Type: | Sport, 90 ft (27 m) |
FA: | unknown |
Page Views: | 0 total · 0/month |
Shared By: | Michael Russo on Jun 20, 2025 |
Admins: | Mike Howard, Jason Halladay, Mike Hoskins, Anna Brown |
According to Jan Studebaker: "The property line mountainproject.com/v/new_m… runs from approximately the current east corner by the access gate in a straight line over the top of South Rock to the top middle of the Chicken Heads/Mosaic Wall mount, and from there west down the mount slope to the meadow just south of the Alley climbs. Some of the most popular routes are completely on private property. There are survey markers on the top of South rock (the mysterious aluminum stake stuck in the rock) and on top of the Mosaic rock (most of the time buried in water in a pot hole.)"
An online Tres Piedras Route Guide lamountaineers.org/Tres_Pie… from LA Mountaineers has been updated with the latest access information, and should be read by all Tres Piedras climbers. Group climb leaders, and Climbing Directors (future or past) should take particular note.
The landowner requests NO fires, no trash, no chalk and "please close any gates". Basically, be a good steward of the land.
In order to nurture greater landowner acceptance of climbers, participants of group climbs are requested to organize quick clean up activities before leaving the area; this should include the climbing area as well as the access roads (trip leaders could supply plastic grocery bags). Small parties should practice "leave no trace" principles.
Seasonal Raptor Nesting:
This climbing area is shared with raptors that nest on the cliffs. Help us maintain access and please avoid climbing near active nests/ledges that raptors are using. If a raptor is disturbed during nesting season it may exhibit aggressive defensive behaviors like vocalizing or dive-bombing. If you witness this behavior, retreat from your climb immediately and find a location on a different formation or a different part of the wall far enough away from the raptors that they are no longer noticeably agitated. If they remain agitated, then please leave the area immediately.
Raptor awareness is especially important during nesting season from mid-February to late May but needs to be considered through the end of August. Please report disturbed and/or nesting raptors to the Carson National Forest the appropriate district office (see below) and share relevant information here on MP. Human-raptor encounters can have negative impacts for the birds and climbers in the area. The Cason NF wants to maintain climbing access while protecting raptor reproduction and relies on climbers to recreate responsibly and share information in order to avoid the need for formal raptor closures.
Questa Ranger District
(575) 586-0520
Camino Real (Comales Canyon) Ranger District
(575) 587-2255
Tres Piedras Ranger District
(575) 758-8678
El Rito Ranger District
(575) 581-4554
Description
Adding for completeness, as the route was not on Mountain Project or red-tagged. Climbed without knowledge of grade or protection. If anyone has any information about the name, consensus grade, FA, etc. please inform so that the route can be updated.
This is a really fun route with a powerful and violent crux that then engages with defiant slab that guards the chains.
Start on large holds and moderate climbing through two bolts, the second left of a left facing flake/corner. Gain a ledge and continue up through two more bolts of moderate climbing to a section of some thoughtful movement to gain a right-trending diagonal crack. Move up to jugs and clip a bolt. This is the start of the crux. Decipher the correct feet and bring the biceps to move through the powerful crux to a jug. Don't celebrate too soon, as marginal feet, bad hands, and tension-intensive moves demand your precision to get through the next three bolts to the anchors.
Great climb that makes you trust your rubber and yourself.
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