West Buttress (South Howser Tower)

West Buttress of South Howser Tower
Topo digram of the route.
LocationSelkirk Range, British Columbia, Canada
RangePurcell Mountains, East Kootenay
Climbing areaBugaboos
Route typeTraditional climbing, Alpine climbing
Vertical gain750-metre (2,460 ft)
Pitches17 to 22[1]
Rating5.8 (5b) & A2 (aided) / 5.10 (1) (free)
GradeV
First ascentFred Beckey & Yvon Chouinard (August 1961)

The West Buttress of South Howser Tower is a circa 17 pitch 750-metre (2,460 ft) alpine-climbing traditional-climbing route, in The Bugaboos range of the Purcell Mountains of British Columbia in Canada. The route is considered to be one the finest alpine climbing routes in North America, and akin to a big wall climbing rock climbing route.

Access

Although the climb almost entirely on granite rock, glacier travel is necessary to access it and descend via the normal rappels on the north face. Access is typically from the Conrad Kain Hut, requiring several hours of glacier travel, and includes steep slopes on snow or ice. A fast party can climb the route in a day, but quite typically the large sandy ledges about halfway up are utilized for a bivouac. Above the ledges rises the Great White Headwall, which provides the crux of the route. The route is typified by crack and dihedral climbing, and has good tradition climbing protection for nuts and cams; there are no bolted anchors. The route is included in the historic climbing book Fifty Classic Climbs of North America.[2]

History

After the first climb by Fred Beckey and Yvon Chouinard in August 1961, the route saw little traffic, since climbers of the era preferred to establish new routes to repeating the known ones. This started to change in the late 1960s as the ascents began using less aids. The now-eponymous Beckey/Chouinard route, however, remained in the aid climbing domain for 14 years, as its 5.10 difficulty surpassed the 5.9 free climbing maximum of the time. After the late 1970s, the renown of both the Beckey/Chouinard and The Bugaboos grew, transforming the area into an international summer climbing destination.[3]

Notable Ascents

  • July 1970 (Second ascent): Completed by R. Breeze and J. Home.[3]
  • 1975 (First free ascent): Achieved by Yosemite climbers Tobin Sorenson and Rick Accomazo, who managed to overcome the route's 5.10 crux.[3]

See also

References

  1. ^ Beckey 2013, p. 310.
  2. ^ Roper, Steve; Steck, Allen (1979). Fifty Classic Climbs of North America. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books. pp. 60–64. ISBN 0-87156-292-8.
  3. ^ a b c Pullan 2016, p. 74.

Further reading