Moonshadow follows a zig-zag line of corners on the right side of the buttress to an exciting top out. Like many Zion routes, there are both brilliant and crusty sections. Avoid this line a few days after rain. The general crack size is fingers to hands, with minimal off-width and chimney which are bolt protected. The route sees 2-4 hours of sun a day depending on the season.
PITCH 1 // .10a 35m
Start in a shadowed alcove beneath three cracks that come together at a ledge 50 feet above. Either commit to the corner on the right (.8) or use it AND the finger crack depending on your arm length. Pull out of the alcove, clip a bolt, then go 10 feet right to an off-width corner peppered with knobs that leads to a great ledge belay.
PITCH 2 // .10a 30m
Stay in the corner past a bolt and a cool boulder problem leading to a left trending ramp/corner to a large right facing corner. Belay beneath a bolted face that leads left. A little heads-up mid pitch on easy but less than perfect rock for 10-15 feet.
PITCH 3 // .9 20m
A fun bolted face leads left. After a midway ledge, step left and follow a right leaning handcrack to a large belay stance.
PITCH 4 // .10a 35m
Scramble up and left 40 feet on a bushy ledge to an EXCELLENT right facing finger and hand crack. At a large roof, traverse left on some odd textured rock beneath a pillar. From here continue left to a low angle runout ledge rising up and right. Going straight up can be done but encounters unpleasant rock and no pro.
PITCH 5 // 4th Class 30m
Step right and scramble up ledges following a fixed line. Belay on a perch at bolts or on a bushy ledge below.
PITCH 6 // .10a 25m
Traverse left on a slab past two bolts to a right facing finger and handcrack in a corner. Follow this wonderful corner to an exit crux onto “lunch ledge”.
PITCH 7// .10c 40m
This is the mega pitch of the route. It is the longest and most varied lead though some great rock. Start up a ramp to a dirty corner on the left aiming towards the massive black and red corner above. Bring the whole rack for this. The crux is passing through the Bombay chimney roof using bolts for pro. In the back of this chimney is a refrigerator sized block one should avoid yarding on with much more than a whisper. It likely won’t fall out for at least another 100 years. The last 40 feet of this pitch is brilliant.
PITCH 8 // .10c 30m
Step left across a gaping chimney and clip a bolt, then follow a ramp up to a stance beneath a bolt and a great but short finger crack. Take this past a hands sized section to a ledge beneath a massive overhung alcove.
PITCH 9 // .10b 34m
A zero star pitch with a four-star crux. Start up the thin hands corner past an arete bordering a chossy gully (tread lightly). At the second bolt traverse left to an arete with a wild exit. This may be the crux of the route if you are short armed. From here the pitch deteriorates passing flaky cracks and not very wonderful rock with easy climbing. Note: Following the low traverse to the arete is a bit thrilling. Stay cool. It’s not too bad. Belay at the bolted rap station or 10 feet higher using finger sized gear on a nicer ledge.
PITCH 10 // .10c 30m
Depending on your tastes this may be either your least or most favorite pitch of the route. Head right up a leaning chimney to a bolt. Exit a roof, then follow a few squirmy wider sections that protect well. After a third bolt, an awkward wiggling steep exit eases the difficulties for an enjoyable finish to a perfect little sky perch belay.
PITCH 11 // .11b 25m
This is my favorite pitch of the route. It has mostly great dark red rock and an airy position above the canyon. From the belay step right to a bolt and make a weird sequence to escape past it in the corner above. From here the line should be obvious. Follow the right leaning crack towards a ledge where you stay in the wide corner (on your left) or step right to a rotten stance and fingerlock to protect (and avoid) the wide section. Above is a finger crack that leads through the crux roof. Pull this thrilling, well-protected sequence to a hand crack taking you to the summit. The rock at the lip proved too poor for bolted anchors. They can be found fifteen feet back from the lip. Tie yourself off and return to belay at the handy little “chair” at the exit. If you are finished early enough there will likely be tourists watching you from the trail. Wave and ask “Is this Angels Landing? We’re lost.”
DESCENT:
Either take the tram (or drive in the winter) to the Big Bend parking area. Walk three minutes east on the road then drop down a faint trail to the river. Pick a spot to cross beneath the buttress and head immediately right through the grass. After 200 yards you’ll encounter a large black boulder on your left. A faint path starts here behind the boulder leading right-wards towards the wall above a drainage on your right. Eventually you will cross this drainage, hook left and pass a second large boulder (on your right) then zig zag to the base. The route starts in the middle of a 300 foot tall mitten-like feature leaning against the wall. Done correctly the approach takes ten minutes from the road.
Doubles of cams #0 - #4, single #00 and #5, 12 slings/draws, 70m rope, helmets
St. Catharines
Thanks for sharing! Jun 8, 2019
Salt Lake City, UT
I was surprised at the amount of wide climbing on this route. Its not wide in the sense that you need huge gear or have to hand-stack (I never had to, which I was happy about), but there is quite a bit of full-on body groveling. There is a lot of variation on all the pitches. Most cracks involve lay-backing/stemming more than jamming.
Finally, I will say that almost all pitches are sandbagged in my opinion. Crux P11 still clocks in at mid-11, but I wouldn't disagree with all the other pitches being bumped up 2-3 letter grades.
Very sustained and impressive route overall. Get after it! Oct 7, 2019
C'Wood, UT
To add from a gear perspective, i would say bring one 4 and one 5, instead of (2) 4s. It would make getting into some of the OW sections alittle less necky before you hit bolts. This route throws in a lot of variety of cracks with several different sizes per pitch so dont try to cut down the rack you carry as you will likely use the gear. Oct 7, 2019
Salt Lake City, UT
1. Bring a BD #6 (the new one). We had a #4 and #5 and both were useless for getting to the first bolt on the P1 OW. It wasn’t terribly hard, but I had to squirm about 15 feet above a ledge with no pro. Not an ideal warm-up. My partner wanted a #6 on P2 also.
2. This route is sandbagged. I don’t know if the FA team is too strong to know what 10a should feel like, but the first two pitches had some solid 5.10 climbing above marginal gear in soft rock. (For reference: We onsighted Smashmouth (11a) the next day, but we did not onsight the first two 10a pitches of this route. Though, to be fair, we couldn’t really feel our fingers on the first two pitches.)
3. The climbing is funky. Maybe the upper pitches are different, but the bottom didn’t have any of the long striking splitters and corners that Zion is known for. The “EXCELLENT” finger crack on P4 has about 20 feet of fingers, followed by 60 ft of huge pods and laybacking/face climbing. The top of this pitch is soft, grainy rock covered in bird poop.
Don’t go into this expecting a modern classic. Expect heady, off-the-beaten-path adventure climbing. Cheers. Nov 4, 2019
Utah
+1 for the 1x 4, 1x 5 beta. Bolts protect sections where you'd want a 6, and the 5 protects you out of them.
Thanks for the work Jer and Jarod, my partner and I had a blast on your route. Nov 17, 2019
Squamish, BC
A single note of concern, the massive flake that you climb on and protect with coming out of the first chimney bit of pitch 10 shifted a few inches while I was climbing it. Absolutely terrifying, but I believe that it settled and is going to stay put. Not trying to promote a fear fest, just be ginger and aware of how you are pulling it. Nov 19, 2019
MO + CA
The bolts on the face next to the chimney should be your protection. The large detached block was a grave concern of ours but in the end we did everything we could to get it out including a series of screaming squats pulling out on it with no luck. On the FA I ended up just barely touching it.
It’s super heavy and leaning “backwards” but yeah it moves 1/4” when encouraged. Maybe in the year 2120 someone will get “lucky”. Dec 29, 2019
Yosemite NP (Tuolumne)
I'm not saying that people shouldn't do this climb, I'd just like to emphasize that if you set out for it expect for a lot of heady gear and anticipate very sandbagged grades. Climb had some excellent views for sure though. Apr 5, 2021
Tucson, AZ
Beta-wise the topo is very accurate and easy to follow. The only place I got confused was at the P9 belay, which says to continue past the rap anchors and belay at a corner. I found a corner that took small gear but I didn't love the rock and spent the whole belay wondering if I should have down-climbed 20' back to the rap anchors, which seemed nicely placed on the route. I'm sure there was a reason for this instruction but I would belay at the rap rings next time.
The belays are all bolted except for the top of P9. When you top out, belay your follower up using botls about 20' back from the ledge (there are no anchors at the lip and the rock there is soft). In general, there are bolts where you want them and the route overall felt safe to me, assuming you're mindful of loose rock. In April the climb had sun for about 3 hours starting at 9:30am, otherwise the whole route was shady (we were glad to have hats and light layers).
I lead all pitches and was happy with the prescribed rack (up to #4). I never wished for larger gear, but I'm also very comfy at this grade. In general, there is very little (no?) OW climbing technique required - but there is a lot of "squirming" and cool transitions from squeeze chimneys to laybacking and regular crack climbing. The climbing feels surprisingly physical but is also varied in a fun way. I did equal parts crack climbing, squirming, laybacking, crimping, cutting feet, and sandy slab climbing :) Have fun! Apr 20, 2021
Hence the route is pretty new its no wonder, that you will encounter some loose an and sandy rock en route, it will clean up with the years, for sure, but due to the northern aspect of the face not so much like on the faces, which get their share of morning or afternoon sun. Alas, good news - it will keep its adventureous style, even if its seeing more traffic in the coming years. More traffic will only bring some of the better holds or crispy footholds down to the base of the climb - eg. in some spots the going might get tougher with the years. We´ve done some chimney sweeping on P10 and send some microwave sized blocks out of the squirmy parts to the ground, same on P11. Still some precarious blocks linger in and between the chimney parts of P10, some of them might come out, when you lift them at their sweet spot - better to stay away from them - or rap in with a nice crowbar and get the business done. Also be alert for some funkiness above the crux passage of P9, when you think its over - it isn´t! From the nice stance you can place some good cams, then you hit face climbing with no reliable pro for the next 30´until you belly flop on a good ledge, all the holds you´re going for and step on are ok, but of really crumbly consistence, if something pops on you, especially below the ledge , you´re in for the big ride. Otherwise most of the pro en route is mostly OK, sometimes tricky to place, but no big deal for an accomplished trad climber.
The suggestsed rack in the topo is spot on, you´re not wrong if you beef it up a bit with pieces from finger to hand size, we´ve also took a C5, and it came out at least three times en route, a C6 is not necessary, although I wished for one at the start of P7, but I think I went the wrong way, gaining the main corner via a burly ow section - had my moments on this one and lost a front tooth in the exciting finish of this loooong pitch way up (biting on the rope whilst clipping with a nice rope drag = bad combination, gave me a redneckish smile for the rest of the trip).
In a nutshell - a sustained outing, old school Zion-style (even with a bolt here and there on the pitches), not for the faint hearted, be prepared for some stout rating, trot softly and stay concentrated en route, follow the sirene call of the wonderful topo - this one and the route is a beauty for the connoisseur. Oct 7, 2022
BirdsAren'tReal
is the rock a little friable? in some sections, but they're 5.9 or below.
are the ratings stiff? maybe a little old school but you can bail and rap from any anchor station on the climb.
if you're at all interested in this climb you should definitely go after it.
Overall, id say its a diamond in the rough and a great climb. Nov 1, 2022
Salt Lake City, UT
• If planning to rappel the route, bring some cord and a link/biner for the small juniper that is about 10’ climbers right of the top of P11. That was the best option we found and were able to pull the rope with minimal drag. Don’t expect there to be any tat up there. Wouldn’t be surprised if it gets taken down by tourists or rangers.
• We didn't bring a #6, but if you have little to no offwidth experience or are extra cautious, bring one and you could even leave it on the anchor at the top of P2 (if rapping) because it's not useful after that.
• If you are used to funky zion climbing, the grades may not feel all that sandbagged.
• Don't let the comments about friable rock, sandy placements, and questionable gear dissuade you from getting on this climb. Yes, the route was sandy and there are some small gear placements but nothing that felt sketchy to me. Any runouts that occurred while leading the odd pitches were on such easy climbing, I didn’t even think twice about them.
• For pitch 5, come off belay and carry your rope up using the fixed line to avoid all the cactus spines getting in your rope. May 20, 2024