Owen-Spalding route
Climbing route From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Owen-Spalding route is a rock climbing route on Grand Teton (13,775 feet (4,199 m)), the highest peak in the Teton Range[2] in Grand Teton National Park in the U.S. state of Wyoming.
Owen-Spalding route | |
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Location | Grand Teton, Wyoming, U.S. |
Coordinates | 43°44′28″N 110°48′09″W[1] |
Climbing area | Teton Range |
Route type | Alpine |
Vertical gain | 2,175 ft (663 m) |
Pitches | 1 |
Rating | 5.4 |
Grade | III |
First ascent | William O. Owen, Franklin Spalding, Frank Peterson, and John Shive |
First free ascent | August 11, 1898 |
History
It was pioneered by William O. Owen, Franklin Spalding, Frank Peterson, and John Shive on August 11, 1898, during the mountain's first ascent.[3] While Owen, who had made previous attempts in 1891 and 1897, organized the 1898 effort Spalding was the more experienced mountaineer and first on the summit.[3]
Description
The Owen-Spalding route begins at the lower saddle (11,600 ft (3,500 m)+), a high mountain pass between the Grand and Middle Teton peaks. Scrambling and sections of modest difficulty climbing leads to the upper saddle, with a sub-peak known as The Enclosure (13,300 ft (4,100 m)+) to the west and the west wall of Grand Teton to the east. From the Upper Saddle ropes are usually used by novices traversing exposed 2,000-foot (610 m) cliffs along the west flank, but the section is generally considered non-technical. Features such as the "Belly Roll" and "The Crawl", where climbers usually straddle a rock fin for several yards, lead to the Double Chimney. The chimneys, the most complex section of the climb and oftentimes icy, yield to a steep scramble to the summit. The descent may be down-climbed or rappeled using several fixed anchors.[4]
References
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