the coyote is both sacred character and trickster, and climbing Coyote Tower will reconnect you to eternal truths as well as your bag of climbing tricks. John Burcham put this route up in the late 1990’s, and to this day it delivers delicate smears, dreamy fingerlocks, solid handjams, thrutchy pods, powerful laybacking, and a soupçon of offwidthing, all at a sustained 9 (ish) grade with a mid-10 (ish) crux on pitch 2 to keep the crowds down. bring 2 ropes (or a Beal escaper) and a partner you can talk into leading odds (show them the pictures of the pitch 5 corner…). All anchors bolted and set up for rappel EXCEPT PITCH 2.
1- the price of admission. climb 3 separate micro headwalls with sparse bolts (and a #3 and #1 in pockets on 1st headwall to keep you off the vegetated ramp). this has been called 5.8 by many, but it may not feel 5.8 with some ankle breaking potential on friable rock. You will find a bolted anchor at top of last little headwall OR with a 70m you can JUST BARELY WITH A FOOT OF ROPE TO SPARE lead the scramble to the base of p2, about 40 feet up and left of the p1 anchors. There will be no bolted anchor here- small cams and RP’s will work, it’s a good ledge and there is great gear coming soon…. 5.8d+ and spicy
2- the crux. beautiful crack climbing from fingers to fists, but it is the steep pods that will call upon your inner trickster. with the 10c bit coming at you late in the pitch, save a #1, 2, and 3 for the top if this is near your limit, or if you like your thrutching a bit cozy; 10c
3- tunnel to plank. climb up and right of the anchor tunneling behind the buttress, up to the limestone band, and walk the bolted rightward traverse. short, 5.easy pitch
4- surf the choss. navigate some choss with the help of a bolt, and get a small cam or 2 in better rock when it steepens a bit, then cruise on 5.9 and 5.fun terrain to the sandy, blonde, tilted blocks beneath the layback corner, .9
5- lay it back for 30 or so feet of stellar, featured left facing corner to weirdness and funk surmounting some less than stellar rock with mantle and bolt. .9
6- the money pitch. great pro. great feet. great exposure capped by the rarest of things, a 5.9 airy offwidth move to summit. glorious .9+
Descent: single rope raps to p5,4,3 anchors. From p3 double rope to p1 and from p1 same to ground. The Wiled Horse/wily coyote beta= Leave 2nd rope at p1 anchors, have your first rap to it single strand from p3 anchors and send it up to the p3 chains and you don’t have to mess w 2 ropes above p1. the extra wily coyote brings one 70 and a Beal escaper, which is bomber (no matter what Google says)
Bell Rock Pathway Trailhead. Coyote Tower is the long slim tower formation that clings to the southeast corner of Courthouse Butte. Use the manicured trail system to get out to the main wash which leads around the back of the formation, and when you hit a manmade retaining wall look left for cairns and the path that takes you up a vegetated ramp trending up and left, this ramp will get you about 200’ up and at its apex, you can look up and spy the first bolt (look high for it)
No such thing as a standard rack! many strongpeople advocate ditching the 4. Double rack .2-3. If you are cool, ditch some of that. if you are way cool, spray about it below…. here is how to have everything you want when you want it, if 10c in Sedona is not trivial for you and you don’t mind extra weight: doubles .2-3, triples 1, 2, 3, and a 4, plus nuts. Dozen draws w half alpine.
Bend
Flagstaff, AZ
Boulder, CO
CL Sep 17, 2006
Phoenix
The optional jump-across pitch at the end is fun to do once, but it is runout on mostly crappy rock then is still a bit of a hike (in climbing shoes) to the top. Rap back to the top of the tower off tree slings. Nov 14, 2007
Phoenix, AZ
Ojai, CA
Boulder, CO
Tucson/DMR
One thing to watch out for: the first pitch has two ledges that are likely to tweak an ankle in the event of a fall. Make sure you're very attentive on belay! Apr 28, 2009
TooSun
Phoenix, AZ
Sacramento, CA
This is a great line, with the 2nd pitch being one of the better pitches I've done in AZ. Dec 22, 2009
Ouray, CO
Phoenix & Prescott, AZ
Flagstaff, AZ
Thanks Dec 20, 2011
Phoenix
Flagstaff, AZ
Phoenix, AZ
Scottsdale, az
Pitch II: crux, 10C, last 30 feet has two overhangs
Pitch III: just walk though the tunner
Pitch IV: nice 5.9- good pro Pitch V: excellent finger layback start
Pitch VI: steep 9, exposed, interesting last move.
Need two ropes (60) only for rappel from top of pitch III to top of pitch II (no need to drag second rope from top of pitch III to top).
Prescott Az
Flagstaff, Arizona
James Q and I had a blast on an otherwise chilly day. High was 40 in Flag but clear and sunny. With an 11am start we were warm and stoked.
I could have used more #1 and #2 C4s near top of crux pitch (p2). Here's what I'll bring next time:
1-Red C3
2-.3 C4
2-.4 C4
2-.5 C4
2-.75 C4
3-1.0 C4
3-2.0 C4
2-3.0 C4
1-4.0 C4
-a few medium nuts
-my 2 fav. medium slung Hexes (yeah, I know...but they're soooo bomber!)
6-extendable slings (not a lot of wandering)
8-draws
SUPER FUN!! Nov 21, 2014
Approach: when following the slick rock wash, trail breaks off just before a man-made retaining wall.
Rack: similar to Danny's recommendation above, but I used - offset MCs purp to red, (1).3-.5 C4, (2) .75 C4, (3)1-2C4, (2)3C4, (1)4C4.
P1: nice spot for #3C4 in first hueco off the deck.
P2: save a 1,2,3C4 for the last 30'.
P3: clean as a whistle compared to 5 yrs ago.
P4: thought this had the most junk rock of the route though easier.
P5: nice corner climbing with great feet throughout. "Dirt clod" is nothing unusual to typical Sedona choss. Bolt protects mantle above it.
P6: nice and exposed with good rests. Rock is a bit hollow at the mid crux.
Raps: instead of dragging/leaving a second rope up to the limestone anchors of P3, another tactic could be to leave it at the P1 anchors. Rap single line from P3-P1 then partner can pull the second line up tied to it to rap from. Nov 24, 2015
Phoenix, AZ
Nevada
P1: Slab with three individual headwalls, each with decking potential. The second one felt most difficult. (5.8 *)
P2: Juicy featured corner, cruxy pod halfway up and then a bigger and cruxier pod right below the anchors. (5.10 ****)
P3: Clamber through tunnel and walk cactus-infested limestone band over to two-bolt anchor. (4th class)
P4: Fun bulgy crack system, some sandy spots for thrill, ample features keep it moderate. (5.9 **)
P5: The stuff of dreams. Perfect layback corner, eats all sizes of gear. (5.9 ****)
P6: That delightful combination of continuously good pro and equally continuous exposure sought by every intrepid trad climber. Final offwidth capstone makes for a wild climax! (5.9+ ****)
Gear: The route could be done with a single rack were it not for P2. This pitch calls for doubles in C4 sizes .75, 1, 2, and 3. None of the pitches require a #4 cam so I would leave it at home.
Rappel: We followed Darren's advice to leave the second rope at the top of P1 (see above) and found this to be a good tactic. However if doing this route again, I would rap all pitches with a single rope, downclimbing/reversing the P3 traverse to get to P2 anchors. Nov 1, 2016
Flagstaff, AZ
p4: first half of the pitch is pretty much only small gear and has the worst rock quality of the whole route, so it's pretty heads up. easier climbing though.
for the descent, all the rappels are fairly clean and easy. for the one that goes from top of p5 to top of p4, stay way right out of the layback crack, since the rope has serious potential to get stuck there while pulling. Nov 11, 2019
Moab
You can rap back onto Coyote Tower with a single 70m from tat on a tree/pinch anchor, and you might need two hands to get back over the gap so use a prussic! Feb 21, 2020
South Bay
P1 5.8+ (*) Some holds must of broken off, getting to the first bolt is the crux. Prepare to do 5.7 moves with virtually not protection to the bolt. Don’t fall.
P2 5.10+ (***) Crux pitch, really sustained and quite brutal. The gear is excellent though.
P3 5.6 (**) More fun than I expected, after the tunnel climb up the broken band on the climbers right to a bolt, then traverse. Dont traverse under the band.
P4 5.8+ (**) Cool features throughout, bring your small gear and start stemming. A more confident leader can link 4-5.
P5 5.9- (***) The layback wasn’t as tough as I expected, it takes all kinds of gear the higher you go. If only it was 50 feet longer!
P6 5.9 (****) Best pitch by far, Derek’s comment is spot on. High exposure, full value!
Gear: I don’t know who suggested not bringing nuts or a #4. We used the #4 over five times. If we had brought the nuts, nearly every pitch could of used them. Danny G’s gear beta comment is spot on. Use his beta.
Rap: Leave the second rope atop pitch 3. Your rope could get stuck in the layback crack on pitch 5 when pulling. At the top, rap each pitch individually to the limestone band on pitch 3. With 60 meter double ropes you can rap all the way down to the top of pitch 1 from the top of pitch 3.
A short approach, great belay ledges, high exposure and remarkable scenery make this a classic. Jan 11, 2021
Flagstaff, AZ
Arizona
Quit wasting time and climb this thing! Feb 10, 2021
Sandpoint, ID
Salt Lake City, UT
P2: Best climbing on the route (5.10- or old school 5.9+)
P3: Micro-pitch mainly heading right (Low 5th class) == I would link this to P4 if you can extend all the pieces and communicate somehow.
P4: Sandy choss (5.8+)
P5: Tips to fist corner crack with plenty of footholds, etc on the faces to keep it tame, up a lil more choss to anchor. Enjoyable, but short. (5.8)
P6-7: Don't be lame; Even if you don't go to the Courthouse Butte Summit to tag the summit register, make it to the top of the formation since it's so close to the top of the tower. I led this as one long pitch and it made for a Spectacular adventure! Climb up some good cracks and solid rock to the OW exit. Once again, nice and tame with the abundance of holds. (5.8+ at the very lip) clip a chain, sneak another piece of pro in, and Jump! Very fun! and mellow even with the wild gusts we had. Climb up easy 5.7 chimney/cracks to the tatted up tree. There's a few scary stones in the chimney, but honestly less chossy than pitch 4. Hand-sized crack above the tree provides a comfy lil belay. (5.9-)
Gear: #4 can be used to easily protect the exit atop pitch 6, but there are other options for sure (and you can clip the anchor once you're wedged).
If I went again, I'd take Nuts, .1-#3 with Doubles of .75, 1, 2, and 3. Absolutely no need for triples.
Rappel: Took a 70m + pull cord (left at the top of P1 to be sent up later). You can almost combine a rappel or two. I also wonder if you can downclimb (reverse thrutch) a few moves down to the flat ground below the P3 rap. And with a 70m you can go P1 anchors to downclimb a few moves to the ground. So, without trying just a 70m and shenanigans on the P3 rap (or traversing back down to P2 anchors), a single 80m rope would definitely work to get you down this route.
PS: this route can get super windy, making the rappels a real pain (Especially the long one), just something to consider.
Enjoy! May 4, 2023
Sedona, AZ
For the descent we followed Darren's beta and left the 2nd rope at the 1st anchor and the rappel from the top of the 3rd pitch was a single line down, exciting!, tie the ropes together and the 2nd pulls it through and double rope raps down. Classic!!! May 23, 2025
POV footage of first two pitches Jun 4, 2025