zig-zag you back and forth a bit, so use long runners towards the top. I chose to head slightly left, towards the non-visible belay anchor above by climbing through the roof section using the angling crack. Lots of fun!
Pitch 5: 35m. Ridge traverse heading up and left towards the pines along the summit. Best to stay roped up even if you decide to use only 1/2 of a rope or less.
Descent tips: the most dangerous part of the adventure is the way down. 1) Remember that all of the boulders are loose, even if your body weight is not enough to move one of them. 2) Shifting rock is even more treacherous after a rain. Most of the rock is covered with lichen which becomes slippery quickly. 3) Take your running shoes up with you. 4) Stay close to the main rock face, along the trees, to keep away from the loose rock. 5) Keep your helmet on. 6) Stagger your descent path from that of your partner's line. If a rock starts to roll, it may not stop. 6) If you encounter rain or hail close to the summit or during the descent, a few bigger pines can provide some temporary shelter. Near the top of the descent, a rock overhang can be a great shelter. Then, towards the bottom, near the first pitch, another overhang provides quick shelter from rain. 7) You can rap off from the top of the first pitch anchors using a 70 meter rope or less, by heading down at an angle towards the trees and rock slope. Again, this places you close to the small overhang to get out of the weather. Jun 21, 2019
Golden, CO
Great route, the whole route has pretty "interesting" pro, so it's a good way to practice not losing it on lead. Apr 9, 2020
Denver, CO
P1 has 3 seemingly solid pitons and bolt anchors at the belay ledge. Above the 3rd piton, there's an obvious crimp on a flake that seemed very loose as it was moving out and hollow. P4 had a single bolt at the belay before the ridge traverse. Jun 8, 2020
Denver, CO
The left path up the route (Gillett's book) felt very much 5.6. The moves are all there - if it feels harder, I would attribute it to: being off route, slab technique, or not having much in the way of small gear.
You definitely don't need anything larger than a 0.75 C4. Small cams (Aliens, C3) might be nice. I was placing DMM offsets and HBs quite a bit, and used a blue ballnut on the flake just above the roof on the first pitch.
Communication and visual contact gets tricky if you belay just below the upper headwall. I would suggest setting your belay on top which should be doable with a 60m.
Agree with others that the talus field decent is the crux. I mean, it's not technically difficult or that precarious, just exhausting. Aug 22, 2020
Around Boulder, CO
Boulder, CO
Aurora, CO
Boulder, CO
CO mostly
P1 still needs micro gear to sew up the first crack, but the bolt at the end of the dihedral (and the piton in the dihedral) eliminate the serious runout.
P1 and P2 have bolted rap-able anchors (double rope and ugly pulls). I couldn't find anchors on P3, but there are trees. Finally P4 has an unrap-able bolted anchor (needs quicklinks). Sep 6, 2025
CO mostly
Estes Park, CO