Yosemite Cragging and Hiking: Arch Rock, Church Bowl, Cookie Cliff, El Capitan Base, Middle Cathedral Rock Base, Pat & Jack Pinnacle, Public Sanitation Wall, Reed’s Pinnacle, Yosemite Falls, Glacier Point

Yosemite Cragging & Hiking

Routes:

Cragging:
- Arch Rock
- Church Bowl
- Cookie Cliff
- El Capitan Base
- Middle Cathedral Rock Base
- Pat & Jack Pinnacle
- Public Sanitation Wall
- Reed's Pinnacle

Hiking:
- Yosemite Falls
- Glacier Point via Four Mile Trail

Region: California
Elev: 3000-7000 ft
Rock: Granite
Mode: 
Date(s): 2007(x2 days), 2017(x1 day), 2018(x2 days), 2024(x2 days), 2025(x9 days)
Partner(s): various

I come to Yosemite for the big multipitch routes, but there are plenty of cragging opportunities for short days or power-building sessions.

On this page, I’ve gathered photos from my days cragging at various locations around Yosemite. Some of these are drawn from older trip reports so that all my cragging days are collected in one place. At the bottom of the page, I’ve included a list of the climbs I’ve done in these areas.

I've also included a few random day hikes I've done on non-climbing days in the Valley.

Yosemite Cragging Areas I've Cragged At

CLICK THE DROP DOWN TO SEE PHOTOS FROM EACH AREA

Photos

SOME RANDOM PHOTOS FROM CRAGGING AT Arch Rock


More climbing fun!
More climbing fun!
Date: June 6, 2007 (Wed)
Partner: Ross Peritore
Climbed at: Arch Rock
Routes (ordered by grade): 
• Gripper 5.10b, 300'
• New Dimensions 5.11a, 400'
The following is taken from my Yosemite 2007 trip report.
For our second day at Yosemite, we decided to get some practice on wide cracks, since we had ambitions for the Salahe route on El Cap, which has a lot of wide crack. We drove over to Arch Rock at the end of the Valley and climbed Gripper (3 pitches, 5.10b) and New Dimensions (4 pitches, 5.11a).

Photos

Arch Rock – Gripper and New Dimensions are on the right side.
Steph climbing up the first wide crack pitch of Gripper.
Ross leading up New Dimensions – wide and funky.
Steph stuck on New Dimensions – wide cracks aren’t exactly my forte!
Ross on the exposed upper pitch of New Dimensions before beginning up yet another wide crack.

Photos

SOME RANDOM PHOTOS FROM CRAGGING AT Church Bowl


More climbing fun!
More climbing fun!
Date: June 20, 2018 (Wed)
Partner: Val Trenev
Climbed at: Church Bowl
Routes (ordered by grade): 
• Bishop's Terrace 5.8
• Church Bowl Lieback 5.8
• Pole Position 5.10a
The following is taken from my Yosemite 2018 trip report.
Valley's most accessible crag for modeate routes. A great place to squeeze in a few evening pitches on a hot day. 3 routes.

Photos

Photos:  Photo descriptions: 
Approach 
~1 min from road, near Majestic Yosemite Hotel

Route 1: Bishop's Terrace
5.8, 1p, 195'
1.  
2.  
1-2. Val nearing the top of the Bishops Terrace route. The route can be done as two pitches, but the 195' lead from the ground makes for a long amazing pitch of sustained 5.8 crack climbing. Bishop's Terrace is known to be one of the best 5.8 pitches in the Valley, and I would not disagree.
Route 2: Church Bowl Lieback
5.8, 1p, 130'
3.  
  
3. Church Bowl Lieback is a popular 5.8. Featuring liebacking of course.
Route 3: Pole Position
5.10a, 1p, 130' 4.   4. Pole Position follows the bolted face on the right, one of the few pure sport routes in the Valley. We toproped it, but it would probably seem a bit runnout on lead. Not my favorite route of the day.

  

To cap off a day of craging....
meadow across the road from Church Bowl 5.
5. After our few pitches of evening cragging, we capped off the day in the meadow across the road from Church Bowl. A five star restaurant could not have beat my salmon-feta cheese salad while watching the light of the setting sun rise up the face of Half Dome.

Photos

SOME RANDOM PHOTOS FROM CRAGGING AT Cookie Cliff


More climbing fun!
More climbing fun!
Date: May 31 & June 2&6, 2025 (Sat, Mon, Fri)
Partner: Rob Dillon
Climbed at: Cookie Cliff
Routes (ordered by grade): 
• Beverly's Tower 5.10a
• Outer Limits 5.10c
• Catchy 5.10d
• Catchy Corner 5.11a
• Crack-a-Go-Go 5.11c
The following is taken from my Yosemite June 2025 trip report.
The mosquito population had seemed to explode in Tuolumne in the few days we had been there, plus Rob's friends Nick and John were in the Valley, so we headed to the sultry Valley for a bit.

May 31: On Saturday afternoon, we went cragging at The Cookie. The Cookie is a classic Yosemite crack area. It contains some of the world's best crack climbs. It was 90 degrees and the Cookie does not go into the shade until mid-afternoon, so we headed up around 3:30pm and climbed for a few hours. We had dunked ourselves in the Merced River before the hike up. I led the first two pitches of Outer Limits (5.10c, 3p) as a 40m megapitch (I almost greased off at the top from sweat, but managed to hang on and get the onsight). We had an 80m rope, so from that anchor we toproped Crack-a-Go-Go (5.11c PG13, 1p) (the start is the crux so we made sure to get out all rope stretch for the climber). Rob tred-pointed both pitches. I did a couple of laps of both. Both were excellent.

June 2: We returned a couple of days later for another afternoon session, after cragging that morning at El Cap base. The plan was to link Beverly's Tower (5.10a) and Wheat Thin (5.10c, 1p). Rob would lead the former and I would lead the latter. Rob kept up his end of the deal, leading the super fun Beverly's Tower (5.10a) and I started up Wheat Thin (5.10c) but got squeamish about the punchy flake lieback moves between spaced bolts and bailed. Darn it. It looked like a fun route! By the time we rapped down it was getting late so we decided to call it a day.

June 6: I had a job interview (via Zoom) in the morning, so this made for a good day to return to the Cookie for another late afternoon/evening of cragging. We did a two-pitch link-up of Catchy (5.10d, 1p) to Catchy Corner (5.11a, 1p), two stellar pitches of crack climbing. Rob led the first and I led the latter. Onsights and redpoints all around.

Photos

Crack-a-Go-Go

5.11c PG13, 1p (toprope)

Route Overlay

SOME ROUTES I HAVE CLIMBED AT EL CAP BASE

Photos

SOME RANDOM PHOTOS FROM CRAGGING AT EL CAPITAN BASE


More climbing fun!
More climbing fun!
Date: June 23, 2017 (Fri)
Partner: Lochie
Climbed at: El Capitan Base
Routes (ordered by grade): 
• La Cosita Left 5.7
• La Cosita Right 5.9
• Sacherer Cracker 5.10a
• Moby Dick 5.10
The following is taken from my Yosemite 2017 trip report.
5-star climbing on the base of the most awesome chunk of rock. 4 routes.

Photos

Photos:  Photo descriptions: 
Approach 
Hike trail from El Cap Meadow, ~15 min.

Route 1: La Cosita, Right
5.9, 1p, 90'
1.  
  
  
  
1. The route features a 5.9 lieback/fingercrack.
Route 2: La Costia, Left
5.7, 1p, 60'
2.  
3.
2. Lochie chimneying. There are actually quite a bit of jugs on this route too to keep the climbing at 5.7.
3. Looking down at the route from Sacherer Cracker. The guidebook notes that this route is perhaps the steepest 5.7 in the valley.
Route 3: Sacherer Cracker
5.10a, 1p, 150'
4.  
5.  
6.  
7.  
8.  
 
9.
4. Sacherer Cracker features an excellent, clean widening crack up a steep wall. It starts off as fingers...
5. ...and widens to hands....
6. ...and then fists...
7. ...and then #4 offwidth and then even wider...
8. ...and above the belay a chimney.
9. To avoid the final 15 feet of offwidth which was bigger than #4, I went right onto The Mark of Art (10d, so harder but more protectable) for a bit and then cut back left to the anchor of Sacherer Cracker.
Route 4: Moby Dick
5.10a, 1p, 150'
10.  
11.  
12.
10. The crack begs to be climbed. The route starts with a technical fingercrack and then features a long battle up a widening fist crack. I found the fingercrack easy and the fist crack (offwidth for me) hard.
11. Looking down while climbing the hand/fist crack. You can actually protect it with small cams and pitons on the right, and save the #3s for the widening crack for up higher.
12. I wished for two #4's here...but I got through it and probably my favorite section of the route was the roof move at the top.

More climbing fun!
More climbing fun!
Date: June 17, 2018 (Sun)
Partner: John Plotz
Climbed at: El Capitan Base
Routes (ordered by grade): 
• Pine Line 5.7
• La Cosita Left 5.7
• Little John Left 5.8
• La Cosita Right 5.9
• First 2 pitches of The Nose (twice!), 5.10 C2, 2p
The following is taken from my Yosemite 2018 trip report.
5-star climbing on the base of the most awesome chunk of rock. 8 pitches.

Photos

Photos:  Photo descriptions: 
Approach 
Hike trail from El Cap Meadow, ~15 min.

Route 1: First 2 pitches of The Nose (twice!)

5.9 C2, 2p, 220'
(x2)
1.  
2.  
3.  4.   
5.  
6.  
7.  
   
   
   
  
1. Gearing up for the NIAD.
2. Pitch 1 at 3:18am.
3. Pitch 2 at 4:02 am.
4. Pitch 1 again a few hours later. Getting it dialed.
5. Pitch 1.
6. Pitch 2 again a few hours later.
7. Looking up at Pitch 3 as we rappelled. The climber at the belay is part of a team doing a "Dolt Run."
Route 2: Pine Line
5.7, 1p, 70'
8.
8. Pine Line.
Route 3: La Costia, Left
5.7, 1p, 60' 9. 9. This is a full-value 5.7. Pretty much vertical, but enough jugs to keep the grade down.
Route 4: La Cosita, Right
5.9, 1p, 90'
10.  
  
  
  
10. A nice finger-crack.
Route 5: Little John Left

5.8, 1p, 100' 11. 11. A #4 offwidth finish. Seemed a bit sandbagged. But fun!


More climbing fun!
More climbing fun!
Date: June 2, 2025 (Mon)
Partner: Rob Dillon
Climbed at: El Capitan Base
Routes (ordered by grade): 
• La Cosita Left 5.7
• Mark of Art 5.11a
• Sacherer Cracker 5.10a
The following is taken from my Yosemite June 2025 trip report.
The base of El Capitan is home to numerous cragging classic climbs to cut your teeth on while gazing up at the enormous cliff above. [I had cragged at the base of El Capitan twice before. In 2017: La Cosita Right (5.9, 1p), La Cosita Left (5.7, 1p), Sacherer Cracker (5.10a, 1p), Moby Dick (5.10a, 1p). In 2018: First 2 pitches of The Nose (twice!), Pine Line (5.7, 1p), La Cosita Left (5.7, 1p), La Cosita Right (5.9, 1p), Little John Left (5.8, 1p).]

The daytime temperatures in the Valley were in the high 80's, so we wanted to climb before the sun hit the wall around 11:30am. The plan had been to meet around 7am, but Rob got suckered into breakfast with his friends, so I went on a run and we met at 8:30am. We climbed for a few hours. The goal was to climb Mark of Art (5.11a, 1p), a 150-foot lead to the right of Sacherer Cracker culminating in an incredibly sustained 1-2" corner. We decided to "warm up" on Sacherer Cracker (5.10a, 1p). I brought a #6 for Sacherer Cracker (5.10a, 1p), recalling how I had been uncomfortable in the upper offwidth in 2017. My lead went well until I hit the offwidth, and while the #6 safely protected it, it still necessitated climbing a few offwidth moves above the cam; I wimped out and Rob had to finish the lead (a #7 would have been nice to have to keep myself on toprope) and even on toprope I found the offwidth difficult. After this, we climbed Mark of Art (I led it and then we both toproped it once). By this time the wall was baking in the sun, so we quickly climbed La Cosita Left (5.7, 1p) -- left-facing so still in the shade -- and then hiked out. I drove to the Yosemite Village store to get some ice cream and yogurt.

In the late afternoon we headed to Cookie Cliff for evening session of climbing.

Photos

Approach

2nd

Photos

SOME RANDOM PHOTOS FROM CRAGGING AT Middle Cathedral Rock Base


More climbing fun!
More climbing fun!
Date: October 22, 2024 (Tue)
Partner: Nate Beckwith
Climbed at: Middle Cathedral Rock base
Routes (ordered by grade): 
• Pee Pee Pillar Left 5.7
• Unknown Corner 5.7
• Pee Pee Pillar Right 5.10a
• Unknown Slab 5.11c

Unknown Corner

5.7, 1p

Photos

SOME RANDOM PHOTOS FROM CRAGGING AT Pat & Jack Pinnacle


More climbing fun!
More climbing fun!
Date: June 8, 2025 (Sun)
Partner: Rob Dillon
Climbed at: Pat & Jack Pinnacle
Routes (ordered by grade): 
• The Super Slacker Highway 5.10, 8p
The following is taken from my Yosemite June 2025 trip report.
After climbing the burly Book of Job (5.10b, 6p) the previous day, we felt like some cruiser climbing with short approach. Rob had mentioned The Super Slacker Highway (5.10, 8p) on Pat and Jack Pinnacles, and this sounded like the perfect route for the day. We started up the route at 2:40pm and were back on the ground at 6:40pm. It was a super fun multipitch cragging adventure, with cool knobs and splitter cracks and even a few chimneys. Overlay and photos below.

Route Overlay

Pitch-by-Pitch Photos

Approach

2nd

Pitch 1

5.10b or 5.8, 30m
Climb either Knob Job (5.10b) or Nurdle (5.8) to a bolted anchor. 30m.

Pitch 2

5.9, 20m
Knobs above the belay lead to a crack. Move left onto the face. Good climbing past a variety of face features leads to a bolted anchor. 

Pitch 3

5.10a, 10m
Climb the short face (thin knobs and edges to a mantle) to the right, protected by two bolts. Above is a bolted anchor (rap anchor). Keep going and belay off a tree at the base of the next pitch. 

Pitch 4

5.10a, 30m
Balance through a knobby face to get established at the base of a right-facing finger crack. Jam and stem your way up the toothy crack until possible to pull onto the slab to the left. Delicate face moves lead past a bolt and up into the overhanging sea of juggy plates and knobs. Crank through this steep, but mellow, section to a bolted-anchor. Semi-hanging belay. 

Pitch 5

5.10a, 25m
A steep pull gets you established on the beautiful knobbed face. Fun moves lead up and right to the base of the "Big Fin". Squeeze in and shimmy through the fin to a bolted anchor.

Pitch 6

5.10a, 15m
Step right on sloping feet and thin edges. Latch the lip and press through. A short section of off-balance fingers leads to a bolted anchor on a huge ledge. 

The ledge at the top of P6 puts you in a unique position beneath the Pat and Jack Pinnacles. Each pinnacle is summited via a single pitch off of the ledge. You can either climb, lower and TR each or summit and rap each.

Pitch 7

5.9, 15m
Pat Pinnacle
The pitches to both of the summits climb on the north face (back side) of the pinnacles.

Both pitches share a start. Two options:
a.) Direct Start. Boulder through the short block above the bolted anchor. 5.11a.
b.) Traverse left to the notch between the pinnacles and climb to the ledge. 5.8.

After selecting a start from the above options, move left to the notch between the two pinnacles. Three-dimensional stemming and chimney moves lead to a bolted face on the north side of Pat Pinnacle. Step across onto the sloping face and climb to the summit. Bolted anchor. 

Descent

4 rappels with a single 70
Rap the route with a single 70m rope. The route is easily descended via three 35m raps and one 30m rap.
R1: P8 to P5. 35m.
R2: P5 to P3. 35m.
Scramble down to the bolted anchor at the top of P3.
R3: P3 to P1. 35m.
R4: P1 to ground. 30m.

More climbing fun!
More climbing fun!
Date: June 10, 2025 (Mon)
Partner: Rob Dillon
Climbed at: Pat & Jack Pinnacle
Routes (ordered by grade): 
• Desperate Straights (Pitch 1) 5.10b
• The Tube 5.11a
The following is taken from my Yosemite June 2025 trip report.
Unfortunately, Steck-Salathe did not happen (It was one of those partner situations that didn't feel right—I'll keep it at that). Based on this mountainproject thread posted the following week, I think I dodged a bullet. Disappointed at how things had turned out, I went on a run to Mirror Lake. And texted Rob that I was free for today and the next after all. We made plans to meet up that afternoon and plan out a yet-to-be-determined multipitch route the following day.

After my pleasant morning jog, I did a bit of touristing around and looking at waterfalls and grabbing a free book at the Yosemite library. Earlier in the trip, Rob and I had discussed a route called Bridalveil East (5.10c, 8p), but once I saw Bridalveil Falls and how the wind blows it around, I determined that this is not a good spring route. In the book “Yosemite Epics: Tales of Adventure from America’s Greatest Playground”, Peter Croft has a pretty entertaining story of an epic he and a client had climbing Bridalveil East in the spring.

Later that afternoon, I managed to convince Rob to belay me up The Tube (5.11a, 1p), a sweet-looking left-facing corner at Pat & Jack Pinnacles. The crux required pasting feet on slick rock while pressing the back into the wall and then making a big reach; the rock felt a bit greasy, and my foot popped when I made the reach (85 degrees doesn't make for great friction), but it was a short fall on a small but bomber cam. Even on toprope the crux move felt pretty insecure. After this, I led the first pitch of Desperate Straights (5.10b, 1p), which was fun geometric offwidth and stemming. Then we called it a day and finalized our multipitch plans for the following day. Thanks Rob for the late afternoon belays!

Photos

Photos

SOME RANDOM PHOTOS FROM CRAGGING AT PUBLIC SANITATION WALL


More climbing fun!
More climbing fun!
Date: October 19, 2024 (Sat)
Partner: Nate Beckwith
Climbed at: Public Sanitation Wall
Routes (ordered by grade): 
• Sanitary Engineer 5.10c, toprope
• Afterburner 5.11c, sport
• Unknown But Super Fun 5.11c, sport
In the latter half of 2024, I made the decision to quit my job and enroll in a 6-month coding bootcamp, with hopes of upgrading my skills and moving closer to the elusive flexible remote sufficiently-paying career job. The bootcamp also gave a nice reprieve from the daily grind, and I spent my summer enjoying the additional freedom and flexibility. Fall 2024 seemed the perfect time to head to the Valley, as it would be the first time in years I had the window to do so. But the day before leaving for Yosemite, I unexpectedly came down hard on my leg while cleaning my gutters and fractured my tibial plateau. It was a minor enough fracture that I was still able to bear weight, but according to my ortho doctor, any climbing, running, etc. was out. However, he did tell me to base my activity level on pain--if I felt no pain, what I was doing with it was probably okay. So I decided to head to Yosemite anyway and promised myself that if I felt pain I would stop.....

Public Sanitation Wall seemed like a good place to test the waters on my knee. Short approach, low commitment, sport climbing on good rock.

Nate and I each climbed three routes (he led two, toproped one, while I toproped all) at Public Sanitation Wall. He did all of the leading. I managed to get up a few pitches, but was terrified by any twinge of pain and struggled upwards in imagined pain and frustration. Climbing 11c one-legged and the talus field on the approach was quite a challenge. At the end of the day, my leg ached. I suspected my attempt to climb in Yosemite was a three-pitch failure.

But with renovation work being done on my place back in Estes Park, I preferred to stay on the road and work. So out of an irrational hope for a miracle of healing, I stayed in Yosemite, bumming off Nate's Starlink, riding his bike around the Valley roads, reading books, and taking my lectures and working on homework. After a few days of this, my knee was feeling a bit better. I couldn't help it. "Let's try the Central Pillar of Frenzy", I proposed. I had climbed this clasic 5-pitch 5.9 route three times (2007, 2015, and 2017) and was happy to climb it again. Plus it was somewhere we could walk from our post in El Cap Meadow. But when we got there, there were two parties on route and three lined up at the base. The first party was hardly moving. No thanks. So we headed right and cragged for a few hours, climbing four single pitches. My knee felt better than it had a few days previous (perhaps because the climbing was a bit easier), so that was encouraging. Perhaps we could climb something bigger the next day....

----

(I almost left and drove back home after the first day at Public Sanitation Wall. My doctor had told me 6-8 weeks of no climbing on my tibial plate fracture, and I figured I had been foolhardy to try to push that limit. But Nate encouraged me to stay a few more days and suss it out a bit more. I am glad he did, because I ended up staying in Yosemite for three weeks, climbing awesome routes like Voyager (5.11c, 7p), The North Face of the Rostrum (5.11c, 8p), Jericho Wall Free (5.12a, 8p), Scarface (5.12, 9p), The Great Escape (5.11d, 4p), The Moratorium (5.11b, 3-4p), Freeblast (5.11, 8p), Central Pillar of Frenzy (5.9, 5p), and Gates of Delirium (5.12-, 10p). (See links for these climbs at the top of this page.) I didn't do much leading but I was able to follow without too much difficulty other than my usual struggles with 5.11+ and harder. By the end of the three weeks, it was four weeks post-fracture, and I had mostly forgotten about it, and I decided to add a one-day detour to do the 44-mile Grand Canyon rim to rim to rim on the drive home.)

Temple of Doom

5.12b, 1p
(Nate toproped, I did not try it in my one-legged state.)

Other Random Photos


More climbing fun!
More climbing fun!
Date: June 4, 2025 (Wed)
Partner: Rob Dillon
Climbed at: Public Sanitation Wall
Routes (ordered by grade): 
• Afterburner 5.11c, sport
• Unknown But Splitter 5.11c, sport
• Big Easy 5.11d, sport
The following is taken from my Yosemite June 2025 trip report.
Rob and I chose Public Sanitation Wall as a good cragging zone in the shade and above the bugs and heat of the Valley floor. This is a nice sport climbing area that is home to one pitch lines on featured, slightly overhanging granite. I had cragged at Public Sanitation Wall for a day the previous year, in October 2024, when we had climbed Afterburner (5.11c, 1p), Sanitary Engineer (5.10c, 1p), Unknown But Super Fun (5.11c, 1p). On this day, we climbed three pitches: Unknown but Splitter (5.11c, 1p), Big Easy (5.11d, 1p), and Afterburner (5.11c, 1p). I led all three, but used a stick-clip on a couple of bolts on each route on my lead. We then toproped each once or twice. After about 6 pitches each of steep sport climbing, the sun had arrived but we were ready to be done anyway.

Photos

Route Overlay

SOME ROUTES I HAVE CLIMBED AT reed's pinnacle

Photos

SOME RANDOM PHOTOS FROM CRAGGING AT REED's Pinnacle


More climbing fun!
More climbing fun!
Date: June 7, 2007 (Thu)
Partner: Ross Peritore
Climbed at: Reed's Pinnacle
Routes (ordered by grade): 
• Reed's Direct 5.10a, 300'
The following is taken from my Yosemite 2007 trip report.
We began our third day by climbing the classic Central Pillar of Frenzy (5 pitches, 5.9) on Middle Cathedral Rock. We then hiked up the trail to climb the Regular Route (5 pitches, 5.9) on Higher Cathedral Spire . After deciding that it was not worth the effort of hiking down and then back up to climb the Lower Cathedral Spire, we headed for Reed’s Pinnacle to finish the day of on Reed’s Direct (3 pitches, 5.10a).

Update June 2018: I climbed Reed's Direct again in June 2018.

Photos

Reed’s Pinnacle Direct route. Three pitches.
Second pitch of Reed’s Pinnacle Direct, a fun wavy 5.9.
Third pitch of Reed’s Pinnacle Direct, a 5.10a chimney with an awkward squeeze near the top.

More climbing fun!
More climbing fun!
Date: June 20, 2018 (Wed)
Partner: Val Trenev
Climbed at: Reed's Pinnacle
Routes (ordered by grade): 
• Bongs Away Left 5.8
• Reed's Direct 5.10a, 300'
• Stone Groove 5.10b
• Lunatic Fringe 5.10c
The following is taken from my Yosemite 2018 trip report.
Steep and splitter granite cracks above the Merced Canyon. 4 routes.

Photos

Photos:  Photo descriptions: 
Approach 
~10 min above HWY 120

Route 1: Reed's Direct Pitches 1-2
5.9, 5.10a, 2p
1.  
2.  
3.  
 
1. Pitch 1. I led this pitch.
2. Pitch 2. Val led this pitch. 
3. Pitch 2. Easy to see why this route is a Yosemite classic.

Route 2: Bongs Away, Left
5.8, 1p, 90'
4.  
5. 
4. Instead of climbing the 3rd pitch of Reed's Direct, we climbed Bongs Away Left, which starts off the right side of the ledge above the 2nd pitch of Reed's Direct. This somewhat obscure route climbs a chimney/offwidth and finishes with laybacking and knobs. It is rated 5.8, but that's Yosemite 5.8. (The 3rd pitch of Reed's Direct is a rather wild chimney climb behind Reed's Pinnacle; it is heady lead, and since I had climbed it in 2007 I was easily convinced to climb Bongs Away Left instead.)
5. Looking up the route from the base of Bongs Away. I enjoyed this pitch.

Route 3: Lunatic Fringe
5.10c, 1p, 140'

6.
  
7.  
 
6. Lunatic Fringe is known to be one of the best 5.10 pitches in Yosemite, a long, steep, and clean pitch featuring everything from with to thin hands to laybacking to face.
7. Val nearing the top of Lunatic Fringe.

Route 4: Stone Groove
5.10b, 1p, 80'
8.  
9. 
8. Looking up Stone Groove, a short but rather burly right-leaning crack. But the gear is good, so it was a fun lead.
9. Val following Stone Groove.

More climbing fun!
More climbing fun!
Date: June 9, 2025 (Mon)
Partner: Rob Dillon
Climbed at: Reed's Pinnacle
Routes (ordered by grade): 
• Reed's Pinnacle Regular Route 5.9, 4p
• Stone Groove 5.10b
• Lunatic Fringe 5.10c
The following is taken from my Yosemite June 2025 trip report.
I was planning to climb the notoriously-burly Steck-Salathe (5.10b, 13p) the following day, so I wanted a lightweight day of climbing, ideally in the morning. So Rob and I headed to Reed's Pinnacle, which has morning shade. Reed's Pinnacle is another popular, classic, Yosemite crack climbing wall. I had cragged here twice before, in 2007 (Reed’s Direct (5.10a, 300′)) and 2018 (Reed’s Direct (5.10a, 300′), Bongs Away Left (5.8, 1p), Lunatic Fringe (5.10c, 1p), Stone Groove (5.10b, 1p)).

Rob and I climbed three routes: We started with Stone Groove (5.10b, 1p), which Rob led; then I led Lunatic Fringe (5.10c, 1p); and then we decided to race the sun and bang out Reed's Pinnacle Regular Route (5.9, 4p). The last one was a new route for me, and had a cool tunnel-through near the top of the pinnacle. By noon the sun had hit the wall but we had gotten in six good pitches of climbing.

I spend the afternoon chilling by the river and resting up for Steck-Salathe the following day. 

Photos

List of Cragging I've done in Yosemite Valley

LIST MAINLY FOR PERSONAL RECORD-KEEPING | DATES I'VE CLIMBED THERE ON SECOND TAB

Yosemite Hikes I've Done on Non-Climbing Days

CLICK THE DROP DOWN TO SEE PHOTOS FROM EACH HIKE

Date: June 1, 2025 (Sun)
Partner: solo
The following is taken from my Yosemite June 2025 trip report.
Rob had been fighting a cold and wasn't feeling too great, plus it was pretty hot for climbing, so I snatched the opportunity to hike to the top of Yosemite Falls, something I had always wanted to do in the spring when the falls are raging. Not only is the Yosemite Falls Trail one of Yosemite's oldest historic trails (built 1873 to 1877), but the Yosemite Falls is one of North America’s tallest waterfalls, rising 2,425 feet above the Valley floor. The trail also offers spectacular views of Yosemite Valley, Half Dome, and Sentinel Rock. The view from the overlook above the falls was fantastic. (Description of the hike on the nps website.)

After viewing Yosemite Falls, I decided to extend my hike east to Yosemite Point (adds about 2 miles and 500 ft gain/loss to the hike). Yosemite Point offers direct views of Half Dome and provides panoramic views of many other peaks. 

The round trip hike including Yosemite Falls and Yosemite Point took me about 4 hours and 15 minutes, including a couple of overlook stops. Temperatures were hitting 90 degrees in the Valley, so the hike down was quite hot, so I was glad I had started the hike somewhat early (7:30 am).

Below are some photos and video from this spectacular hike.

Map

Video

Photos

Date: October 15, 2025 (Wed)
Partner: solo
A couple of days of cold rain had settled over the Valley, and the high country even picked up some snow. Tioga Pass was temporarily closed. By Wednesday, the weather had cleared, but everything was still too wet and chilly for climbing, so I decided to hike up to Glacier Point and photograph the fresh snow.

I took the Four Mile Trail—a steady five-mile ascent with about 3,400 feet of elevation gain, according to my Garmin watch. I hit snow about 30 minutes into the hike (maybe just above 5000 feet elevation), and by the time I neared Glacier Point there was at least four inches covering the trail. I could see a party ahead of me, but I passed them just before reaching the top, making me the first to arrive. With the road and visitor center closed, I had the entire viewpoint to myself. The sight of snow-encrusted Half Dome and Yosemite Falls was magnificent.

As I headed down, more people were hiking up, and nearly everyone wanted a trail report. My standard reply became to glance at their footwear—if they weren’t in flip-flops, I’d assure them they’d be fine.

Below are some photos from the beautiful hike. Hopefully the snow melts soon and we get a few more weeks of climbing!

Map

Video

Photos

Comments Pertaining to this Page / Trip Report

Useful beta. Updated route information. Corrections. Historical notes. Interesting facts. No fluff please.
Please do not put links in your comment, as my spam filter will filter those comments out.
Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *