Salathé Wall
Salathé Wall | |
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Location | California, USA |
Coordinates | 37°44′02.4″N 119°38′13.2″W / 37.734000°N 119.637000°W |
Climbing area | Yosemite Valley |
Route type | Aid climbing, Free climbing |
Vertical gain | 2,900 ft (884 m) |
Pitches | 35 |
Rating | 5.13b (free) or 5.9 C2 (aid) |
Grade | VI |
First ascent | Royal Robbins, Tom Frost, and Chuck Pratt, 1961 |
First free ascent |
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The Salathé Wall is one of the original big wall climbing routes up El Capitan, a 3,000-foot (900 m) high granite monolith in Yosemite National Park. The Salathé Wall was named by Yvon Chouinard in honor of John Salathé, a pioneer of rock climbing in Yosemite. The route is recognized in the historic climbing text Fifty Classic Climbs of North America and is considered a classic around the world.[1][2]
Climbing history
[edit]First ascents
[edit]The first ascent was in 1961 by Royal Robbins, Tom Frost, and Chuck Pratt. After climbing about a quarter of the route, they retreated to re-supply, leaving four fixed ropes in place. Quickly returning, they jumared back up the ropes and totally committed to climbing the upper wall in a single push, which they did in 6 days using only 15 bolts total. The route was about 25% free climbing with sections of run-out at grade 5.9, and the rest being aid climbing which was also difficult at grade A4. A year later, Robbins and Frost returned and did the route in a single push from the bottom.
In 1972, Peter Haan became the first to aid climb the route alone as a rope solo, using pitons for aid and protection. It was his first big wall climb.
First free ascents
[edit]In 1975, Kevin Worral and Mike Graham, starting from the Nose route, traversed left a bit to join this route and free climbed pitches 4 through 10 of Salathe Wall Route up to Mammoth Terraces, adding three pitches of 5.11. A little later, John Long, and John Bachar free climbed pitch three (5.11b) making all 10 pitches free.[3] These ten free pitches, often free climbed as a standalone multi-pitch climbing route in its own right, are known as Freeblast (5.11c).[4]
In 1979, Mark Hudon and Max Jones, climbing from the ground up, led all but 250 feet of the route free, adding three pitches of 5.12 and 5 or 6 of 5.11.[4][5]
In 1988, Todd Skinner and Paul Piana made the first free ascent by free climbing all the sections (each climber free climbed only about half of the route, with 2 hanging belays for resting) during a nine-day push, after thirty days of working the route, and gave it a grade of 5.13c.[4] The Salathe Wall was the first major route on El Capitan to be fully free climbed, and was the first-ever free ascent of a big wall route in history at the grade of 5.13b (8a).[5][6]
In 1995, Alexander Huber became the first individual to free climb all the individual pitches, leading every pitch free himself in a single push (with one hanging belay for a rest), and using an easier variation at one of the cruxes and assigned a grade of 5.13b.[4][5][7][8]
In 2005, Steph Davis made the first female free ascent, with the grade at 5.13b.[4][9]
References
[edit]- ^ Roper, Steve; Steck, Allen (1979). Fifty Classic Climbs of North America. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books. pp. 269–275. ISBN 0-87156-292-8.
- ^ McNamara, Chris, and Sloan, Erik. Yosemite Big Walls. Mill Valley, CA: SuperTopo, 2005. ISBN 0-9672391-9-2
- ^ Reid, Don (1998). Yosemite Free Climbs. Falcon Press. p. 359. ISBN 0-934641-59-5.
- ^ a b c d e "El Cap Free Timeline". Rock & Ice. 19 November 2018. Retrieved 20 July 2023.
- ^ a b c Wilson, Ken (27 August 2003). "Yosemite - Land of freedom". British Mountaineering Council. Retrieved 18 July 2023.
- ^ Samet, Matt; Steve Bechtel (November 2006). "Loss of a Legend". Climbing Magazine. Primedia. Retrieved 2007-03-27. [dead link ]
- ^ "El Capitan Freerider: Alexander Huber Yosemite masterpiece celebrates 20th anniversary". PlanetMountain. 5 October 2018. Retrieved 16 December 2022.
- ^ Huber, Alexander (1996). "Freeing the Salathe, the greatest rock climb in the world". American Alpine Journal. 38 (70): 69–70. Retrieved 16 December 2022.
- ^ Noble, Chris (2013), Women Who Dare: North America's Most Inspiring Women Climbers, Falcon Guides, Globe Pequot, p. 27, ISBN 9780762783717.