Brazos Cliffs
Description
[Edit]Note from scotthsu: George Perkins re-assigned this page to me from MP user Sheets on 10/10/08. The text below was written by me, and I will slowly add to it. Thanks for your patience.
The Brazos Cliffs tower some 3000' above the surrounding lands to the northeast of Tierra Amarilla. The tallest parts of the Cliffs offer up to 2000' of technical climbing/scrambling. The rock is hard pre-Cambrian quartzite. The first technical climb was made on the Brazos Cliffs in 1952 by George Bell, Sr., Virginia Lotz, Don Monk, and K. Bruecknerand when they climbed Easy Ridge. Later that year, George Bell and Don Monk climbed the Great Couloir. Over the next 20-30 years, members of the Los Alamos Mountaineers (LAM) established some 45 routes and major route variations on these cliffs. The LAM website has an engaging write-up on the climbing history of the Brazos Cliffs. George Bell, Sr. wrote an article on the Brazos Cliffs, published in the March 1972 (#639) issue of Trail & Timberline, on which much of this description is based. In 1986 the Los Alamos Mountaineers voted against assembling a guidebook to help preserve the sense of wildness that is so unique to these cliffs and to give future generations of climbers a chance to re-discover the cliffs for themselves.
The Brazos Cliffs are on private property, and thus access is restricted (click on "more info" link above).
The cliffs have three main parts, from west to east: (1) the main Brazos Cliffs, (2) the Brazos Box Canyon, and (3) the Encinado Wedge. The main Cliffs are about 2000' tall, and the Cliffs get shorter and steeper as you move east, with the Wedge being about 1000' tall. A selection of the routes (from the T&T article) are listed below.
Main Brazos Cliffs routes listed from west to east (w/FA party and year):
White Gully (5.5), D. Liska, A. Liska, G. Bell, and M. Williams, 1967Cat Burglar (5.7), D. Liska and L. Campbell, 1971Great Couloir (5.6), G. Bell and D. Monk, 1952Great Couloir Direct (5.6), G. Bell and D. Coward, 1956, with subsequent variations by D. Liska et al.Easy Ridge (5.6), G. Bell, D. Monk, V. Lotz and K. Brueckner, 1952East of Easy (5.6), G. Bell, W. Hendry, C. Keller, and R. Harder, 1970Going to Jerusalem (5.6), F. de Saussure, 1958
Brazos Box Canyon:
Cleft (5.6), G. Bell and F. de Saussure, 1958Box Tower (5.5), G. Bell and M. Hane, 1959Gothic Arches Buttress (5.7), D. Liska, G. Bell, L. Dauelsberg, and M. Williams, 1969
Wedge:
West Ridge of the Wedge (5.8), W. Hendry and C. Keller, 1970Wicked Ridge of the Wedge (5.6), W. Hendry and M. Hart, 1969 with east variation by D. Michael and L. Dauelsberg, 1971Roofy Ridge of the Wedge (5.7), W. Hendry, L. Dauelsberg, M. Hart, C. Keller, and M. Williams , 1969Rickety Ridge of the Wedge (5.4), LAM party, 1968
Routes are 10-17 pitches long, all with non-trivial approaches and descents, and thus are all Grade III & IV.
to be continued...
Local climbing organizations
[Learn more]No organizations found for this area.
Do you know a great local organization? Let us know