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5.11b, Sport, 1900 ft (576 m), 22 pitches, Grade IV,  Avg: 3.4 from 248 votes
FA: Tristan Higbee, Thomas Gappmayer (T. Higbee w/ Christian Burrell earlier on lower pitches)
Utah > Wasatch Range > Southern Wasatch > Rock Canyon > Kyhv Peak

Description

For a much better printable (PDF) topo and the history of the route, go here.

Welcome to the world of sportaineering. Squawstruck goes right up the south face of Squaw Peak (also known as Squaw Mountain). The line isn't the most direct in the world, and some ledges and short pitches could be considered a drawback, but the rock is mostly good, the climbing is great, and the route is long! The route is also remarkably sustained, with five 5.8 pitches, four 5.9 pitches, twelve 5.10 pitches, and one 5.11 pitch. I tried to keep the route 5.10 or under the whole way, and almost succeeded.

The route is entirely bolted; no trad gear is necessary. The climb is characterized by slightly less than vertical pitches punctuated by roofs, though there's pretty much a bit of everything. There are several large ledges that interrupt the route. Some of them you can walk in your climbing shoes, but some you need to change back into your approach shoes for.

You'll encounter a wide variety of limestone on the route, from a few choss sections to beautiful water-streaked loveliness. You’ll see rock of all colors, including light and dark gray, white, black, tan, red, orange, brown, and blue.

This route was over two years in the making. More than 2/3 of the bolts on the route are stainless. Every belay has at least two bolts and a nice ledge. Apart from 3 & 4 and 7 & 8, I wouldn't recommend linking any pitches. Pitches 9 and 11 kind of suck, but everything else has good climbing. The whole route is south facing and gets a lot of sun. Winter is too cold and snowy, summer is too hot.

Pitch by pich beta

1) 5.10b, 110', 13 bolts - Sharp slab to chossy roof. Turn roof on left side. Hollow jugs above roof. Some crimpy moves lead to easier climbing two a two bolt anchor (bolts don’t have chains).

2) 5.8, 75', 8 bolts - Cross from the pillar/tower to the main wall via the “Leap of Faith” and clip the chain anchor (this is where you rappel from if rapping the route). Climb up easy terrain to a dihedral.

Unrope and scramble up easy 3rd class terrain up to the big, sloping ledge. Angle right after the scrambling. (Keep your climbing shoes on. It's a short walk.) Pitch 3 starts in a shallow, chossy dihedral.

3) 5.9, 60', 8 bolts - Make some mantle moves on chossy rock. The rock gets better shortly. Go to the right of the bush on some 5.9 moves and belay on a nice ledge.

4) 5.10b, 50', 7 bolts - Nice slab leads to steep climbing over the left side of the roofs. Belay at a great ledge. (Can combine 3 & 4)

5) 5.9-, 60', 8 bolts - Go right, then up through the "Frosted Flakes" and some beautiful white rock. Turn a roof before the belay on a ledge.

6) 5.10c, 105', 10 bolts - Climb through a band of chossy rock to the first crux, then head right over a sandy brown roof (second crux). Belay (3 bolts) on giant ledge.

Move up and left to the base of the next pitch, which starts just left of the edge of the pillar (belay at a flat spot to the right of the pillar).

7) 5.10a, 95', 9 bolts - Turn the roof and climb up jugs on good rock to the ledge.

8) 5.8 or 5.10a, 40', 5 bolts - Go up and right. Carefully stand on very tip of pillar and make an interesting move (5.8 or 5.10a, depending on how you do it) to the belay (3 bolts). (Can combine 7 & 8)

Walk right a couple hundred feet to the base of the next buttress. Pitch 9 starts on a blunt arete to the right of a broad trough.

9) 5.8-, 110', 11 bolts - Dirty climbing on somewhat suspect rock leads to a large, dirt-covered ledge. Belay at the base of the next section of cliff. Go right and then up at bolt 8, not straight up.

10) 5.10b, 75', 9 bolts - Lots of slopers lead to a small roof. Funky climbing beyond the roof leads to a corner, then a layer of orange julius rock to the belay.

11) 5.8, 105', 10 bolts - Go left on the ledge, then up past a couple shiny bolts to a ledge with a large pine tree. Head up steep part left of tree, then trend right to belay (hangers only).

Scramble up to flat spot and unrope. Put approach shoes on and head northwest uphill till you see a short red fixed rope. Scramble up short cliff band (using fixed line), then head up and left. You’ll see a dark cave/mine at the base of the next section of cliff. Aim for that, switchbacking your way up the slope to make it easier. Pitch 12 starts just right of the mine. The mine offers a nice respite from the sun.

12) 5.10c, 100', 13 bolts - Thought-provoking slab climbing with a couple bulgy sections.

13) 5.10c/d, 100', 13 bolts - Climb up the steep wall using the cracks to a ledge. Climb up the steep funky flaring chimney thing to a large, sloping belay ledge.

14) 5.11-, 50', 9 bolts - Tan slab with horizontals leads to a corner, which leads to a roof. Enjoy the exposure, get a rest right before the roof (there are bolted variations to the left and right here, as I didn’t know which would be easier. The left one is easier and better, and the right can lead to a bigger pendulum fall. So go left.) and then make insecure, desperate moves to the belay. This belay (an exposed stance) is the worst on the route.

15) 5.10b, 60', 7 bolts - Climb up the face, then head into the corner to some guano-draped holds. At the roof, turn the arete to the right and face massive exposure as you crimp your way to the belay.

16) 5.10d, 50', 7 bolts - Move the belay to two bolts 10 feet to the right. Climb up the very thin slab. Some balancy moves, some big moves. Hard pitch to read. Belay at 3 bolts .

Put approach shoes on. Go up the slope, using the fixed line if necessary, then head right along the base of the cliff. Continue right (east) a few hundred feet to a shallow, right-facing dihedral. There’s a 10’ length of rope attached to the first bolt, making it easier to see.

17) 5.9, 90', 10 bolts - Climb the dihedral and pass a couple bulges to the belay.

18) 5.10c/d, 110', 14 bolts - Long pitch with 3 cruxes. Make some burly moves to a big pocket, then more burly climbing leads up and left, left, left. The whole pitch angles left significantly.

19) 5.10c, 75', 10 bolts - Thin slab leads up and left to beautiful rock and then back right on desperate and tricky holds.

20) 5.8, 100', 9 bolts - The "Marble Slab" pitch. Climb up a steepish section, then enjoy the sweet slab with cool rock to the next belay.

21) 5.9+, 105', 12 bolts - Thin holds over a less-than-stellar roof make you wish you were at the top already.

22) 5.10, 90', 10 bolts - Keep climbing up then right over some roofs with depressingly small holds.

Unrope here and scramble up 30' to the summit of Squaw Peak.

Descent

Option 1: Hike the great Squaw Peak trail back down to Rock Canyon (4.2 miles). This is the fastest, easiest, and best option. From the summit of Squaw Peak, walk north. After 50 feet or so, the trail becomes well defined. Follow this for a couple miles back down to the main trail that goes up Rock Canyon, then follow that trail down canyon to the parking lot.

Option 2: Make 19 rappels (walk around pitches 9, 10, and 11 to the west) with one 70m rope down the route. From 18, rappel straight down to a 3 bolt rappel station, then another rappel to the large ledge b/t 16 and 17. Rappelling the route is the slowest and worst option. I HIGHLY recommend taking the trail down.

Location

The route starts on the lowest point of the limestone, up a tower/pillar.

Option 1: Hike up Rock Canyon. After 10 or 15 minutes, you’ll come to a green gate at a climbing area known as The Kitchen. A few minutes past the gate, you’ll come to a really big limestone boulder on the left side of the trail (this is just past the climbing area called PA’s Mother). Cross the seasonal stream in front of this boulder to a campsite on the opposite side of the stream. Locate a horizontal concrete thing and follow the trail over that. This leads to some scree slopes (not bad; the rocks are large and stable). Trend left toward the right side of a ridge, but don’t go onto the ridge top. Instead, switchback your way up through the thin brush to the right of the ridge. Once you’re almost level with the lowest point of the limestone to your right, cut right across a couple talus slopes to the start of the route.

Option 2: Hike up the talus gully between The Appendage and PA’s Mother until you gain the ridge top. Follow the ridge up and then head right to the start of the route.

Protection

16 quickdraws

4 24 inch slings w/biners

Whatever slings & biners you need for belays

60 m rope, unless doing longer linkups.

Helmets

No trad gear needed

Photos [Hide ALL Photos]

Topo with some retreat options marked.
[Hide Photo] Topo with some retreat options marked.
Totally bomber pro from one of my early forays onto Squaw Peak.
[Hide Photo] Totally bomber pro from one of my early forays onto Squaw Peak.
Squaw Peak from Y Mountain
[Hide Photo] Squaw Peak from Y Mountain
Nice shade right before the 12th pitch
[Hide Photo] Nice shade right before the 12th pitch
Me topping out at the summit. Too stoked to get my shoes off.
[Hide Photo] Me topping out at the summit. Too stoked to get my shoes off.
Jack Powers Mid route checking out the bivy cave at about 2AM!
[Hide Photo] Jack Powers Mid route checking out the bivy cave at about 2AM!
Summit photo with Rollin
[Hide Photo] Summit photo with Rollin
Cool view of pitches 3-8
[Hide Photo] Cool view of pitches 3-8
Modified topo. My opinions from 3 ascents, adjusted ratings, clarified descriptions & directions. Print & climb with it in your pocket.
[Hide Photo] Modified topo. My opinions from 3 ascents, adjusted ratings, clarified descriptions & directions. Print & climb with it in your pocket.
Thomas Gappmayer enjoying the belay before pitch 16.
[Hide Photo] Thomas Gappmayer enjoying the belay before pitch 16.
A view of Guy at the cave with another group headed up pitch 12.
[Hide Photo] A view of Guy at the cave with another group headed up pitch 12.
The "crux" pitch 14 linked into 15 (although I felt a couple other pitches were perhaps more technical than pitch 14).
[Hide Photo] The "crux" pitch 14 linked into 15 (although I felt a couple other pitches were perhaps more technical than pitch 14).

Comments [Hide ALL Comments]

Tristan Higbee
Pocatello, ID
  5.11-
[Hide Comment] Suburban big wall sport climbing at its finest...

Not sure how often the whole thing will get climbed, but the bottom 8 pitches are a lot of fun for an afternoon climb. They've been completed since 2008 and have gotten a fair amount of traffic, with the result being that they're pretty clean now. The original topo I made for the first 8 pitches is here. mountainproject.com/v/trist…

Again, a two-page PDF (with a much better and informative topo and the approach and descent beta pics), along with a history of the route, can be found here. thealoof.com/squawstruck-be… Sep 21, 2010
[Hide Comment] congrats that you got this thing done!!! i have watched your progress over the years. very respectable amount of dedication and vision! inspiring!

yee-haw! Sep 21, 2010
[Hide Comment] While I wasn't able to pull through the FA with Tristan, even being a minor part of this route is something I look on with real pride. Opportunities to be involved in such a monumental event don't come around very much. Thomas G. was able to step in a did a great job.
I know that I personally wouldn't have had the will to put in all the work that Tristan did (partly because of me, partly because of $$$, and partly because of family) to get this done. He deserves all the pats on the backs and free bottles of water anyone offers (after how dehydrated he was, I'm sure he will never turn down free water again). The day we attempted the FA was too hot for me as I would've needed more water than I could realistically carry (stashing water for ascents is not a bad idea).
Here are a few of my thoughts about the route:
1) When approaching, get on top of the ridge as soon as possible. It makes the going MUCH easier. You can cut over to the start as soon as you are level or continue to the bottom of the main cliff and just walk over. Both are about the same.
2) The first 8 pitches are fantastic and make a great climb all by themselves (many ascents of this have already been done) and the rock is pretty darn clean now. Plus, getting down by rapping isn't a big deal at all.
3) If you are not ready to go for the whole enchilada, the first 8 can be good training or fun all by themselves. But don't assume that just because you nail the first 8 the rest of the route is a gimmie. From the top of 8 you really feel like the rest of the route is within your grasp. Tristan said it best; this route is a climbing equivalent of a marathon. Unless you are in really good climbing shape you won't just stroll up the thing.
4) Pitches 9-11 are a bit annoying. Dirty and sometime weird. But it still beats just walking up the hill (which is possible).
5) The wall with pitches 12-16 (although I have not climbed 15-16 yet) is still dirty and loose (but not as bad as you might think). Be careful. But are packed full of great exposure and neat features.
6) I have only rappelled the upper wall at this time, but the climbing looks just as good as the bottom (maybe better)!
7) If you have to bail from above pitch 8 (after rapping the route to that point), there is a way to do a single rap instead of following the line all the way down. Directly above the Mine Wall is a set of anchors with quick-links. You can walk over above pitch 8 and do the one rap and then walk down the Blue Wall gully. See Tristan's topo for location.
8) This route is destined to be a major Utah classic. It should be a goal of nearly everyone and it is within reach of everybody if they are willing to put in some prep time. How long will it be until Alex Honnald solos this thing. :) Cheers!
Sep 21, 2010
Tristan Higbee
Pocatello, ID
  5.11-
[Hide Comment] To comment on Crisco's comments: I disagree with getting to the ridge top ASAP on the approach. I think staying to the right of it is better. Sep 22, 2010
Jon Bitter
Waco, Tx
[Hide Comment] Congrats guys. This is amazing. I'll definitely be training for it this winter. Sep 27, 2010
[Hide Comment] Phenomenal effort, Tristan. I agree with James in that you'll have a hard time topping this FA -- I'm not sure if you'd even want to! I did the first eight a couple years ago and thoroughly enjoyed them.

Is there a reason why you wouldn't recommend linking some of those middle/upper pitches? They seem pretty short. Rope drag, perhaps?

I can see this route first becoming quite a destination in itself (22 pitches!?), then a superb training route for budding alpine/big wall climbers. Looking forward to giving it a burn soon, though I'm not sure I have the endurance to top it out! Oct 1, 2010
[Hide Comment] Just did Squawstruck on 10/02 as a party of 3. Started climbing around 10:30 and topped out around 6:30. Here are a few thoughts. It's HOT. October 2nd...come on, felt like July 2nd in the sun all day. The rock is still pretty chossy on the upper pitches. We had a couple falls as a result of holds breaking. Leading to the next thought - helmets are a must.

At first, the meandering nature was a detractor, but given all the loose rock, I think it actually adds some safety to the route as a party above us was knocking down bowling balls all day but they would harmlessly fall hundreds of feet to the side...until we pulled within a pitch or two at the end and were in their direct line of fire.

The climbing is mostly 5.9ish with distinct cruxes that make the pitches in the mid 10-11 range. There are a couple exceptions that seemed pretty continuous for the entire pitch (mostly in the middle/upper pitches).

It's long. Maybe the climbing felt a lot harder near the top simply because of the fatigue factor.

The anchors and bolting were very well done, but some of the pitches seem too short (although I rarely felt the urge to run them together). We did the 22 stated pitches in 20. Tristan's route description is dead on.

The FAs did a ton of work to put together a great local adventure. If it gets enough traffic to clean it up, I think it will be a huge classic (not necessarily for the climbing or the line or the rock, but the adventure). It was great to hike out this evening and then look back up trace the line that I'd thought about for 10 years but never would have actually put together. Thanks again to Tristan and co. Oct 3, 2010
[Hide Comment] Colin Hale and myself where the second assent to the top. What a great climb! The last sections were pretty dirty and could use some more traffic. We started at 7pm and topped out at 5am. i would suggest doing it at night due to the heat factor. Plus the glow from the city make for some amazing night climbing. We only carried 3 liters of water per person and at night it was the perfect amount. i look forward to doing it again soon in a much shorter time slot.(maybe 5-6 hours) great job my friend on the bolting and lets all try to clean the top sections for the future climbers. Oct 4, 2010
[Hide Comment] I climbed Squawstruck with a friend on Saturday. An awesome experience.

Here are some observations:
  • The hike in took us about 35 minutes. We ended up walking straight up the scree. Not very smart, particularly given that we had both made the questionable decision to wear super-light "approach shoes". In retrospect (looking down from top of first pitch), I wish we had followed Crisco's advice to head straight for ridge to left and stay on ridge until level with start of climb.
  • We started about 7:30 am, and finished about 5:30 pm (10 hours). That was moving at a gentle pace and included a lunch break. On the other hand, all of the climbing was well within our capacity, and we didn't struggle anywhere. I would guess that 10 hours would be fairly typical.
  • This is really a 20 pitch climb. Tristan suggests linking pitches 3 & 4 and 7 & 8. Frankly, I can't see why anyone would *not* do so. But 20 pitches is still a LOT of climbing. Be prepared to be very tired at the end.
  • The route is graded at "11-". But there's just one single 5.11 move, right at the end of pitch 14. It's a reachy move, so will be harder for short people. But you could easily skip the move by pulling on the bolt. The rest of the climb is hard 5.10.
  • Both of us were whining about our feet aching long before we made it to the top. Wear your most comfortable shoes! There's virtually no edging on the climb, so tight shoes are unnecessary and very painful.
  • Tristan has gone to a lot of effort to make the climb as beginner-friendly as possible, and the bolting is is often very dense, particularly around the harder sections. We skipped a lot of clips.
  • Much of the rock is still very loose. As the route sees more traffic, it will certainly clean up and become more stable. But don't even think about climbing without a helmet.
  • Because of the loose rock, climbers need to be very aware of where rock will fall. Belayer will often need to move around to avoid being directly under leader. We frequently employed the "pebble test" to confirm that belayer would not get hit.
  • On the final set of pitches a very fast party of three came up behind us, putting themselves directly in the line of any rockfall. We did our very best to dislodge as little as possible, but holds break off and pretty much every ledge is still covered in rocks. Just the motion of the rope often showers the seconder in pebbles. We were very worried by the possibility of seriously injuring the climbers beneath us. Until the rock is more stable, I would STRONGLY advise against climbing underneath other parties. Since the route is conveniently split into tiers with grouped pitches, it is easy enough to wait until parties above have cleared the next section. I would have been far more relaxed if that group had opted to take a snack break before tackling pitches 17-22.
  • The anchors at the top of pitch 9 are unfortunately located precisely where rockfall from the climber on pitch 10 funnels down. And pitch 10 is still very dirty and friable. Recommendation: put long extenders on the anchors here, so that belayer can shelter under the small bulge about 6 foot to the right.
  • Put your approach shoes on for ALL of the upper transitions (between pitches 8 and 9, 11 and 12, 16 and 17). The surface is loose scree and brush, and very unpleasant in climbing shoes. You won't save any time by keeping your climbing shoes on, as you'll have to take them off again to empty out the grit.
  • The hike down took us about 70 minutes and is very mellow. The trail detours a bit further west than shown in Tristan's descent map, but it's obvious where to go.
  • Heat is likely to be a big issue. The route really bakes in the sun. We climbed on October 2nd, which was an unusually hot day for that time of year. I took 3 liters of water and my Camelbak ran dry about an hour an a half before the top. Take as much liquid as you can reasonably carry.
  • The anchors at the top of pitch 14 are easy to miss. My partner led straight past them, and only realized when he ran out of quickdraws and had to down-climb. The belay is on left, immediately after the "11-" move.
  • The limestone is often ferociously rough. A few moves up the first pitch, I was convinced that my fingertips would be worn raw long before 22 pitches were finished. Thankfully, the rock is not consistently that rough. By the end of the climb, however, both of our knees were amazingly scratched up: a slight brush with the rock can be enough to draw blood!

That's about all I can think of. A great (and long) day of climbing. Congratulations, Tristan, on your superhuman achievement! Hopefully this will inspire others to clean and bolt more lines in the area. I've contributed to your bolt fund, and encourage others to do the same.

-- Dom

Oh yes, one last thing: on the route I picked up several cigarette butts (Camels) and a blue lighter -- presumably all littered by same guy. Shame on you.
Cigarette butt (one of several) found on Squawstruck.
Oct 4, 2010
[Hide Comment] Let's get realistic with the quality of this route. It is fun because it is a long well bolted sport route- I cannot imagine the expense or effort required. I know that I am far too lazy to ever make such a contribution. That said, the rock is rather chossy and will likely remain that way. The ledginess also detracts some from the quality. While the route does have some nice exposure in parts, very few of the pitches are as good as mediocre single pitch routes. In comparison to routes like Infinite Bliss in Washington and most of the longer routes in Portrero, this route is not that sweet- the developers just did not have that much to work with. Oct 17, 2010
Doug Haller
Boulder, CO
 
[Hide Comment] Clearly, a lot of time and effort went into bolting this route. Leaders should not worry about lack of gear. The quantity of bolts reflects the lack of quality of the rock. On every pitch climbers should anticipate loose rock. To minimize risk, avoid climbing below other parties. Definitely wear a helmet. Expect rock fall. Expect to break holds while climbing. The 6 routes I have done in the Black Canyon had better quality rock. We combined pitches doing the 22 as 16 back cleaning draws. Oct 17, 2010
[Hide Comment] I wish I had read Dom's comments beforehand as hiking up the scree slope to the first pitch was definetly the least enjoyable part of the experience. Neither my partner or I had anything break on us although we were both selective about what we put our hand and feet on. A helmet is defenitely a must as there are loose rocks all over the place. I had a blast climbing this thing. Thank you Tristan for spending so much of your time and money to put up this route. Nov 8, 2010
[Hide Comment] Anyone know when it will be warm enough to climb this route again?

It appears that this fall was the first season it was completed so there may not be much knowledge of the weather in the winter and spring. My friend and I will be driving around the U.S. for January-July and sounds like this one is a good one to check out. So anyone have weather beta?

Also, is a 70m necessary if you're going to hike off the summit? (we have a 60m) Dec 9, 2010
Tristan Higbee
Pocatello, ID
  5.11-
[Hide Comment] Fall should be great on the approach and on the rock itself. There will probably still be snow on the hike down, though. If you're not rappelling, you could do the thing with a 50m rope. The pitches aren't super long.

I'm not sure when the earliest it will be climbable is... I can see the route from my house, though, so if you need a conditions report, shoot me an email. Dec 10, 2010
esallen
Utah / Nevada
[Hide Comment] Tristan/Crisco, I've been reading about this route and looking at all your pics and I am super psyched to do this in the near future (as soon as weather permits). Yesterday I saw the bit about Squawstruck in Climbing magazine. I am so excited to be back in Utah and to do this and your other new routes - I know you guys put up a bunch of other fun routes while I was gone. Happy holidays, and I hope to climb with you guys soon! I've been in the gym almost everyday since November trying to get back in shape so I can keep up with you fools :)

E Dec 20, 2010
[Hide Comment] I think everyone who's climbed in rock canyon has at some point looked up and wondered if anyone will/has ever climbed up the face to the peak. I'll look forward to hitting this in season. Let's hope the dirty nature of the route doesn't hurt anyone. Don't follow too close behind another group, wear a helmet, and keep an eye out. Jan 31, 2011
user id
SMOGden, UT
[Hide Comment] I know I've looked up and said, "i wonder if anyone would be dumb enough to climb up the face of that peak?"

Thats a fine service you guys have done down there. Jan 31, 2011
Jordan Tait
La Crosse, WI
[Hide Comment] Climbed this route on Saturday. Unfortunately we were not able to top out as a thunderstorm rolled in and we were forced to retreat as lightning grew closer and closer. Thank goodness for the cave as it gave us a place to escape the rain/lightning. We loved pitches 1-8, we found that they were mostly 5.8-5.9 climbs with one 10ish move. Pitches 9-11 were still very dirty and we blew holds left and right here. You must have a helmet! Even with helmets you need to pay attention as we were blowing pieces that no helmet will protect against. If you cannot top out as we couldn't I would highly recommend rapping off. We hiked for quite awhile trying to find a decent way down without any luck. May 16, 2011
BJB
Salt Lake City, UT
  5.11b/c
[Hide Comment] My Buddy and I did the whole thing Friday the 13th, 5.13.2011. It was a blast. We are probably some of the weakest climbers to ever complete the whole thing, so keep that in mind when you are considering my input. Your ability will definitley make what I have to say more or less relevant.
We did the whole climb in 16 hours, and that is with taking a half hour break at the half way, and an hourish break at the 3/4 way.
We did the first 11 pitches in 4 hours, the last 11 pitches in 11 hours. We got stuck at pitch 15 for probably 2 hours though because I was so burnt and another hour and a half on pitch 22 for the same reason. The first 11 pitches are now relatively clean (no holds broke) while the 2nd 11 pitches are still somewhat dirty (we fell on 3 broken holds).
Pitch 15 was the hardest for me and my buddy, maybe because it was different than anything we have ever done, but we were stuck on it for a LONG time before finally doing it. While we went through, a huge piece of the roof came off probably making it harder for the next guys. I think a hold or two must have come off on this pitch because it was much harder for me than any of the other 5.10b's on the route.
I was really surprised by the difficulty of the final pitch as well. The topo says that it is a 5.10 with no letter grade listed. I had thus assumed that it would be a 5.10a, but it was a wicked roof on small holds when I was as tired as i've ever been.
Finally, when we were coming down, there was about 2 feet of snow that i had not been able to see from the bottom of the canyon. We had to hike about 1/2 a mile in the snow where we couldn't find a trial. Eventually we found foot prints and just followed those down until we came to a more clearly marked trail.
One of the funnest climbing days i'll ever have. Thanks for all the hard work Tristan. May 28, 2011
James Garrett
Salt Lake City, UT
 
[Hide Comment] Lots of climbing and certainly adventure to be had. Perhaps a little bit of sandbagging going on between Pitches 17 and 23, but maybe we were just whupped...not a lot of gimme pitches up there.

A 70m rope and 15 QDs with 10 free biners and slings allowed some linking not previously mentioned. Many loose bolt heads, especially the upper pitches. Recommend taking along a wrench to remedy said situation. What a view! Jul 23, 2011
Chelsea Wood
Reno, NV
[Hide Comment] My friend and I want to do a female ascent of this. Does anyone know if a female ascent has been accomplished yet? Sep 22, 2011
M L
Sonora, CA
[Hide Comment] My camera unclipped from my harness on top of the 5.9+ pitch this saturday. I'd love it back if you find it!

Also, I was wondering about the flip-flobability on this route. so if you were too, flip flops work just fine for the approach and descent.

That first female ascent question is too funny. soooo many thing wrong with that, i don't even know where to begin with the mockery.

fun route, thanks for the hard work and expenses. Sep 25, 2011
Brian in SLC
Sandy, UT
[Hide Comment] My friend and I want to do a female ascent of this. Does anyone know if a female ascent has been accomplished yet?

Well, since its Utah County, probably not (ha ha).

The potential for sponsers if you pull this off makes my head spin... Sep 26, 2011
M L
Sonora, CA
[Hide Comment] Penises are aid

I'll toss in a $75 reward for the camera, even if it's busted. Sep 26, 2011
steve edwards
SLC, UT
 
[Hide Comment] Did it yesterday, 10/16. Nice route. Amazing bit of work by the FA team to get this up. That said, not one of the pitches would ever be repeated if it were in the Verdon Gorge. But for a big wall in the chossy canyon it's pretty cool. Great views, decent climbing, civilized belays for the most part, and easy descent make it worth doing.

Descriptions here are very accurate. Someone would have to pay me to do the approach in flips but it's certainly possible. I've done a lot of speed climbing. This route isn't a good candidate for that approach. Didn't see a camera but found a fossil. I think it highly unlikely Honnold will solo it. That would be a game of Russian roulette. Maybe the FFA would bear merit if the girls became "team choss" and got known for comparing the world's loosest rock climbs. Could see the mags all over that one.

James, I don't think it's sandbagging as much as holds breaking. Did it with someone who'd done an early ascent and he said many pitches have changed a fair amount, almost always making them harder. Upper part has some moves for sure. I can see how it could be vexing for anyone pushing their limits. Neither of us thought the original crux was the hardest pitch now. Currently that honor seems held by the slab two pitches after it but will probably stay up for debate as the route morphs.

Big thanks again to the authors. Excellent public service provided. Oct 17, 2011
Dennis
Albany, NY
 
[Hide Comment] Climbed Squawstruck last week. Many thanks to Tristan and Co. for putting it up. Overall I am glad I climbed it as it was a thoroughly unique adventure-sport climbing experience.

Bring a helmet. Most of the rockfall we saw was of the starburst sized variety that casually bounced of our helmets. However the character changes in the upper pitches (19-22). Here seemingly solid looking handholds broke off unleashing VHS cassette and car battery sized chunks of stone. I was appreciating the closely spaced bolts in these sections!
Top of pitch 8 with lots of loose stuff ready to go.


Amazing views and exposure, many sections of solid fun climbing, easy access and descent. Apr 26, 2012
Broseph L
Salt Lake City, UT
[Hide Comment] Question, I haven't climbed the route, but would it be possible to DRIVE off? I know the Squaw Peak road goes up that way, but I've only of it as a place for BYU students to go and get lucky... May 8, 2012
Tristan Higbee
Pocatello, ID
  5.11-
[Hide Comment] Nope. The Squaw Peak Road does not come anywhere near the summit of Squaw Peak. May 11, 2012
Nich Cloward
American Fork
  5.11-
[Hide Comment] Started working on this project this week. I am very excited to see what the other pitches are like. We hiked up the huge scree to the west of the Appendage thinking it would get us to the ridge. It didn't. We ended up skipping the first two pitches to our disappointment. Time only gave us pitches 3-6 but they were very fun. I really liked the frosted flake section on pitch 5 (I think). These pitches were mostly clean. We did knock some small stuff down, but a helmet is a must. Very well protected. May 19, 2012
Nich Cloward
American Fork
  5.11-
[Hide Comment] Did the whole first half today, 1-11. Enjoyed the first 8. Pitch 9 wasn't bad and 10 was fun with a couple small chimney-esk parts. The first is really dirty, lots of loose stuff. Pitch 11 seems like it was just thrown in to get up to the next approach up to pitch 12. I didn't care for it, but at least it was easy and the scenery was great. We did go to the cave at the start of 12, but made the mistake of going too far west. Water is a must. We both had a 2qt camelbak and ran out after pitch 11. Good thing that was the plan, so we came down, but nect time we will have to double what we took. And the heat really takes it out of you. Will have to wait for a nice, cooler, overcast day to finish all 22. May 21, 2012
Nich Cloward
American Fork
  5.11-
[Hide Comment] Pulled off the summit on June 11 with Mike Vaughn. Great climb! The "third quarter" (Pitches 12-16) were definitely the hardest overall, although pitch 14 wasn't a sustained 5.11-, just like Tristan says. It's really just pulling that corner. Pitch 15 was thin and crimpy too. I appreciated the last pitch, even though I was tired and it was dark when we hit it. Great little roofs. It was almost disappointing to not have a super easy finish, but only because we were tired. Thanks for not letting up on us Tristan. Cool visitors log at the bottom of the last pitch. We had perfect weather when we went; 70s and even had some clouds when we hit the 3rd quarter. It got pretty dirty in the 3rd and 4th qaurters, although it seems to be cleaning up nicely. Take plenty of water, find a nice cool day, and enjoy. This was one of those "far-fetched" dreams in my mind and I never thought I would actually accomplish this goal. Thanks to Mike for pushing me. Thanks again Tristan for your investment. Jun 18, 2012
Nich Cloward
American Fork
  5.11-
[Hide Comment] Don't miss this sweet diving board at the top of pitch 8. Top the chains and head west about 100'.
Don't miss this sweet diving board at the top of pitch 8.  Once you top the chains, head west about 100'
Jun 18, 2012
Michael V.
Provo, Utah.
[Hide Comment] In April of 2010 Taylor Maughan and I climbed the first 8 pitches. Even though the rest of the route wasn’t set yet, I fell in love with the route. It wasn’t until June 11th of this year that I climbed the route again, this time with Nick Cloward. This climb has amazing variety, great exposure, and gives dynamic to the climbing challenge.

Nick Cloward and I picked the perfect day. As far as weather goes, this is my opinion:
- 70-80 degrees is just fine (We climbed it with a high of 76)
- 80-85 is pushing the limit (We trained in this weather. We were downing water like crazy)
- Anything 85+ you will find miserable.
There’s pretty much a constant breeze moving around up there, which is nice. But the hotter it is, the more water you bring, and the more the sun zaps your energy.

This was our time schedule. We kept it pretty chill on the speed – enjoying the scenery a bit too much and whatnot:
7:15 leave parking lot
8:15 start 1st pitch
1:15 reach cave
- Lunch -
2:15 start 12th pitch
11:15 end 22nd pitch
11:45 start trail descent
1:15 get back to cars
TOTAL = 18 hours
We climbed 3 pitches in the dark. We summitted 2 hours behind ‘schedule’ – the sheer volume of pitches takes a good bit out of ya. The last quarter just seems harder because you’re tired.

Also:
- DON’T climb this without a helmet. I got beaned in the helmet twice with rocks. And that number easily could have been more.
- The “red” rope described in previous posts is now grey. Fully functional, just grey.
- In reading this form there is a high probability that climbing is a large part of your life. If you call yourself a climber, live within the Valley, and do not give this route a full-hearted attempt – you are doing yourself a disservice. The location of this superb route is second to none!

Tristan – Thank you for all your hard work and time spent in creating this route. It truly is an amazing gift to the climbing community. Rock Canyon has been a ‘stomping grounds’ to me for the past 3 years. I’ve climbed all over that place and I can truly say this is an impressive and unrivaled capstone to all the routes in Rock Canyon. Thank you. Jul 4, 2012
Shiho
 
[Hide Comment] wayyyy too many bolts and they are not even well bolted. If you want adventure on chossy limestone, you are better off climbing notch peak. Oct 3, 2012
Brennan Crellin
Sandy, UT
  5.11a
[Hide Comment] Tristan, thank you for your hard work on this classic climb! We looked forward to it for two years, finally set aside a day to send it, then loved it. The rock quality is sub-prime in a few spots, but that was out of your control and you set a great line, with fun climbing. Well done!

Climbed with my wife, Alexis, October 19,2012...43-67 F, no precipitation

Timing: Left car at 6:45am, started Pitch1 at 8:00am, finished Pitch 11 at 12:00 pm, reached summit at 6:30 pm, 10.5 hours of climbing
Gear beta: 20 draws, 4-24" slings, 2-48" slings, small backpack each, 3L water each, light food, headlamps, helmets, daisy chains, approach/traversing shoes

Climb Beta:
- Bolting is great on almost every pitch. Skipped some when linking pitches, but Tristan did an awesome job bolting this safely for its grade.
- Linked pitches 3 & 4, 5 & 6, 7 & 8, 14 & 15

Pitch Ratings
- Pitch 1: not 5.10b but probably 5.9+
- Pitch 11: NOT 5.8 but probably 5.7 awkward...worst pitch!
- Pitch 16: NOT 5.10d. This pitch is easily 5.11a/b. Also, bolts on the sharp thin slab of this pitch should have been closer.
- Pitch 17: not 5.9 but probably 5.8. We added a section of red rope to the first bolt for improved visibility.
- Pitch 19: NOT 5.10c, but more like 5.10d-5.11a
- Roofs of Pitch 22: 5.10???.....probably 5.10c-5.11a range. Oct 21, 2012
[Hide Comment] Is this route usually dry and the descent without snow between last week of april and 1rst week may ? Feb 26, 2013
Mr. Hummus
SLC, Utah
 
[Hide Comment] We climbed this yesterday and had a blast. Car to car in 10 hours. 8 hours of mostly casual climbing and breaks for food. It was a super fun day! Where else can you climb a 22 pitch route without placing a nut or cam? I couldn't believe how many bolts were placed. Very well bolted, perhaps a bit excessive, but nothing to complain about. If you don't want to clip 'em, then don't. We skipped lots of bolts, but felt safe. It was nice to have lots of bolts up top when I started to get tired.
We linked several pitches using a sixty meter rope and 12 draws (2 of them alpine draws). If I remember correctly we linked 3 & 4, 5&6, 7&8, 10&11, 14&15, 20&21. We skipped bolts to do this. If you aren't comfortable with that then bring more draws.
I got to lead the crux 5.11 pitch and the exposure was incredible. It wasn't too bad for me. I thought pitch 16 was equally hard if not harder. Definitely harder to read.
We lucked out and had great weather. 60 degree day at the end of april! Perfect.
Great work Tristan. Thanks for putting up a fun route. May 1, 2013
Ethan Lennox
South Lake Tahoe, CA
[Hide Comment] I was looking at the beta for this route and I have a few questions. First I see on the main picture associated with this climb that there's a walk off to climbers left after pitch #11. I also noticed the question mark after it. Is this actually a walk off possibility? Or just one that might be feasible in case of an emergency bail? My second question is, can you rap the route with a single 60m rope? To be honest I'm not feeling strong enough to climb the entire route since I'm coming back from a shoulder injury, but I want to climb as many 9-10 pitches as possible in one outing. Since we'll be passing through, I thought it would be a great way to link up as many pitches as possible. May 5, 2013
[Hide Comment] I would be interested in hearing what others have brought on this route to eat? Anyone care to share? Thanks in advance... May 21, 2013
Mark Parrett
Salt Lake City, Utah
[Hide Comment] Climbed this last Friday with Tim Golden. I would say that I overall agree with the grades, with a couple of exceptions. P16 is really hard - I felt that it was 11b/c, but maybe I just don't know how to climb limestone slab stuff. Much harder than the crux for us.

I also thought P15 was significantly harder than the crux, so I would call it 5.11-. The crux felt like it was in the 10's to me, but these are little nits. The final pitch felt easier to me than the 5.9+ P21... which was still very loose and we pulled off a couple of car-battery sized rocks.

Overall, the first 11 pitches are cake and I thought that the final wall (P18-22) contained the best climbing. I was whooped by the time I got to 18-22 so thanks to Tim for being a bro and taking the lead more than his share. Weather was perfect - we were only roasting in the sun for the crux segment and were in the shade before and after that. Took us 12 hours of climbing. I highly recommend doing this in the spring as you'll have way more daylight to work with (only important if you're on the slower side like we were) - we did the first half last fall and it meant a dark approach and a shorter day (we would have been in the dark had we tried this in October. The weather was perfect for us overall with a high of 77 and a nice breeze all day.

I was a bit sad to see that the logbook at the top has been taken over by hikers - maybe someone can move it down a pitch next time they are up there so we can see who has climbed this route? Many thanks to Tristan for putting this project up. May 28, 2013
Tristan Higbee
Pocatello, ID
  5.11-
[Hide Comment] When we did the FA, I think that pitch 16 is the only one that took me multiple tries. I had to pull the rope and re-lead it like 4 times before I got it clean. I thought I was just really tired and dehydrated and that's why it felt so hard, but it's interesting to hear others confirm that they felt it was hard, harder even than what I thought was the crux. It might very well be the crux of the whole route. It's thin, that's for sure.

The summit register was originally in a Nalgene bottle at the belay below the last pitch, so it wouldn't be accessible to hikers. Interesting that it's been moved to the top.

As far as the possible walk off after pitch 11 goes, I've never done it, so I don't know if you can actually walk off that way. There might be cliffs blocking the way at some point. If you want to descend after pitch 11, walk down around pitches 9-11 (as shown by another orange line in the pic), rappel the Buckley's Mine wall, and then walk off past the Blue Wall. It's not as complicated as it sounds. The Buckley's Mine anchors are obvious if you just go as far east as possible, as is the Blue Wall walk-off (there are cliffs above and below you, so you only really have one way to walk down).

You CANNOT rappel the route with a single 60m rope. You need a 70 or two 60s.

As for food, I think I just filled my pockets with Clif Bars, Gu, and maybe some trail mix. Jun 6, 2013
jzp
Pleasant Grove
[Hide Comment] On 6/15 we did the first 11 pitches it took 7 hours.
started first pitch at 6:30 (45 min lot to p1)
p6 has 13 bolts not 10
linked p7 & p8
I do not like p 11
hiked off to the west, i think i lead us astray somewhere and ended up in the scrub oak... 2 hours hike down
i drank 6 liters of water (2 3 liter camelbaks)
nice weather all day, could have started the hike 1.5 hours earlier because it was light enough to climb at 5:45. started to get warm around noon and hot by 2 Jun 22, 2013
Chris Doobtrain
Sandy, Utah
[Hide Comment] If you think you've got a lot of stamina, put it to the test! I sure thought I did, and I screamed my way through the last few pitches. Managed my FA in May and ate a heinous amount of Clif bars along the way. Bring more water than you think you will need (you can always pour it out to lose weight) and WEAR A HELMET! I was hit several times in the helmet with small rocks and avoided many. Its way CHOSSY but that's to be expected on this large of a limestone climb. Also, take the hike down. Its much more mellow and faster than the rap.
Epic view after the top out.
Aug 9, 2013
CalmAdrenaline
SL,UT
  5.10d
[Hide Comment] Did this yesterday in 10 hours, super cool route, the traverses got kind of old but what gives? Honestly thought the rock was pretty damn good most of the time with only a few small sections of chossy garbage.

There are a few spots where bolt placement left me scratching my head, a few bolts that invariably position the biners in a crossloading situation, and a grip too many slammed into the summit blocks, which may or may not have been the FA party.

Next time definitely not in August in a black shirt and helmet. If you decide to, and even if its in shoulder seasons, I would highly reccomend a camel back or more than 2 nalgenes. Dehydration is a bitch. Aug 19, 2013
Jonathon Spitzer
North Bend, WA
 
[Hide Comment] First-off, Thank you Tristan and FA team for all your hard work making this route take place. Pretty cool line up Squaw Peak. It's amazing to climb 22 pitches with only a 45min approach and a really nice mellow hike down. Tristan's Topo was very accurate and perfectly described.

We climbed this on Sept 20th. It was forecasted to be 80F in Provo with some clouds. However it was still very hot on the route and no clouds came in. I wouldn't recommend climbing this unless it is in the 60-70's in Provo.

We linked several pitches as mentioned above in comments doing a total of 17 pitches. If you want to link pitches bring 12-14 quickdraws and 6-8 alpine draws.

Pitch 16 referred to in Tristan's topo was defiantly the crux. Possibly some hand holds have broken off over the years?

I didn't find the rock to be loose at all on route. Way less loose then the Central Spur on NW Face of Dromedary or any route in the Dolomites.

We started at 8:30am and back at the car at 4:30pm. Great training day in the Wasatch and highly recommend this route! Sep 23, 2013
[Hide Comment] So we climbed the first 8 pitches today and it was only low 70s with some clouds every now and then and still very hot. It sucks the energy right outta ya. Great climbing though. Not too hard at all. The route is generously rated on the hard side in my opinion. It's definitely over bolted but they are their for you if you need them. Thanks for all the efforts. We link pitches 3/4, 5/6, and 7/8 with a 70m and much left over to spare. Route was very clean didn't pull off any rocks or anything that I can remember. The hardest part is getting up to the dang thing. We turned left at the large boulder and went up the shoot which is still ahrd but much easier then going by the Bulge route area way. Also, I would highly not recommend the walk off after pitch 12 or so. Only do this if you have no other choice because it is very long, very steep, very loose, and no trail basically. Great day on the rock with some awesome views and great exposure. Definitely a must do. May 3, 2014
Joe Forrester
Palo Alto
 
[Hide Comment] Went ctc in 14.5 hours on this on 5/18. Temps were 80s in Provo, and it was pretty pleasant on the climb, but we started early. Had 3.5L per person.

We climbed it in 16 pitches with a 70m. Linked 1+2, 3+4+5, 7+8, 10+11, and 14+15. I brought 24 draws/slings and I didn't have to skip many bolts while linking.

The upper pitches are more sustained and don't lend themselves quite as well to linking although I would bet 19+20 could be linked without too much work.

The rock isn't that loose on the actual climbing, plus there are ton of bolts. Quite an effort to bolt that thing!

Also, on the last pitch. There is a bolt under the last roof that is loosening up a bit. Might be worthwile to rap in from the top and replace that one....

As of 5/18, the summit register was no where to be found.....

While the climbing itself isn't spectacular, a route this long so close to suburbia is pretty wild. A logistical achievement for sure.

J May 19, 2014
[Hide Comment] Climbed it in 14 pitches with 20 draws (35 minutes approach via Appendage gully, 7 hours on the climb, 2 hours to get down via the trail). Here is the link up:

1,
2,
3+4,
5+6,
7+8,
9+10,
11 (weird),
12,
13+14,
15+16 (last 2-3 bolts sparse on hands/feet, stay left),
17,
18+19 (tricky start for me),
20+21,
22

All the pitches are well protected, so it was not unusual to comfortably skip bolts or back clean. Pitches 12 through 22 are very enjoyable, and the longer linked up climbs are very isolating and peaceful.

I would rate many pitches down at least one full grade putting the climb at 5.10 b/c. Thank you Tristan for this Rock Canyon legacy. Jun 2, 2014
Landon McBrayer
Salt Lake City, UT
 
[Hide Comment] We climbed this route Friday the 13th (spooky!) in June, at night under a full moon with cool temps (50s-60s). Perfect conditions. A few comments that might supplement what others have said:

(i) Climbing at night was glorious. This wall bakes in the sun ALL day, and the sun will drain your energy even if it's chilly. We got on the route at 1.30 AM and topped out at 9.30 AM; the sun didn't touch us until pitch 18. You'll also be able to carry less water and still stay fully hydrated if you climb at night.

(ii) We linked pitches in the same way that Eric Mercer did (see above comment). This drops the pitch count to 14, and nicely breaks up the difficulties between you and your partner if you're swinging leads the whole way. Doing so much linking was surprisingly easy; there was a little rope drag here and there, but nothing worth avoiding. I would, however make one change to the links: don't link 18+19 (18 traverses hard left, and 19 is vertical to rightward trending, so the drag was a bit much). Instead, I'd do this next time: 17, 18, 19+20, 21+22. The pitch count would still be 14 and the drag eliminated. All the other linked pitches were smooth and natural.

(iii) Pitch 14 has a tricky spot, but it's truly a one-move wonder. Pitch 16 is the crux for sure.

(iv) I wore a pair of comfy Mythos (with socks!), and I didn't need to remove them once. So, wear comfy shoes and leave the approach shoes in the bottom of your bag. The ledges and traverses aren't nearly as big/long as I was expecting them to be.

(v) We found the listed grades to be a little wonky (e.g., expect to find one 10c to be significantly easier or hard than the last/next). Also, there isn't a single slab move on this climb, so ignore the description of a few pitches as being slabs. They're not.

(vi) There are bits of good stone here and there, but the rock quality is generally poor throughout. Given the nature of the rock, this isn't the kind of thing that will be eliminated with more traffic. There is just loose choss everywhere, and pulling holds will just expose another layer of choss. That being said, I think this climb is definitely worth doing simply because of the position, length, and general environs. After a few pitches the poor rock quality becomes an afterthought.

Overall, a nice, worthy outing. Jun 14, 2014
[Hide Comment] Props on the night ascent, that sounds cool.

My opinion on this climb, its over rated. It rains rock fall and is over bolted. The folks who put this up did a great job and worked hard, but I have never had to be so mindful of z-clipping. They could have done this safely with way fewer bolts. This is definitely an adventure, but its less than amazing in terms of rock quality and aesthetics of the line. Sep 12, 2014
[Hide Comment] With some effort toward speed we just did car to car in 8:08 (about 5.5 hours on route). 11 pitches (two sets of triple links, and we should have done a third), a tiny bit of jogging the descent, futsing with my five-finger socks... I'd like to see some folks go for the speed record; let's start a friendly competition. This was our second time on the route; my first weighed in at 15 hours. Our breezeless day of 55 degrees was superb. Oct 29, 2014
Ryan Arnold
SLC
  5.11b
[Hide Comment] Long and fun day. 11 hours car-to-car. Nice route onsight by Derrick!

Pitch 14: "one move wonder" 11a maybe, but it's a BURLY and reachy move. The rest of the pitch is like 5.7 so you pack it all into that corner move.

Pitch 15: Hard 5.10 climbing with the bolt hanger missing at the crux.

Pitch 16: I wouldn't link this with 15 again. Ledgefall potential, especially if dealing with ropedrag. Probably sandbagged.

Pitch 19: A crux pitch for me. Hard 10+ traverse moves.

Pitch 22: Awesome icing on the cake! Exposed roof pulling that felt 10b if you commit.

A late winter ascent was perfect, 40-60 degrees the whole time. Around 2L each of water. No way would I try this in 70+ degrees.

Great effort by the FA team!

Edit: went back for the redpoint 10/2018. Again had 50-60 degree temps, can't imagine climbing it in hotter weather. Linked 1-2, 3-4, 5-6, 7-8, 9-10, 12-13, 14-15, 17-18, 19-20, 21-22 with a 60m rope and about 25 quickdraws. Rope stretcher on about 4 of those combos but drag wasn't a big deal except on pitch two. Feb 9, 2015
[Hide Comment] If repelling do not combine pitches, especially if solo! I camped on top and had planned to repel down in the morning to check out the condition of the route before climbing it sometime in the upcoming couple weeks. Skipping a pitch left me in a very dangerous situation that I was very lucky to get out of. I ended up having to leave my rope hanging from the 15th pitch. I will retrieve it as soon as the snow stops, it is a green 70m rope.

While repelling I also noticed that I believe pitch 15? There is one hanger missing. The bolt is still there and in solid shape but the hanger and nut is missing. I will try to replace next time I am up there. Besides that all the bolts and anchors look great on the part I saw (second half of the climb) Feb 26, 2015
Nate Muncy
Thornton, CO
  5.11
[Hide Comment] Pitch 15 is still missing a hangar, right after the roof.

Pitch 16 was the crux for me, and I thought the big roof on pitch 22 was the red-point crux, I was a little tired for those moves.

Very comfortable bolting, I skipped many.

Did roughly 10 pitches in my approach shoes, there is plenty of friction.


Long day, good rock, fun with friends. May 31, 2015
Jeff Jones
Elk Ridge, UT
[Hide Comment] So my daughter and I decided to do the first 8 pitches of this route having heard good things. We were in the parking lot at 5:45 in the hopes of getting up there and most of the climbing done before it got hot. She leaves for school this week and there was no other time to do it.

Got to the base of the route and started climbing. After clipping the 8th bolt, I went to make my move to get up to the next ledge. I stepped on a seemingly good rock which immediately broke away. I am guessing a microwave sized rock or slightly smaller. I panic'd as I saw the rock heading straight for my daughters head. I consider this a miracle it did not hit her in the head. It stranded me on the climb as it also cut my rope on the way down.

In short, this chossy section is still loose. I would appreciate it if anyone climbs this route and finds my eight quick draws on it. I can be reached at 801.504.6235. Be super careful when climbing this route. Maybe I just drew the short straw but it is going to be a while before I can even think of attempting this again. Aug 15, 2015
[Hide Comment] Climbed Squawstruck on September 5, 2015…67-74 F, no precipitation, half cloud cover, 40mph winds gusting to 50mph

Timing: Left car at 6:00am, started Pitch1 at 6:30am, finished Pitch 11 at 10:30 pm, reached summit at 6:30 pm, 12 hours of climbing

We linked pitches 3 & 4, 5 & 6, but not 7 & 8 due to rope drag, and not 14 & 15 due to difficult, scary climbing.

Pitch Ratings
- Pitch 1-11: ratings made sense. Recommend just skipping 9-11 and walking around.
-Pitch 14: scary exposed, desperate move makes its 5.11a. Leader had to take off backpack to wedge in. Looked like it could be climbed around to the right to stay on arete and skip belay ledge, but that looked too hard for us.
Pitch 15: Missing bolt at roof is still missing and is a serious danger. Forces 30’ of runout climbing on 5.11 moves with slippery feet as you come out from under roof. I am willing to head up there with anyone who has the ability to fix that bolt, it should be fixed before someone gets hurt though!
Pitch 16: Agree with Brennan "NOT 5.10d. This pitch is easily 5.11a/b. Also, bolts on the sharp thin slab of this pitch should have been closer.” I would have rated it mid-to hard 5.11. Maybe holds have broken off, maybe I was tired?
-Pitch 18: most quality route on the climb.
- Pitch 19: Agree with Brennan, its 5.11a for sure.
- Roofs of Pitch 22: Why the hell does the route randomly veer off to the right to try and hit some random ugly roofs? Pitch should just go straight up to avoid long runout, awkward falls, and ugly climbing. At least that should be an option.

Are you strong enough?
I can usually on-sight 5.10’s in Rock Canyon, but begin to struggle in the hard 5.10 range. I can rarely redpoint mid-5.11. My buddy (who climbs about the same grade) and I got on the climb just to see what it was like for a future attempt at finishing it. We believed we would bail at pitch 8 or 11. The first 11 pitches went by so fast and felt comfortable enough for us, that we decided to keep going an made it to the top.

If you are like me and cannot insight 5.11, then this may be an epic battle for you!! It was for me. The second half of the climb got a whole lot harder than the first half. Never really felt exposure until pitches 14 and 15, and didn’t really feel it after that due to the ledginess of the climb. The high winds made it very scary there though… I kept getting blown off my stances! It would be extremely difficult to bail by rappelling down the route after pitch 12. From anchors on 13, it would be difficult to get back to anchors on 12, and it gets increasingly difficult as you continue up. Commit or not by the mine (halfway point)!!

If you have the endurance of an old fat man like me, expect to feel like you are going to fall on 5.8 by the top. At some point your mind just has to be stronger than your body and you must keep pushing on. If you have strength and endurance, then it might not be such an epic climb for you.

Gratitude

Thank you to Tristan for this beautiful climb!! Well done. Any chance you’d be willing to bolt a direct variation to the last pitch so climbers can go straight up? Sep 8, 2015
jackson marvell
lindon utah
[Hide Comment] Paul Robertson and I simuled it today. 25 minutes for the approach 2:38 minutes for the climbing 40 minutes to run back to the car. Car to car we clocked in at 3 hours and 43 minutes. We took 45 quick draws and a liter of water each. Feb 25, 2016
[Hide Comment] Is the pitch 15 hanger still missing?

Edit- hanger still missing on pitch 15. Take a tool to tighten nuts as well as a bolt and hanger for this particular bolt. I would say all the pitches rated 10c/d through the "11" pitch are all roughly the same. The meat of the climb is 14-top. We had a nice cloudy day, didn't rush and sent it car to car in 9 hours. I haven't seen this mentioned so I will say it... Make sure and protect your second on the pitches that meander. You can back clean draws easily but doing so can set your second up for some really crappy swings.

All in all a great route. If you don't want to bring a hanger for pitch 15 just know that's a no fall zone. Apr 28, 2016
Cameron Lucker
Holladay
  5.11-
[Hide Comment] Finally got on this thing yesterday. What a sick climb!! This is about as much adventure you could ever have while still sport climbing.

To comment on the missing bolt hanger on pitch 15, I found some of the comments on here to be a bit misleading. Granted, I did not lead this particular pitch. However, my partner and I both agreed that the missing bolt hanger does not pose much of a threat. My partner was still clipping the next bolt with his feet just past the previous bolt, despite the missing bolt hanger. Once you pull around the roof and are on secure holds again, the next bolt is within reach. Sure, the fall could be a little awkward, but it would likely lead to a 10-15 foot fall on average. You are 4-5 bolts up on the most exposed pitch of the entire climb, so there is zero deck potential. Perhaps how well bolted every other crux is on the rest of the climb makes this section a bit more spooky. Have an attentive belayer, rest up if needed before going for it, but don't be too intimidated by it. It's nothing to worry about if you've made it to this point. May 30, 2016
Bart Kensinger
Salt Lake City, Utah
  5.11-
[Hide Comment] Thanks to the equipper. What a hero. I'd like to know the dollar amount; my partner and I estimated about 2 grand. The bolts are all brand new, safe, and mostly very close together.

The climbing is generally ledgy and slabby, and punctuated by roofs. Wear helmets. Some football sized rock fall blew by us on some of the earlier pitches.

My beta is that the first half of the routes the ratings seem a little soft grade-wise, but they stiffen up for the second half. I also agree with previous comments about the ratings on the second half. Pitch 16 definitely seemed to be 5.11 thin and a very desperate. The crux pitch seemed a little easier. Pitch 18 and 19 were probably the next two hardest (maybe we were wiped out).

There is still a hanger missing on the pitch right after the crux pitch. Who would do that? I'll give you a hanger if you are going to climb it (just message me). It's hard to see where the route goes from there because you can't see the bolts above from the missing hanger. However if you know this, just go for it and pull the mantle. The next bolt is not far up on the left, you just can't see it from below.

All in all this is a great route. I'm so tired.

Thanks Tristan,
Bart Jun 1, 2016
grog m
Saltlakecity
  5.11-
[Hide Comment] 40 draws (14 alpine draws were amazing to have)
70 meter rope
3 liters of water, 1 liter of gatorade, three protein bars(fine)
Did it July 3rd - it was sunny and hot but we arent idiots so we wore lots of suncreen and drank a lot the day before - didnt even get sunburned.
Triple linked some pitches, double linked most others
Choss factor 5/10 - not as bad as expected
Hardest moves were on 16 - very thin slab
Overall - bottom half of the route has 5.10 moves but not sustained. Top half of the route is very sustained pitches of 5.10 and the fatigue made it tough. It was a GREAT ADVENTURE - maximum fun.

Found the old summit flag around the top of 16 - before the final block of pitches. It was laying on the scree/hill still attached to the iron rod from the summit. We used our nut tools to take the flag off of the pole because we couldn't leave Old Glory laying in the dirt!!! The pole is still on the hillside. I will post a pic if I remember. Jul 3, 2016
[Hide Comment] Great tour, really exhausting! For us, the crux Pitch wasn't the 5.11a but a slab after that. Maybe just hard to onsight. Furthermore, we couldn't follow the description of the approach at the beginning of the loose Rock section. Do you really have to scramble up the ugly debris field to get to the climb? Aug 16, 2016
Tanner Pursley
Thatcher Arizona
[Hide Comment] Got up to the missing hanger and just couldn't get around the roof without the hang soooooo fail! We sure were sad to turn around and that walk off was a struggle! But 15 pitches was a ton of fun! Can't wait to finish this project when someone smarter and more prepped puts a replacement hanger on there! Big thanks to Tristan for bolting this MONSTER of a route! Sep 3, 2016
Logan Bradford
Lindon, UT
  5.11-
[Hide Comment] The hanger on pitch 15 is now fixed. Owen Witesman and I had brought one up with us, but the party right behind us was moving faster than we were, so we gave it to them to put up. It was plated steel, and I completely forgot to look at the bolt to see if it was plated or stainless steel. Someone more knowledgeable than I am should take a look at it and make sure we didn't mix metals. It's the bolt of pitch 15 right before you go around the corner, out of the chimney-like feature, and back out onto the face.

Both of us are solid 5.10/11a climbers and those last few pitches (18-22) were an absolute trial for us. After pitches 14-16, we were pretty spent. Don't climb this if the high is above 80* in the valley. The high was 76* the day we did it and I would NOT have wanted it one degree warmer than it was.

Highlight pitches: 4,6,13,14,15,18,19,21,22
We skipped pitches 9-11 and just walked around. Seemed worth it, given their descriptions.

I completely disagree with the few people above who ragged on the route: it may not have perfect rock the entire way up, but there are some pitches that are absolute classics (those being among the ones I mentioned above). The fact that this route is even bolted/possible is HUGE, and we owe INCREDIBLE gratitude to Tristan and the others who helped him with this route. If you're a Utah climber, and especially if you're a Utah Valley climber, this is absolutely a must-do. Sep 18, 2016
[Hide Comment] hanger on pitch 15 replaced Sep 26, 2016
Eric Rydzo
Salt Lake City
  5.11-
[Hide Comment] Great route. Climbed last Sunday in perfect 70 degree weather. Feels like a classic due to how much work and hardware went into the FA. Kudos Tristan!

This climb is so well bolted there is little risk as long as you have an attentive belayer. Toughest pitches for us were 14 (one move wonder just before the chains), 16 (very technical!), 18 (loved the roof start), 19 (great technical section over a bulge), and pitch 22 (only challenge here is pulling over the chaucy roof after a long day). We climbed car-to-car in under 11 hours.

Tips:
-Link as many pitches as possible and bring runners to reduce drag. Pitches 1-2, 3-4, 5-6, 7-8, 15-16, 20-21 are particularly easy to link-up
-Bring lots of water and some snacks if you do not regularly on-sight 5.11+. Apart from one another the individual pitches are not hard, but the rock pulling & hiking adds up by the end of the day
-Hike around pitches 9 to 11. It is a moderately easy straight hike and will cut 1.5+ hours from your day
--Pitch 12 begins AT THE CAVE. Not sure if anyone else had this problem. But we didn't realize the cave was the start of the climb and went a little left at first.
-Don't turn around at pitch 8 like most people do. If you are feeling strong and have water, go for the top! Oct 17, 2016
DRyan Ryan
Bellingham, WA
 
[Hide Comment] A great route for an early spring day. Late March, 55 degrees, sunny, and a light breeze felt perfect once the sun hit the first pitch around 9:30 am.

Car to car in 11 hours with a casual pace all around. A bit of a heinous walk off through deep snow and muddy trail, but almost certainly still preferable to rapping the the beast.

Climbed thirteen total pitches with a 60 meter rope by linking 3+4, 5+6, 7+8, 13+14, 18+19, and 20+21. We opted to skip pitches 9-11 by walking around. 22 draws total with 10 alpine and the occasional skipped bolt.

Key beta: the state liquor stores close at 7 so if you want full strength beer make it down by then or arrive prepared.

Overall good fun and well worth doing, especially with the novelty factor. Mar 31, 2017
Alex Temus
Lehi, UT
  5.11c
[Hide Comment] Came back to the route in May and did the full thing. What a route! Still blown away that a route like this exists, and that it's so accessible. Thank you, thank you.

While the upper pitches obviously haven't been climbed as often as the first 8, there still isn't much choss compared to other multi-pitch routes. Bring a helmet, but I think I knocked off more choss on Open Book (Lone Peak) which has been climbed hundreds of times, than I did on this. It really isn't bad.

We simul-climbed the first 13 pitches (brought about 23 draws), then linked a few of the easier pitches after that, but the climbing does get tougher. Still felt like P14 was the crux. The biggest surprise to me was just how thrashed your skin can get after pulling on that much (relatively) untouched rock in just a few hours! By the end of the climb I had 4 or 5 flappers and had just worn through the outer layers of skin on the rest of my fingertips. BRING TAPE! (It may also come in handy if you rip a fat hole right through your favorite old shoes with 12 pitches still to go...)

Such a sick route. Nothing quite like it! Aug 1, 2017
[Hide Comment] Climbed this September 8th.

The bolt hanger protecting the last roof (P22) is missing.

It's long. It was hot. P14 has one hard move. P16 has several less hard moves. P18 has some bouldery moves. The scramble up to P1 and the hike out were my least favorite parts.

We found lunching in the shade of some trees after P8 more refreshing than that nasty cave. Sep 11, 2017
Shitty Chris Sharma
Salt Lake City, UT
  5.11
[Hide Comment] Climbed this on Sept 26th. Bolt on the roof of pitch 22 is still missing. Not the hardest move but after a long exhausting day I was too scared and had to follow it. Falling doing the crux move without the bolt would lead to a less than fun deck. Amazing fun and adventurous route. Sep 27, 2017
Austin Hancock
Pleasant Grove, UT
  5.11-
[Hide Comment] SUCH a sick route. Pitches 1-11 were all pretty cruiser. 9-11 were sub-par but totally worth doing!

We didn’t link any pitches. We both felt the upper pitches were harder than the original ratings let off. Maybe the traffic hasn't been nice to the rock over the years.

Hardest pitches were 13, 14, 16, 18, 19.

We drank a ton of water the day before and each brought 2 liters of water for the climb. I ran out at the top of pitch 19.

Overall, we spent about 8 hours actually climbing. We didn't link any of the pitches. We also got lost for like an hour after pitch 11 so that sucked. It was a sick day that required a lot of try-hard! Amazing to get to climb something like this so close to home. Oct 1, 2017
Guy McAtee
Orem, UT
 
[Hide Comment] Climbed with Austin. 7am start and 5:30pm top-out. Not sure how but we got lost for one hour in between 11 and 12. We didn't see a red fixed rope as mentioned in the topo. The route is in great condition. I ate one peanut butter and jelly sandwich on the route, saved one for the top. Route wasn't as chossy as I thought it would be (still wear a helmet.)
All of the pitches were well bolted; if you can link 14 and 15 you would save yourself from the awkward belay (I felt I was standing on the jug where the follower needed to grab) but you would need to be pretty strong to link 14 and 15 clean. Oct 2, 2017
[Hide Comment] Climbed this yesterday (10/7/2017). Hanger on pitch 22 still missing. It is the bolt right at the roof move. Fall would be very dangerous, would not recommend climbing unless you are very comfortable leading in the 5.11 range (route is only a 10- but because you are on the last pitch and your fingers are likely angry with you, the route will feel harder, your mindset will not be as strong, etc. . . It is a dangerous fall) Oct 8, 2017
[Hide Comment] My buddy and I did this yesterday -- because we are total-dumbs we:

(1) parked at the wrong parking lot (over by the soccer field rather than at the canyon entrance) and wandered our way into the canyon
(2) failed at our alpine start goal (left car at 11am)
(3) walked up the scree field, then went 'left toward the ridge' near the top, then barely went any higher before traversing back right to the base ... if there is a good way up by hanging to the left, would recommend.
(4) endured an epic route finding fail at top of pitch 2 ... You are supposed to go "RIGHT" to the base of pitch 3 -- we didn't check the topo and saw a cairn off to the left at the base of the same formation which seemed like it ... No ... in fact -- this is definitely a 'different' way up the same formation than the normal pitches 3-8 ... An -- epically -- horribly -- different way. Thinking we were in the right place, I tried to link pitches 3/4 on this other route. I kept thinking 'jeez these two pitches seem long, I guess the anchors must be just passed that next bolt' -- and 'wow I sure have a lot of rope drag, I wonder how people link these pitches' -- until I ran out of rope with epic rope drag and belayed off a single bolt at an awkward ledge ... The topo for pitch 3 describes loose rock at the bottom that gets better as you go up -- this definitely does not apply to the alternative route we did. The alternate line goes up via some of the worst and scariest choss I've ever climbed. We topped out to the left of pitch 8 at a precarious looking diving board rock in three pitches -- one 70m+ pitch with a fair amount of loose work to a bolt (not recommended), one shortish pitch on very loose rock to reach the second anchor, and another normal length pitch on very loose rock with some harder sections that were scary given quantity of loose rock...

We rested for a good long while at top of pitch '8' and contemplated our lives -- the loose sections on the rest of the route felt rather bomber by comparison ... we ended up climbing everything after the crux pitch by headlamp but we did finish! I'd rather not say the time we got back to car in a public forum ;0 -- this route gave us a very long, intense adventure day!

Does anybody know or done the route to the left of pitches 3-8? Oct 13, 2017
Kevin Lockwood
SLC, UT
  5.11a
[Hide Comment] Lots of comments on this thread but I'll add my twist on the route:

Climbed on 10/22/17, high of 62 and sunny. Good temps for the route. Brought 34 draws, two microtraxions, and a 35m rope. Simul-climbed most of the route. Climbed in 8 blocks (1-2, 3-6, 7-8, 9-11, 12-14, 15-16, 17-19, 20-22). Fun route. ~30 min for the approach, ~5.5 hrs climbing, ~1 hr back down. 7:22 car-to-car.

Hanger on pitch 22 is still missing. Consider replacing with a glue-in, or add some epoxy or loctite to keep the nut on. The climbing isn't too hard near the bolt, it's just a little heady. The nut and washer are missing in addition to the hanger, does anyone know the thread on those bolts? 3/8-16?

cdn-files.apstatic.com/clim…> Oct 22, 2017
Creed Archibald
Salt Lake City, UT
 
[Hide Comment] As others have said, this route is awesome and has cleaned up super nicely. The only really crappy pitches are 9-11. The rest of the route is solid. If you have any experience climbing alpine rock, you will be pleasantly surprised by the rock quality. FA really performed a labor of love on this rig.

The hanger on pitch 22 is still missing. Unfortunately, that missing hanger would be protecting the crux of the pitch. In my opinion, the last pitch is 5.10 R in it's current state. You'd be pulling the roof with a bolt well below your feet and down to the left, leading to a big pendulum whipper if you blew it. Instead of climbing right to the missing bolt and over the roof, I went left into an easy chimney and then traversed back into the bolt line at about 5.7. Still run out, but this felt reasonable and secure. Apr 16, 2018
Logan Bradford
Lindon, UT
  5.11-
[Hide Comment] It is SUPER easy to get the approach wrong if you're not careful. Thinking I knew exactly where I was going because I had done the route twice already, we didn't pay a ton of attention to the gullies we were going up. We ended up missing the first pitches by a LONG shot and ended up at the same level as pitch 3. Thinking we were just around the corner from pitch 3, we found some bolts and started climbing. My partner led it -- in the middle of the route, he said, "this is DEFINITELY not 5.9" -- and took a fall from about 15 feet above his last bolt. He literally bounced down the wall, gashing his hand and banging up his knees and ankle. I lowered him and then went up to clean our gear. The route was probably .11c and CHOSSY. We had to bail because my partner was so beat up. So, moral of the story: on the approach, when you get to a gully, go right. And if you get to a wall that has 3 sets of bolts, THAT'S NOT THE ROUTE! You're about 100 yards too far to the left and you will be on a miserable choss fest. Apr 21, 2018
Eric Chabot
Salt Lake City, UT
[Hide Comment] I heard reports from another climber that Peregrine Falcons are showing nesting behavior on the route again this year. Please consider avoiding this route during the spring, although there is no closure. This will give them the space they need to make their breeding attempt for the year!

Last year, the nest was high on the route, so doing the first 8 pitches would likely not disturb them if they nest in the same spot. Apr 24, 2018
cdec
SLC, UT
[Hide Comment] Climbed it on 4/24/18. Saw the bird warnings so paid attention and didn't see any bird action all day. Apr 25, 2018
Logan Bradford
Lindon, UT
  5.11-
[Hide Comment] The hanger on pitch 22 has been replaced.
Approach beta: don't go in between The Appendage and PA's Mother (this one of the recommended approaches.). Instead, walk past PA's on the main trail till you get to the boulder, then head up the gully east of PA's. The route is in pretty good shape this season, although there are a couple of spinners here or there. Might not be a bad idea for you and your partner to carry a wrench and tighten as you encounter them (I was stupid and didn't think of this till I was writing this trip report).
We linked 3&4, 5&6 (rope drag), 7&8 (rope drag), 14&15 (combined, these two pitches form one 11b pitch by my grading, and were great), 20 &21 (do not recommend: it felt like I was hauling up a 70 lb rock every time I went to clip a draw). We had a 70m rope, 15 quickdraws, 3 24" slings, and 1 48" sling. The slings were absolutely crucial for the linked pitches. 3 liters of water for the 80* day.

This is a fun, full day. Apr 28, 2018
Brent Cody
Fort Collins, CO
[Hide Comment] Super enjoyable climb, especially the upper pitches. As with any climb you need to watch for loose rock.

In the middle of congratulating myself for climbing this route I thought about what it would take to bolt this line, not to mention staying within a consistently challenging but not impossible grade range. Almost unbelievable. Really appreciate your effort putting this one up Tristan! May 1, 2018
johnny utah
Salt Lake City
  5.11c
[Hide Comment] Does anyone know what the deal is with bolts being placed all over the place (off the climbing route) on the true summit of Squaw Peak? There are at least 6-7 bolts with hangers placed at random nowhere near the cliff edge. I joked that they must have been set for a highline to the Y Mountain summit. Jun 12, 2018
Casey Dahl
Salt Lake City, UT
  5.11a
[Hide Comment] Did this yesterday with a high in Provo of 92°. The wind was our saving grace. Camped across the creek bed and made it campsite to campsite in 7 hours. Linked pitches as Eric Mercer suggested, (burly)(you’re a beast). I was blown away by the sustained climbing on the second half of the route. The .10s above the “crux” pitch were significantly harder than I expected. We drank 2 liters of water each, ate very little food, and just moved as quick as possible. To prepare for the route, I just climbed 22 routes in the gym a few times a week. I was still wrecked by the end. My biggest suggestion would be to move fast. Get off the wall as quick as possible by keeping breaks to a minimum and fighting the fatigue. Go get on it! Sep 19, 2018
Rud Johansen
  5.11-
[Hide Comment] Linked most all the pitches except 16 which seems to be the technical crux with ground fall potential so I wanted the belayer close. Otherwise a little rope drag from the links is a fair price to pay to easily get you up and down in daylight hours. Great adventure! Oct 22, 2018
Brian Koralewski
Springville, UT
  5.11b/c
[Hide Comment] 45 min hike from car to Pitch 1 using gully behind PA's Mother.
Skipped many bolts on Pitches 1-8.
Linked 3-4 & 7-8...guide recommends linking these pitches and it was no problem.
Linked 5-6- but not recommended due to rope drag unless you're good at strategically using 3-4 runners.
Pack rolled off top of 8...rappelled down, got the remains, toproped back up (luckily pitch 8 is so fun).
Checked out Diving Board formation 100' west of top of 8-- worth checking out.
Hard steep 30 min hiking around 9-11. Would consider doing 9-11 next time.

Crux pitches:
13 - Not bad
14 - One really hard move at the top. Stayed on left bolt path as recommended in the guide. Would consider going right next time.
16 - 11c free climb/10c draw-yank....Did the yank way- which made it easy except for gap between bolts 2-3.
18 - 10d steep start, then fun cruiser 10c climbing). I liked the interesting holds & pinches and really enjoyed this pitch, though my partner didn't.
19 - Beautiful rock, but very challenging. Very sustained climbing- would be hard to redpoint. 10d/11a. 2nd or 3rd hardest pitch. Rested at almost every bolt.

Other notable pitches:
15 Guide says “massive exposure” and wow, no kidding! Jonathan followed and pulled off a big flake hold...may be a bit harder now.
21 Favorite pitch- Big ledges and jugs. Great rock. Great exposure.
22 Pulling over roof near the top...each finger held onto the rock by a separate sharp pokey textured bump- trust the sharpness and pull.

Several pitches had 2-3 more bolts than stated in the guide.

Squawstruck was about as much as we could handle in a single day. (We are both 12a climbers and V7 boulderers, and both had done several smaller multi-pitch climbs.)
Hiked down in snow. Then mud, Then dark.

6:30am to 9:15pm- just under 15 hours....I thought it would take us 10-12 hours, as many parties report.
What slowed us down?
-Retrieving dropped backpack (+45 min)
-Partner climbed the day before & was tired on upper pitches (+45 min)
-Snow, mud, dark on hike down (+45 min) = 2 hr 15 min slower...so even if smooth, still would have been 12-13 hours.

Perfect weather: mid 60's, 3 mph wind......shorts, t-shirt, sweatshirt.

22 quickdraws, 60 meter rope, 4-5 slings and runners were very helpful on belay stations and in certain spots to prevent rope drag on the linked pitches.
We both used old, beat up, but comfy shoes, which was a good choice over our tight uncomfy bouldering shoes.
2 liters of water was plenty, considering cool weather.

Used this method on most pitches to belay from above: youtube.com/watch?v=F_f61vU…
Used locking carabiner directly through bottom links of chains to secure gri-gri…(“climber side” of gri-gri facing away from wall) = comfy ledge sitting with easy belaying.

All in all it was awesome and fun! Props to Jonathan for being my rad partner and leading several of the hardest pitches. Props to Tristan Higbee for rad vision and awesome dedication in equipping the route. Apr 24, 2019
[Hide Comment] Anybody know anything about a speed record? May 1, 2019
Brittany Mattrella
Jackson, WY
[Hide Comment] I did this around 4th of July a few years back at night with a friend. Linked to 16 pitches total. Easy to climb at night and follow the bolts with your headlamp and navigate the ledges. I bet it would be awesome on a full moon. Rock was still very hot from the sun though. Awesome climb! Thanks for putting it together! May 4, 2019
[Hide Comment] If you witness spray about this route being choss, kindly tell the person to enjoy their day cragging Bad Bananas, and go get on top of this route.
Stellar.
Thanks Tristan and colleagues for all your work!
+1 for full moon ascents Jun 16, 2019
Madison Kinder
Spokane, WA
[Hide Comment] Climbed this route on June 23, 2019. We started the hike from the parking lot at 4:45am and started up the climb at 5:45am, after getting a bit confused on the ascent to the base. We did not get sunshine on route until pitch 11, then lost it again until pitch 15. We had a nice breeze once we were in the sun and the temperature was not as bad as we thought it would be. We brought 2 liters of water but could have used 3-4. We linked pitches to climb 14 total pitches:
P1
P2
P3+P4
P5+P6
P7+P8
P9+P10
P11
P12
P13+P14
P15+P16
P17+P18
P19
P20+P21
P22

We followed Eric Mercer's advice for the majority of the route and found it very helpful. Like he mentioned, we did skip quite a few bolts as the majority of the route was very well protected. This route was loads of fun with lots of fun movements. Some of the rock, especially towards the bottom was so sharp, beware. I personally thought pitch 14 and 22 were the scariest as the follower, but my partner loved leading them.

We ended up back at the car around 5pm, but we were taking our time at ledges, stayed at the top a bit, and stopped to soak our feet in the cool river on the way down the hike. I highly recommend this route to anyone looking for a fun and relatively easy day of sport climbing!

In case anyone goes to climb this anytime soon, I dropped my chalk bag off the top of pitch 11 or 12 and it fell to the base of pitch 9.... it was a sad sight. If someone goes up there, you should look around on the big ledge at the base of pitch 9, then give the chalk bag a good home if you find it. It was in great shape and it's yours if you find it! Jul 16, 2019
Logan Bradford
Lindon, UT
  5.11-
[Hide Comment] I've now done this route 3 times and I think I've figured out the optimal link-up. It will require a 70m, plus a handful of 24" and 48" slings (we had 4x24 and 3x48) to manage the rope drag, and another 16 QDs.
1
2
3+4
5+6
7+8
9+10
11
12+13
14+15 (CLASSIC CLIMBING!!)
16
17+18 (truth be told, I haven't done this link-up, but I think it could work. The opening roof of 18 perplexed me (and thus led to a number of falls) till I figured out the beta. With the ledge below, and your belayer not having eyes on you, taking a fall here could have deck potential.)
19+20
21+22 Sep 22, 2019
Logan Bradford
Lindon, UT
  5.11-
[Hide Comment] I remade Tristan's [SUPER helpful] pdf that was on his site, which is no longer up.

Full page photos/pitch descriptions (3 pgs total): drive.google.com/file/d/1Un…

Single page (if printed double sided - probably more convenient for you if you're on the route itself): drive.google.com/file/d/1iZ… Sep 23, 2019
Rob Stinogle
Salt Lake City
 
[Hide Comment] Climbed this on 10/4/19. Weather was fantastic.

Wow. Hats off to everyone who helped put this route together. It was STELLAR. Lot's of variation in the pitches, and some seriously amazing sections with some great exposure. Very well protected. Our beta:

Gear:
20 ultralight draws
8 alpine draws - wish we would have had a couple more to help with rope drag
70m rope
2 liters of water each - could have used another liter
Assorted bars and chews for food

Pitch links:
P1
P2
P3+P4
P5+P6
P7+P8
P9+P10
P11
P12
P13+P14
P15
P16
P17+P18
P19+P20
P21+P22

Overall thought pitch 14 was mellow aside from the crux at the top. I thought 16 was the most perplexing pitch. Quite thin and balancy, with some sustained slab at the start. Pitch 18 had some pumpy roofs, especially that late in the game. I especially found the first to be tough. The exposure on pitches 15 and 22 was epic! Logan's doc above was stellar; We had little to no problem finding the start, or any of the scrambles in between. Did the walk off hike, which was gorgeous with the fall foliage. We were door to door in 12 hours. Oct 7, 2019
Austin Hancock
Pleasant Grove, UT
  5.11-
[Hide Comment] I found the original topo that Tristan made in my Google Drive. Props to Logan for recreating it! Here's a link to the original anyway. drive.google.com/file/d/19K… Oct 15, 2019
Tristan Higbee
Pocatello, ID
  5.11-
[Hide Comment] My site where I had listed more beta, the first ascent history, and a printable topo was down for the last several months (long story), but it's back up now, and I fixed the link in the description.

It's now been 9 years since I finished this route. It took me nearly 3 years to bolt it. I climbed it once, and I've never been back on it, and I never will get back on it. I've mentioned that to a few people over the years, and they found that hard to believe. But putting up new routes for me was never really about the climbing—it was about the creation. I loved bringing the things into existence. It felt much more like art than sport. If I'd just wanted to climb, there were much easier and cheaper ways to get that fix. Going back to the route now wouldn't give me anything more than what I already have. It was a rewarding experience for me, and I'm content.

It's really great to see people enjoy the route, and I hope that Squaw Peak will continue to motivate people in one form or another for a long time to come. Dec 5, 2019
Sam Elander
Salt Lake City, UT
  5.11a
[Hide Comment] ~~Conditions and Beta as of (April 4th 2020):

-Only bolts that need tightening are every bolt on pitch 18 and the mini-roof on pitch 22 (I hand-tightened it as much as I could)
-Walk off descent is snowy, but not bad. Just takes longer than normal.
-I tried to make Cairns at each start point if others want to help add on to them.
-All the hardware is still in FANTASTIC condition!

BETA:
-With a 70m and slings you can combine many pitches together like others have said.
-You can link 1+2, but it's a bit of a drag.
-I recommend combining 9+10+11 (aka choss mountain) with a 70m and crafty slings. You belay off the tree rather than going the pointless couple extra bolts upwards.
-EVERY belay ledge is awesome!
-Hardest pitches:
#14- Go left use the 1 good hold and get crafty with your feet and for one of the big jugs without worrying about clipping until after. (one move wonder) 5.10d
#16- Hardest technical climbing! Using trashy micro crimps and dimples make several desperate moves. Wind doesn't help. At the third bolt there's an awesome pocket hiding out left. Then it gets easier. 5.11a
#18- Not bad. Only one crux section near the start bulge. 5.10c
#19- Very thin upper section! I don't know if I missed some holds, but it was stout. 5.10c/d
#22 is NOT bad. It feels epic though after all that climbing! 5.10a/b

Note:
-Quite the adventurous route. Not the best quality rock, but still worth doing once for an alpine-style adventure.
-Easy escape!: Get to the big ledge before pitch 9. (If you're higher, with a 70m rap down to the mine, walk around the choss mountain and walk towards buckley's mine area, but just keep walking along the cliff line for a good while, eventually the trail ends at a scree slope leading back down to the bottom.)
-Approach Option 1 is WAY better!
-Left car at 5:53am (so probably started around 6:30am) and topped out at 7:10pm. ~12.5 hrs. One climber max 5.12d, the other 5.10b (aided a bit on the route). Apr 5, 2020
Andrew Stemmler
Logan, UT
[Hide Comment] For weather we had a high of 68 and a low of 42 winds around 5-7 mph. Clothing wise was a t shirt and light wind breaker and I was comfortable all day. Maybe even a little hot.

I brought 2.5 liters in a bladder and my partner brought 1.5 liters. I had quite a bit of water left over at the end of the day so next time I would take 2 liters maybe.

The rack consisted of 16 sport draws, 10 alpine draws and a couple quads for the bolted anchors.

We left the parking lot 4/25/2020 at 7:30 am. 30 mins for the approach, 7.5 hrs for the climb and 1.5 hrs for decent. This gave us a car to car time of 9.5 hrs.

We linked most pitches. Our pitch count was:
1/2
3/4
5/6
7/8
9/10
11
12/13
14/15
16
17/18
19/20
21/22

All the pitches linked fine except for 17/18. I would pitch those out if I were to do it again. Bring a helmet! Apr 27, 2020
Joshua Ngo
Tempe, AZ
[Hide Comment] Anyone have the GPS coordinates for the start of this route? Jun 5, 2020
[Hide Comment] I've done this many, many times now, both with partners and rope soloing--thought I'd share my beta. 70M rope, 23 draws (several extendable). Strategically skip bolts or back clean and you'll be fine with these links. My pitch count below; feel free to reach out if you have any questions.

1/2
3/4
5/6
7/8
9/10/11 (belayed from tree)
12/13
14/15
16
17/18
19/20
21/22 Nov 6, 2020
David Kozak
The Earth, Our Mother
[Hide Comment] I encourage that the name of this route be changed. It is racist and highly offensive. I realize that the peak is also named the "S-word" but MP has no authority to change a peak's name. Perhaps concerned climbers in the area could initiate a change of the peak's name. Dec 30, 2020
[Hide Comment] Climbed this today with Jackson Marvell. FKT.
3:22:38 Car To Car

24:02 Hike Up
2:18:15 Climbing
40:20 Running Down Feb 11, 2021
Kip H
Farmington, utah
[Hide Comment] Mark and I did this on April 24 2021 and picked the wrong day to go. Cold high winds and threatening rain and hail met us half way up. It made it really hard. But we survived thankfully and topped out at 6 pm. Kudos to the pioneers who put this up. Really an incredible feat and undertaking! Big exposure experience. Not for the weak of heart, go if you have the chops and experience to push thru it. Apr 26, 2021
Matt VanBuhler
Salt Lake City, UT
 
[Hide Comment] Kudos to the developers! Great route. Go get after it Aug 29, 2021
David Shane
Torino, IT
[Hide Comment] Intended to do the first 8 pitches of this last Friday afternoon, but we didn't read the topo too closely, assumed there was only one route up this formation, and got on another bolt line to the left of the route for pitches 3-8. It was pretty chossy and run out at times but not harder than 5.9+ I think. It finished at a surfboard like feature over the cliff. Anybody know what that was? Anyway we rapped down the actual route (couldn't rap the other line with a single 70m) and it looked much better. So don't wander left on the first big ledge! Sep 9, 2021
Zack Little
Jackson, WY
[Hide Comment] I'm sure there are 10 other comments just like this on the page, but I thought I'd share so folks hopefully don't have to sift through as much info to find beta for linking pitches. Climbed this on 10/02/2021 with a 60M rope, 13 quickdraws, 12 alpine draws, and 2 double-length slings. we linked the following pitches:

Pitches 1&2
Pitches 3&4
Pitches 5&6
Pitches 7&8
Pitches 9&10
Pitch 11
Pitches 12-13
Pitches 14-15
Pitch 16 ( definitely move belay to the hangars without chains as Tristan recommended)
Pitches 17-18
Pitches 19-20
Pitches 21-22

The only linkup where rope drag was a small issue was on pitches 1&2 but manageable if you are thoughtful about your runner placement. every other linkup was super smooth. definitely be mindful of how your rope runs on some of the ledges with loose rocks between pitches, but again very manageable with runners. super awesome climb! Thanks for all your hard work Tristan & CO! Oct 5, 2021
Alex Fischer
Albuquerque, NM
[Hide Comment] How far does the cave go into the cliff? Is it natural, or a mine? Dec 8, 2021
Mulch
Jacobstown, NJ
[Hide Comment] Ahhhh Redactedstruck, nice! Jan 26, 2022
[Hide Comment] is it frowned upon to rope solo this and bring up a portaledge and haul bag? been dreaming of rope soling it for years and want to attempt it this year. don't want to cause any uproar in the community if its not a good idea. 4-4-2022 Apr 4, 2022
Alex Temus
Lehi, UT
  5.11c
[Hide Comment] Jaxen, I mean, you possibly could rope solo it, and it could be an inconvenience to other parties trying to pass you, but that's not really the issue - parties regularly pass each other on long climbs.

Just for the sake of your sanity, I strongly discourage trying anything that causes you have to bring overnight gear. Yes, it's "suburban" big wall climbing, but it's still a decently long/steep approach, with multiple hikes between each of the 4 or 5 main sections of wall that are linked together here.

I can't imagine carrying a haul bag or overnight gear up this thing. Hauling (even a small bag) on 8-10 pitch routes like Zion's Touchstone or Moonlight with no elevation gain on the approach is enough of a chore - trying that on a 22 pitch route like this with the approach it has and the discontinuity between walls would be enough to drive you insane. May 20, 2022
james climbs
  5.11+
[Hide Comment] The highlights of this route:
- It's rad. And unique. And next to a suburb. And the top-out is unbelievable 360 degree views.
- A few of the pitches are on overhangs with incredible movement and exposure.
- There are a significant number of options for bomber hand jams on brief, smooth limestone crack sections. Bringing some basic crack climbing skills can help! (No need to tape/glove up).
- The movement on the not-so-chossy pitches is thoughtful and high-quality.
- Linking the pitches as the comments here made a lot of sense, so no need to repeat what's already been said. That said, even if you're going for a link, don't be afraid to pitch it out if you're on lead and in the moment sketched out about rope drag or decking on a ledge.
- The hike down has beautiful vegetation and is a great, well-shaded trail.

Worthy to take note:
- In my opinion, this route is way harder than what I expected it to be based on this MP page. For me, the two crux pitches felt like they were around 5.11+, the first burly and the second one technical. I way-underestimated how hard climbing multiple 5.10+ pitches in a row would be, especially on less-than-ideal rock and many thin holds.
- The scree field approach was surprisingly taxing and lengthy, and way more loose than the description here says.
- You'll feel this route in your legs - the combo of the scree field approach, all the high feet involved on climbing this style of limestone, and overall 22 pitches plus a downhill descent.
- It pays to "bomb test" some of the more positive holds before weighting them fully - I had a dozen or so jugs flex on me, which really required I climb with my feet and not pull so hard on some of the holds (good technique in general, but especially important here!).
- I had to dodge pebbles and rocks a handful of times when lead belaying and my partner would yell "ROCK!"
- My partner and I definitely hit a psyche and energy plateau after pitch 14 and 16, and had to re-up on calories and psyche to finish off the remaining pitches. We cruised the first 11 pitches but significantly slowed down after the first crux pitch.
- I had to back-clean some draws on the last two pitches that we linked, since I doubled up a few single-length runners to help with drag.

Must-do's (in my opinion) for the route:
- DON'T link pitch 1 and 2. We did this and had heinous drag.
- Start early! We wanted to be car-to-car in 10/11 hours like some others here, but even starting the 5th class climbing around 6:00am we slowed down significantly and topped out around 4:30pm (May 24, 2022).
- I *loved* having the Rocky Talkie's on this route, especially with the longer link-pitches. They felt like life-savers and made the climbing way less stressful. That said, being so close to a suburb, we had interference on more than a few channels and had to switch channels a number of times.
- Bring enough calories, protein and 3 liters of water. Very important!
- Comfy stiff-toed shoes were great (I brought my TC Pro's) and even then had to take them off at the belays since my toes were hurting. Don't bring bouldering shoes, unless you're going to just wear them for a handful of the sportier pitches!
- I regret not having double-length runners (and instead had to connect two single length runners together in some spots, and thus had to back-clean). Going forward I would bring 3-4 double-lengths.

Have fun! So glad I did this, even though it kicked our butts. What a great unique experience. May 26, 2022
Joshua Brown
Provo, UT
  5.11a/b
[Hide Comment] Very similar beta to Zach Little:
Climbed twice now. 60m rope. 24+ draws, and a few(4) alpines (one or two 120cm or 180cm slings can be nice for pitch 1&2 and a few others)

1/2 (rope is technically too short, but follower starts climbing)
3/4
5/6
7/8
9/10/11 (simul 9 with 11, as rope is too short. Alternative would be 9/10 and then 11)
12/13
14/15
16
17/18
19/20
21/22

If you had to rappel off a 60m rope would be too short, so make sure you know how to deal with that on your own. Alternatively use a 70m and deal with the extra. 70m makes linking 1/2 and 9/10/11 easy, but I would rather have less rope to carry and deal with the simul climb. Sep 12, 2022
Daniel Campbell
Salt Lake
  5.11b
[Hide Comment] Excellent route, thank you Tristan and co. Rock quality is 95% great, bolts are all bomber (and well bolted).
12:30 c2c 5/8/23.
Linkups listed in other comments are pretty much spot on. 1/2 (extend heavily), 3/4, 5/6, 7/8, 9/10/11 (very easy simul 5.8 on 20' of start of 9 and end of 11, belay at tree, skip last 3 bolts and walk around right because rope drag is really really bad, 70m rope), 12/13, 14/15, 16 (hard with TC pros), 17, 18 (do not link with 17, hard move at very start of 18 right above a ledge), 19/20, 21/22. May 9, 2023
David Carter
Salt Lake City
[Hide Comment] On Saturday, April 29 (2023), my partner and I encountered what I am reasonably sure was a peregrine falcon nest on the same ledge system as the belay at the base of the 14th pitch described here (rated 5.11-). The nest is very close – perhaps 50ft horizontally – to the 2-bolt belay anchor. May 19, 2023
[Hide Comment] If you walk up to the green forest gate, about 1 minute past the gate is a crossing on a bunch of logs over a chute. It's the same crossing for The Appendage and PA's Mother. After crossing the logs head right keeping PA's Mother to your left. Circle around the south face of PA's Mother and then about 2 more minutes of hiking with the river to your right brings you to the normal crossing for Squawstruck. Turn left, cross the camping spot and look for the trail heading up and right. Follow this to the start of the route. Probably doesn't even add a minute to the normal start. May 30, 2023
[Hide Comment] Here's where to cross when the river is high.
youtube.com/shorts/NJ4zYb6M3R0 May 30, 2023
Sam Elander
Salt Lake City, UT
  5.11a
[Hide Comment] The name of the climb is Squawstruck, a play on words. And it's grasping at straws to say that Squaw is, in its correct usage, is "offensive".

As the Smithsonian Institute even says: 'the word squaw is perfectly innocent, as current dictionaries also correctly indicate: squaw comes from a language of the Algonquian family in which it meant "woman.'

Tired of MP not using real humans on these redactions, there's many that are 100% fine. Others, not so much. Jul 6, 2023
Mike Gee
Ogden, UT
 
[Hide Comment] If night climbing in July, consider bug spray. I got tons of mosquito bites on my feet while belaying. Bugs were only out at night Jul 10, 2023
Tate Aronstein
Salt Lake City
[Hide Comment] Climbed 10/8/23, temp high 72, low 49. Started the approach at 6:20 and started climbing at 7, topped out right around 8pm. Linked most of the lower pitches in the same way as described in a lot of the above comments with one triple link on 3/4/5. Had a 70m rope and 24 draws, ~3L of water each. All in all a great if not exhausting day. Don’t under estimate the difficulty of 5.10 climbing as it compounds throughout the day, we we’re definitely pulling a lot of draws by the 20+ pitches Oct 9, 2023
W Royer
  5.11a/b
[Hide Comment] Climbed March 17, 2024. Good temps and rock was relatively stable even right after winter. Full 12-13 hr day on the wall but was able to only follow the last pitch in the dark. Linked most everything except for the oddballs between walks.

Long day, and the walk off is a solid hour in snow. Huge slide in the lower canyon we had to pick our way over. Good climbing throughout, though pitch 22 will piss you off after 22 pitches of climbing. Apr 8, 2024
Aaron Shamy
SLC
 
[Hide Comment] The views …
instagram.com/reel/C7LEAhQO… May 19, 2024
Double J
Sandy, UT
  5.11
[Hide Comment] To the next folks up the route, if it isn’t at your limit consider bringing a wrench. There are LOTS of spinners on route. Oct 22, 2024