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The Skeleton Key

5.13a, Trad, 1300 ft (394 m), 15 pitches, Grade V,  Avg: 3.9 from 7 votes
FA: Karl Kvashay, Brandon Gottung 2018. FFA: Aaron Livingston, Karl Kvashay 10/2020
Utah > Southwest Utah > Zion NP > Kolob Canyon > N Fork of Taylor > Tucupit
Warning Access Issue: Seasonal Raptor Closures ***** RAIN AND WET ROCK ***** The sandstone in Zion is fragile and is very easily damaged when it is wet. Holds rip off and climbs have been and will continue to be permanently damaged due to climbers not respecting this phenomenon. After a heavy storm the rock will remain wet, sometimes for several days. PLEASE DO NOT CLIMB IN ZION during or after rain. A good rule of thumb is that if the ground near your climb is at all damp (and not powdery dry sand), then do not climb. There are many alternatives (limestone, granite, basalt, and plastic) nearby. Seasonal Raptor Closures DetailsDrop down

Description

The Skeleton Key is a king line of the North Fork of Taylor. The route was established in a multi-week ground up effort by Karl K and Brandon G. They managed to free all but roughly 50 feet of climbing on the first ascent. Thanks to them for this modern day Zion Classic. There were many hours of hand drilling on lead that made this route possible.

The Skeleton Key features long crack systems connected by unlikely face climbing sections and could reasonably be climbed at 12a A1 with some aiders. Every pitch features high quality climbing from beginning to end. Some sections seem a bit spicy onsighting but the route is quite safe and well equipped.

in 2020 Brandon reached out and suggested I reach out to Karl about trying to free their prized route. He was certain it could go. Karl was psyched to show me the line and we teamed up for 5 days in October 2020 to try and free the route. 

We spent 2 days getting ropes fixed from the ground up thru the crux on pitch 12. Karl took a rest day and I worked the route all the way through the crux on day 3 removing our fixed ropes on the way down. After a rest day we set off to try and send the route from bottom to top. It was my last day before heading to Yosemite so our fingers were crossed that it would come together.

Ultimately I managed to free the entire route in about 13 hours. Karl and I climbed in blocks and he graciously offered to let me lead each crux pitch. He walked away having done every move but without sending the crux from anchor to anchor. It was one of the best days of climbing I’ve ever had, and one of the best routes I’ve ever climbed. Karl is a wonderful partner and one of the nicest guys you’ll ever meet. He and Brandon have put dozens (maybe hundreds?) of days into developing high quality routes in Kolob Canyon and I’m thankful they allowed me to play a small part in their story.

P1- (11+) look for two bolts in dark rock off the ground. Make some tricky moves to the roof that leads you left to another bolt in a left facing corner. Switch cracks into a right facing corner near a bush. Climb to a bolted belay. 40 meters

P2- (12b) Start up the right facing corner until you can step right to 2 bolts. Climb up into a STEEP left facing corner. Use some stemming wizardry and bouldering power to get out of the corner and make some tenuous slab moves to your right. 30 meters

P3- (11c) climb the left facing corner above then escape right out of the roof onto a cryptic Zion slab. 15 meters.

P4- (10d) continue following bolts up and right until you  clip the last bolt at a funky step across move to the left. Follow the large corner up to a bolted belay on top of a massive pillar. (Potential sloping bivy). 35 meters

P5- 11d climb up into the roof and then follow the difficult shallow corner with a less than tips crack. 15 meters

P6- 11a “The Sportwidth” start up the obvious wide crack above. If you lack OW technique you might be luck if you have strong fingers. After finishing the wide navigate the funky roof overhead, step right to a bolt and continue up a flare to a set of anchors on the left wall. 35 meters

P7- 11a “The Flare” step right off the belay and navigate some funky terrain to a flared roof feature. Clip a bolt then continue up the massive corner above. Keep an eye out for anchors on a ledge on the right wall. There is a bolt protecting the traverse. 35 meters

P8- 10d “The Gills” step right off the belay clip a bolt and head up the crack above. Switch to the right crack near a roof and continue up the splitter until a bolted belay. 30m

P9- 11a climb up the burly corner until you get to the wild flake feature heading left. Do not continue up the main corner. Clip a bolt at the top of the flake and belay at a small stance.

P10- 12a climb up and over the roof following a thin splitter which slowly opens up to hands. After about 80 feet look for bolts traversing right on an INSANE patina face. 35m

P11- 11b climb up the striking right facing corner to a massive bivy ledge. 3 people could easily sleep here. 30m

P12- 13a or 10d A0 “Condor Corner” move the belay left to the obvious line of bolts. (You may have to link the first 2 bolts to build a belay here). Climb some incredible techy stemming moves up to a burly boulder problem crux. There’s a good stance here to enjoy the incredible position you’re in before continuing to the belay. One bolt belay. Bring a 1”-2” piece for the anchor.

P13- 12c “The Twister” climb up the left facing corner until you get to a steep bolted section. Try and sneak a rest at the lip of the roof and then tackle a boulder problem on amazing patina. The position in this pitch is once again, incredible. Continue following bolts up and left to a bolted belay.

P14- 11a climb up the wildly overhanging cracks above. Follow cracks up and slightly right then take a left leaning over hanging corner until it curves back right to a bolted belay. 35 m

P15- 11c climb the right facing corner to a ledge. Follow two bolts up a devious slab sequence which guards the summit. Continue to bolted anchors on the summit of Tucupit!

Descent: a 70 meter rope will do the whole route. Tie knots and use back-ups!!! Some of these raps are extremely tight on one rope and some require traversing to get into the anchor. An 80m wouldn’t be a bad idea.

Start rapping from the top. Go to the anchors on top of P13 and rap straight down instead of trying to traverse to the route. Find a rappel anchor left of the condor corner and make a tricky rap back over to the bivy below condor corner. Rap the route from here until you are back on the pillar at the top of P4. Head down the climbers right side of the pillar and hit the anchors on top of P3. From here it’s 2 35m raps straight down to the ground.

Location

Hike about ten more minutes passed the approach trail for Tucupit Occidentalis. When the drainage starts to narrow and you’re under the north side of Tucupit look for a drainage heading up on your right. Eventually escape this drainage and hike up hill to the base of the wall. Head right and after going down a hill look for the bolts marking the start of P1.

Protection

Nuts, Doubles purple C3-#1 C4, singles 2, 3, 4, 5

Photos [Hide ALL Photos]

Karl soaking up the exposure at the end of "The Twister" pitch
[Hide Photo] Karl soaking up the exposure at the end of "The Twister" pitch
Karl coming out the Wild Flake on P9
[Hide Photo] Karl coming out the Wild Flake on P9
The Abbreviated Passage links P1 of Pain Chamber into the top of P4 of Skeleton Key skipping a bulk of the hard climbing and the sandiest rock on the route. This makes the best way to climb it at 5.12a A0.
[Hide Photo] The Abbreviated Passage links P1 of Pain Chamber into the top of P4 of Skeleton Key skipping a bulk of the hard climbing and the sandiest rock on the route. This makes the best way to climb it at 5…
Karl negotiating the roof on "The Sportwidth" pitch
[Hide Photo] Karl negotiating the roof on "The Sportwidth" pitch
Karl all smiles on the incredible Patina finish to P10
[Hide Photo] Karl all smiles on the incredible Patina finish to P10
In the crux on the Condor Corner
[Hide Photo] In the crux on the Condor Corner
Rough overlay.
[Hide Photo] Rough overlay.
Charlie Malone at the anchor above the flake pitch (p9)
[Hide Photo] Charlie Malone at the anchor above the flake pitch (p9)
Karl on the FA of crux twelve pitch.
[Hide Photo] Karl on the FA of crux twelve pitch.
Sunset at the ledge atop p11
[Hide Photo] Sunset at the ledge atop p11
Looking down the upper portion of "The Flare" pitch.
[Hide Photo] Looking down the upper portion of "The Flare" pitch.

Comments [Hide ALL Comments]

Brandon Gottung
CO Western Slope
 
[Hide Comment] Karl and I established this line in a multi-year effort, starting in 2015 and finally enjoying the finished route in 2018. According to my notes, we spent 26 days on the route together, which doesn't include a few solo outings and many days of hauling gear and water.

My assessment of the grades and length of the route differ from Aaron's. I would say he over-rated the easier pitches, under-rated the harder pitches and slighted the totalled length of the climb. Here's what I have in my notes: P1 5.11c, P2 5.12c, P3 5.12a, P4 5.11a, P5 5.11d, P6 5.10b, P7 5.10c, P8 5.11b, P9 5.11a, P10 5.12a, P11 5.11b, P12 hard, P13 hard, P14 5.10c, P15 5.11. The route is about 1500' up a 1300' wall due to the many traverses.

A really good way to climb this route is to skip the first 3.5 pitches via the 1st pitch of the Pain Chamber and take that pitch to the bottom of P5 (5.11a A0). This makes the route very approachable at 5.12a A0, 12 pitches. The logistical concern with this is that the access is from the west face and the descent ends on the north face. Because of this, I recommend climbing with packs through the access pitch. See photo of Abbreviated Passage for a visual. Apr 26, 2021
Aaron Livingston
Ouray, CO
  5.13a
[Hide Comment] While Brandon’s suggestion can help skip a few pitches I’d like to note that it entails sketchy raps off of suspect shrubs and takes you to a stretch of very difficult slab or mandatory aid (not sure which, I couldn’t free it) on a bolt ladder. If you can climb 511 and have some halfway decent aiding skills then you’ll have no trouble at all making your way thru the lower pitches. You also might burn a huge chunk of your day simply trying to find the bypass. And you’ll miss out on some of the best climbing on the route. Just my 2 cents. May 12, 2021
[Hide Comment] Sweet route!! Many thanks to the developers for establishing an awesome and safe route in such a rad spot. Suggested rack is spot on. Massive” bivy ledge on the top of pitch 11 is a pretty bad bivy for 2, sweet hang/spot to work the crux though. Would recommend bringing a ledge if you plan on sleeping there. May 26, 2022
Aaron Livingston
Ouray, CO
  5.13a
[Hide Comment] Randy is probably right. The bivy is spacious but not overall flat. Sorry for the misleading description. Myself and (I believe) the FA team, never actually slept there. A portaledge would certainly make it more comfortable. May 26, 2022
Luke Antonia
Colorado Springs
[Hide Comment] 5/21/22: The first pitch was wicked fun! Really technical and precise. P5 above the first ledge was sweet! Balancy on sloped feet and tricky to decipher as the crack narrows. Pitch 9 was probably my favorite pitch (I led odds and jugged most my follows). So cool! Very Indian creek like and plenty of variation. The flare was fun and you get your first bit of exposure there and really get your dose on the twister pitch. Such neat patina edges (reminds me of kindergarten rock at garden of the gods) I just keep going on and on. This route is great! Very well bolted, thank you Karl and Brandon! We brought a portaledge and slept two nights (one on the ledge above p4 and next on the ledge above p11). As mentioned in Aaron and Randy’s comments (Randy Ranchero is a pretty fucking cool name by the way) probably best to bring a portaledge even with there being a “Massive” ledge on route (haha just busting your balls, Aaron). Definitely doable without one though. Jun 18, 2022
Cole Lawrence
Salt Lake City, UT
[Hide Comment] Can anyone offer the sun/shade hours for this time of year (September) the general Kolob Canyon Iphone weather is suggesting 80 degrees here the days we hope to climb. Sep 22, 2022
Aaron Livingston
Ouray, CO
  5.13a
[Hide Comment] When we did it in October we only saw sun on the last pitch for the last hour or so of daylight. I would just say plan on shade for most of the route. You should only see sunlight the last bit of the day before sunset. Sep 22, 2022
Max Tepfer
Bend, OR
 
[Hide Comment] We had a really fun adventure climbing this route over three days. While it's a cool line in a really beautiful setting and a worthy objective to aspire to, I'm not sure I'd describe it as particularly classic. Finding the line, equipping it, and freeing it are all super proud accomplishments, (strong work Karl, Brandon, and Aaron) but if you're looking for all time climbing on good rock, my .02 would be to look elsewhere. The route has frequent sections with soft rock and/or brittle holds throughout most pitches, but the last two pitches stand out as the worst on the route by an order of magnitude. My partner's words after climbing them (who onsighted them after freeing every other pitch first or second try) were 'I never want to climb anything like that again. Ever.' The climbing was dirty, sandy, uninspiring, and had generally terrible rock quality.

Regardless of the above, the posted beta is generally quite good. We brought the recommended rack and it was perfect. We also brought an 80 and it made the raps super cruiser. One addition, if you're free climbing, is a soft haired brush. We had to re-clean many of the holds for free climbing and our one brush got a lot of mileage. One other add you could consider is a belay seat. The top of pitches 1, 6, 8, and 9 all merit one and it could be kinda nice for 12 too. We had sun starting around 4-5 in late April/early May. May 3, 2024
Karl Kvashay
Northeast PA
 
[Hide Comment] I might have waited for Aaron to respond in regard to Max’s comments before putting my two cents in, but in his absence, and realizing that I haven’t yet offered my opinion on the route, here goes! The Skeleton Key would likely have fallen into obscurity had Aaron not took interest in the project, made the FFA, and subsequently posted it here on MP. (BTW I’m totally fine with him sharing the route, and I think it’s great more people have been experiencing it)

For me, the exploration of this line started in 2015. By 2018 the route was fully equipped and I freed all but a few moves on pitches 12&13. I could have dedicated more time to possibly making a free ascent, but to be honest, I was more interested in doing new routes than hammering away at this one project, so it stood. Luckily Aaron stepped in and got it done, rest in peace Brother.

Looking back, I remember agreeing with Brandon that this climb really didn’t have a ‘money pitch’. What it did have was pitch after pitch of varied challenges, a whole lot of moderate climbing interspersed with really engaging cruxes on pretty good (sometimes great) rock. Sure, there are plenty of hollow features, stuff that’s sounds off when you knock on it, but you can use it just fine. (I guess over time some of these holds may break…or wear away… how exciting!!)We put bolts near these places to avoid the temptation of placing gear which might well break the rock if loaded. I can imagine after a couple years idle it needed a good scrubbing, and I’m sure if any more parties make it up there they will be thanking you Max! I can also imagine for a solid 5.13 climber this route could feel a bit disappointing, unless perhaps you were going for an in a day onsight or something like that….I’m kind of surprised how you guys found the last two pitches! I don’t remember the rock quality diminishing so radically… this was my baby though, I had it wired. Don’t let any of this dissuade you!! If you’re psyched go have an adventure, and as always, buyers beware! May 4, 2024