| Type: | Trad, 200 ft (61 m), 2 pitches |
| GPS: | 39.98195, -105.30157 |
| FA: | George Bracksieck and Anne Leibold, 10/15/83 |
| Page Views: | 588 total · 8/month |
| Shared By: | George Bracksieck on Apr 12, 2020 |
| Admins: | Leo Paik, John McNamee, Frances Fierst, Monty, Monomaniac, Tyler KC |
bouldercolorado.gov/service…: lifted 7/26/23: Third Flatiron, including Queen Anne’s Head, W.C Fields Pinnacle, 1911 Gully and the Ghetto, the East Bench & West Bench, the East & West Ironing Boards, The Fin, Green Thumb and Jaws.
Update from the Flatirons Climbing Council July 2021: due to late nesting of peregrine falcons this year (2021), this area is closed until ~Aug. 12, 2021.
Information on OSMP wildlife closures, which help to protect sensitive habitats, can be viewed at:
bouldercolorado.gov/service…
maps.bouldercolorado.gov/wi…
The following crags are closed 1 February to 31 July:
First Pinnacle (Gregory Canyon)
Second Pinnacle (Gregory Canyon)
Third Pinnacle (Gregory Canyon)
Third Flatiron
Queen Anne's Head
WC Fields Pinnacle
The Ghetto
East Ironing Board
West Ironing Board
The Fin
Green Thumb
Jaws
Updated details may be found here.
osmpwildlifeclosures.org.
See: bouldercolorado.gov/service….
Click here for the trail closures. Some are M-F, some are 24/7. These impact the Bear Canyon/Fern Canyon regions primarily:
flatironsclimbing.org/tempo…
Click here bouldercolorado.gov/service… for the latest in raptor closures.
Description
This route is, until now, undocumented in MP and in all guidebooks. Climb an ugly slot and loose blocks, and make a rotten traverse left, to the prominent crack. Climb the crack (wide and rotten at first, narrowing to almost fingers, and then widening to hands). I often had to stop and scrape a lot of crusty lichen out of the crack, with one hand, while painfully jamming with the other. This led me to believe that no one had previously climbed it. I belayed at the top of the crack on a pillar/pedestal. Btw this is the same crack that the adjacent route, Bay of Pigs, ascends. I think that BoP was first climbed in the late ‘80s.
The second pitch was much easier. It continued up a short dihedral, then traversed east, across the south side, to the east-facing, low-angled slab, following that to the summit. We scrambled down east, then south.
No bolts and pins were anywhere on the rock. We didn’t name the route, nor did we report it to the “authorities.” We didn’t name Cuban Tower, either — I don’t see any resemblance to Cuba (where I have climbed).



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