Stolen Chimney (Fisher Towers)

Stolen Chimney

The Stolen Chimney route on Ancient Art Tower, Fisher Towers near Moab, Utah.
Location Moab, Utah, USA
Coordinates 38°43′18″N 109°18′14″W / 38.7216°N 109.3040°W / 38.7216; -109.3040
Climbing Area Ancient Arts, Fisher Towers
Route Type Trad
Vertical Gain 500 feet (150 m)
Pitches 5
Rating 5.10d or 5.8 & A0
Grade II
First ascent Bill Roos & Paul Sibley, 1969.

The Stolen Chimney is a traditional rock climbing route located on the Ancient Arts tower one of the Fisher Towers. This is the most common route to ascend the cork screw summit of the tower. The cork screw summit is the western most summit of the Ancient Arts tower but it is not the tallest. The summit is noteworthy for its extremely unusually shape which makes climbing the technically different from most other climbs. The unusual shape also makes it visually striking. Photographs of the cork screw summit have been extensively published in many settings including mainstream advertisements.[1][2][3]

The name of this route, Stolen Chimney, is often confused with the name of the tower it is on, Ancient Arts, and the name of the summit, the cork screw summit. This is likely because this is by far the most popular climb on Ancient Arts and is predominantly known for the cork screw summit.

References

  1. Desert Towers Select by Dougald McDonald and Chris McNamara, Supertopo LLC, 2002.
  2. Desert Rock III by Eric Bjornstad, Chockstone, Falcon, Helena, MO, 1999; ISBN 1-56044-754-0.
  3. Classic Desert Climbs second edition, by Fred Knapp Sharp End Publishing, 2002; ISBN 1-892540-17-7.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 2/12/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.