A blog about hiking.

I just love it. So, I created this blog to record and share the numerous adventures I've had the joy of undertaking, most often alongside my two favorite climbing partners, Sherpa Jonnie and Lhotse the Adventure Dog.





Sep 21, 2010

Selaginella, Yosemite National Park

Class: 5.8, Trad

Height of route: Approx 550’

What it is:

Pitch 1: 5.8, 160 feet. Move up the easy and enjoyable cracks heading up and towards the dihedral. Climb the dihedral and surmount a dead snag remnant. Belay on a huge ledge on the left just above the snag. Gear belay.

Pitch 2: 5.8, 100 feet. Move up the cracks toward a right-facing dihedral. Just above this initial dihedral, look for an easy escape left via low angle ramp system. Head left and up and belay at highest tree (gear).

Pitch 3: 5.8, 120 feet. Surmount some flakes just above belay on right and enter a low angle groove/chimney. Re-enter another right-facing dihedral and exit onto a small ledge on left. Clip a new bolt (and/or piton) and step left (crux of route?) onto a large, sloping ledge with embedded "crystals". Gear belay.

Pitch 4: 5.8, 160 feet. Move up the obvious right-facing dihedral with a hand crack. Continue up a series of intermittent small dihedrals with thin cracks. Eventually reach a narrow ledge. Traverse left to a 15 foot flake. Move up the flake and pull onto the rim (there's a Manzanita tree/bush there, and awesome views)

Descent:

From top of route, hike directly uphill for ~150 feet until you reach the obvious Yosemite Falls Trail. Hike the trail left till it brings you down to Camp 4 in about a mile. Hike park road back to your car.

What you need to bring: Your basic rack, rope, chalk, and some tape for your sad knuckles.

What you want to bring: Sunblock! Most of the route isn’t shaded unless you climb in the late afternoon.

How to get there: Either climb one of a dozen or so routes to reach the top of the lower tier of Five Open Books cliffs (i.e. Hanging Teeth). Follow the obvious climbers' path that connects the two. Look for nice cracks formed by flakes trending left towards the huge right-facing dihedral.

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