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Immediately above the blocky chimney, we arrived at what one would normally consider the start of the technical stuff - a roughly 20-foot high smooth slope of slickrock next to a wall on one side, and next to open air on the other. There are small steps carved into this slope, greatly easing the difficulty, but the exposure is still there. Last year we got out the ropes and fully belayed this section, but then later did not bother to use ropes on the way down. As it turns out, the steps (often referred to as 'moqui steps') are quite positive and there are plentiful handholds. With a bit of care, this bit of exposed easy 4th-class scrambling is quite doable unroped. Which is what all of today's climbing party elected to do.
courtesy RHanel
courtesy PChen
Shallow Chimney
Moqui Steps
Climbing the steps
courtesy RHanel
Steps section
Steps section
Scrambling ever higher
Skipping a rope-up exercise for the first obstacle gained us yet more "efficient-time" credits, and we were soon making our way along the alternately-hiking / alternately-easy-scrambling bit above the moqui steps. In addition to the faint path from other climbers' footsteps, there were occasional faded but large yellow paint markers on the rock - back from when this used to be an official trail.

Generally speaking, the route traversed left (to the south) for a bit, scrambled up a few steep and blocky sections, then resumed travel on a faint path across another earthy slope dotted with trees - all the while angling back and forth upwards towards the next (much larger) cliff band.
courtesy BConnell
Scrambling ever higher
Airy Point
Stopped for a breather
courtesy RHanel
Scrubby Band
Forested Slope
Decent little path
Twenty minutes' worth of herdpath hiking and easy scrambling brought us to the base of the next obstacle - a steep scrambling route straight up to the base of large cliffs. The base of this scrambling route is the hardest part of this segment - a trickly little step with some mostly-worn off moqui steps. If one can get past the first five feet, the rest of the climbing is easy. I went first this time around (Roland did last year), and from the top (maybe 20 feet higher) dropped down a handline to whoever needed or wanted it for assistance.
courtesy JInnes
courtesy PChen
Pre-Chimney trickiness
Top of tricky bit
Pro climbing move
courtesy RHanel
courtesy JInnes
courtesy PChen
Searching for a way
Waiting above
Hand line setup
After the tricky step, a steep ramp with easy climbing led up and around to the base of the crux of the entire ascent - a 25-foot climb up a big chimney that had formed between the main mass of the mountain and a huge detached chunk. The first part of the climb is the trickiest and most exposed. From our experience last year, though, I estimate that the actual climbing difficulty is no more than a low 5.x (maybe 5.2) on the Yosemite Decimal System climbing scale.
courtesy RHanel
Steep Ramp
Main Chimney in sight
Break before the Chimney
Despite the relatively easy grade, we still felt this bit of the climb warranted the rope, so we got out the rest of our climbing gear in prep for a belayed climb. I did the honors this year and led the chimney, with Caroline giving me a belay. And, just as I remembered from last year, it wasn't all that hard. Even so, I put in a cam and a nut (always good to practice), then set up the top belay from the huge eyebolt that is anchored into the rock up near the top of the chimney.
courtesy BConnell
courtesy JInnes
courtesy JInnes
The Chimney
Climbing the Chimney
Caroline Follows
courtesy BConnell
View from above
Jenn's turn
Jenn from above
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[ Return to "The Checklist Edition" Home page | Introduction | Day 1 : South Kaibab to Clear Creek Trail | Day 2 : Clear Creek Tr to Cottonwood Camp | Day 3 : Cottonwood Camp to North Rim | The North Rim | Drive to Zion | Lady Mountain Redux | The Subway | Angel's Landing | Zion in Flood | Valley of Fire | Wind-up and Return | The "Short Report" | GPS Data ]


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