Peregrine Traverse

Page Type Page Type: Route
Location Lat/Lon: 43.05300°N / 122.644°W
Additional Information Route Type: Technical Rock Climb
Additional Information Time Required: Half a day
Additional Information Difficulty: 5.7
Sign the Climber's Log

Approach


Follow the approach described on the main page for Acker Rock to reach Sun Bowl - a small "cirque" at the southern tip of Acker's south ridge. Approach time from trailhead (gate on FS road 950) is approximately 45 minutes to 1 hour. Once at the southern tip of Acker ( a "saddle" 50 feet above Sun Bowl), look for a minor, low angle ramp (with a small tree at its top ~70 feet up) or ridge extending southeast from Acker's south ridge. See topo 3 for route's start.

Route Description


The route traverses Acker's south ridge from its southern tip (Sun Bowl area) to just below the Acker Rock Lookout at the summit of the formation. With a couple exceptions, the route is a face climb - given the quality of the rock in Oregon, faces are typically cleaner and more solid than cracks or chimneys. Furthermore, the route is largely a sport climb - see the list of recommended gear and don't overexert yourself carring in extra stuff. The route rating of 5.7 given by G. Orton's guidebook seems quite soft. The pitch ratings and lengths given below are MY own interpretation (I'll add Orton's ratings later for reference). Even though the route is 10 pitches long, it goes by quickly as the pitches are short and mostly bolted. All bolts encoutered on route looked new and beefy. All belay stations (except for end of P9 at the mouth of the chimney where there is a large tree for belaying) were nicely bolted with two, new bolts each. Lastly, most of the time you are one or two rappels above the ground (rap east) making escape possible from many a belay station. These features make this route very beginner-friendly. A 5.6 leader will have fun on this one; a 5.7 leader looking for sustained climbing will be disappointed.

Pitch 1: 4th - low 5th class (5.3 guidebook), 100 feet. Follow the low angle ramp (or minor ridge protruding east from the main south ridge of Acker directly below Lunch Rock) up towards the tree where the ramp meets the east face of the main ridge. Belay either from the tree or look a bit higher and to the left for a pair of bolts.

Pitch 2: 5.6 (5.7 guidebook), 60 feet. Climb 15 feet up the steepening face and traverse left 40 or so feet following nice bolts. You are traversing below a minor overhang. Belay from double bolts in a "shallow depression" in the face. Note that you could combine this pitch with the next one but the rope drag might be bad. View down from top of this pitch: photo.

Pitch 3: 5.6, 70 feet. Climb straight up a slabby face from the belay station. Look for first bolt about 15 feet above belay. Follow 2 or 3 more bolts to the crest of the ridge. Belay from double bolts at the crest.

Pitch 4: 5.7 (this is the "4b" variation mentioned by guidebook), 120 feet. Traverse 4th class terrain 20 feet toward the base of a 30 foot high-angle ramp (3 bolts visible from belay). Move up the ramp/slab. This is probably the crux of the route and also the most fun section of climbing you'll get! Continue up about 20 more feet of easy ground above the ramp. Traverse right following the base of Lunch Rock (~30-40 feet below top of Lunch Rock) over easy terrain (exposed class 3-4). You'll pass a small tree (optional belay bolts). Keep moving right for another 10-20 feet where a pair of shiny belay bolts awaits you.

Pitch 5: 5.6, 120 feet. This pitch is easier to lead than to follow. Continue traversing right in the direction of the large notch in the ridge. Before the notch, move UP clipping a bolt then look slightly higher up and right for two more bolts protecting the downclimb into the notch. Walk in the notch in the direction of the steep headwall in the ridge. Move up a mossy, low angle terrain on the left side of the crest and veer sharply right a loose ramp to reach a nice ledge about 1/3rd of the way up the steep headwall. Belay from two nice bolts. Staying right of the ridge crest might be a better variation but we did not see any bolts there and it looked harder (cleaner rock though). Beginning of P5 photo: here.

Pitch 6: 5.6 (5.7 guidebook), 120 feet. From belay, climb straight up - steep but with huge holds. Clip a bolt and continue moving up. The angle quickly eases as you reach a doubly bolted belay station near two small trees.

Pitch 7: 5.0, 100 feet. Follow the ridge crest about 40 feet, then move left of the crest where terrain steepens. Look for bolts. Belay on the left side of ridge crest from double bolts (located right of the next tree on the route).

Pitch 8: 5.0, 120 feet. From belay, move up through a small notch. Follow ridge crest to the "summit" (referred to as such by G. Orton). This does not really seem to be the summit (lookout structure seems to sit higher actually) but this is where the register is. Belay from two bolts.

Pitch 9: 5.0, 100 feet. From summit, climb down the right side of the ridge (don't go too far right, just right of the bushes on summit) and into the "jungle" below (~50 feet below). Walk to the base of a dirty-looking chimney and belay from a large tree (slings) at its mouth.

Pitch 10: 5.4, 100 feet. Move up the chimney (probably class 4 to 5.0). Near top, move right and up to the crest of the ridge. Walk the knife-edge ridge to its end (toward lookout structure). Belay from one of two sets of nice bolts at end of ridge.

Rappel (the awkward start of this rappel is the crux of the route IMHO) ~50 feet down on the right side of the ridge. At this point you're on class 2 ground and can store the rope (for a while....keep your harness on for descent). Walk uphill through brush toward the lookout cabin passing the pit toilet.

Descent:
If you don't want/need to return to the base of the route, simply hike down the FS trail to the FS road (950) and then down to the gate where your car is (have not done this descent - from map it looks to be about 1 mile in length).
If you wish to return to the base of the route, double back to where the last rappel deposited you a few minutes earlier. Hike down the well-defined (forested and shady) gully between Acker Rock's south ridge (Peregrine Traverse on right) and Wizards Tower formation. As you exit the old-growth section of gully a few hundred feet below, traverse class 3 slabs (sandy, mossy and generally slippery - be careful!) left and make your way down to a "bowl" about 70 feet above the climbers' trail (which you used earlier to access Sun Bowl and start of route). Do a single rope rap to the ground level. This is the Waterfall Wall rated "mossy" 5.8 so rapping is a good idea for most people. You are now back on the climbers' trail about 5 minutes away from start of route. Follow trail right to start of Peregrine Traverse.

Essential Gear


Helmets. 50 meter rope will work just fine. Quick draws (~8). One or two long slings.

Trad Gear:
We did not know what to expect on this route and hauled along a mid-sized rack....that was a wasted effort as most of the route is bolted. Here is what I'd call a conservative rack (these are the pieces we actually placed literally):
1 red Alien = 0.75 inch cam (VERY optional on pitch 1....foreget about it)
1 red Camalot = 1.5 inch cam (placed on P6)
1 yellow Camalot = 2+ inch cam (placed on mossy ramp of P5)
1 blue Camalot = 3 inch cam (placed above chimney on P10)

Photo "Topos"


Route overview (pitches 1-8): topo 1
Upper pitches (pitch 10): topo 2
Route view from base (pitches 1-5): topo 3

More Route Photos



More Route Photos



More Route Photos



More Route Photos



Additions and CorrectionsPost an Addition or Correction

Viewing: 1-3 of 3

Jibs - Aug 3, 2011 11:42 pm - Voted 8/10

Not accurate guide

Uhh... Do not trust the directions to find the climbers trail on the main page. First off... there is no "yellow surveyor's tape" anymore. Found some orange surveyors tape, assumed that that was the trail. Walked off the road at that point. Then once off the road, after scouting for where the surveyors tape was supposed to lead for about 10 minutes and not finding anymore tags, we decided to go tromping through the forest. It took us an hour and a half to find it. Turns out we were an apron and a gulley below where the route starts. Once making it to the route however, the climbing was phenomenal. A few problems with the route, lack of bolting in some parts, leading to run outs of 70+ feet, however, those points are 5.0/class 4 which isn't difficult, but definitely adds a mental factor. It should be noted that the anchors on the last pitch are severely covered over by a tree and about 20 feet away from the top of the pitch, making it hard to access, belaying from the tree is much easier. Another thing that needs to be added to the page is the descent of the last pitch. Follow the sketchy knife ridge to the end of it and look for some slings with more quality rap hangers just over the edge to the right.Once you get the final rap station, make sure, especially if you are using a 50m rope to: 1. tie a knot in it and 2. rap down about 20 feet and work your way right towards a tree, or else you will be stuck on the side of a cliff with no way down. Another problem is the start of the last pitch. The guide says belay off a tree, however, there are fresh bolts there with rap hangers. One major problem here is getting to this belay station is highly UNSAFE, and i mean, Severely. I ballzed to it, however one slip in the loose dirt and your going off a fifty foot cliff. I had to set up an anchor for my partner just to climb down over a ledge to get to this sketchy area, and then rope him in for the next 5 feet. Another thing that should be noted is that the ninth pitch should have some rap hangers or something to get down into the "jungle" unless if you plan on sacking up and doing some ballzy class four 600ft fall awesomeness... Haha it was fun. Overall, great climb, probably gonna go back and solo this biotch in the next month. Jigga Jigga Yeah....

rpc

rpc - Aug 4, 2011 10:54 am - Hasn't voted

Re: Not accurate guide

the info is 7 yrs old so it's outdated. you can have the page & rewrite it (esp since you'll have done it twice after you solo that biotch next month and all). otherwise, i'll get rid of it. let me know jibs

gorton - Feb 27, 2014 3:20 am - Hasn't voted

Re: Not accurate guide

Some corrections for the Acker Rock info as of Dec 2013. 1)Someone had cut out and re-flagged the climber's access trail into the Sun bowl. I'm sure even Mr. Jibs could find his way in now. 2)The most current most complete guide for Acker Rock is "Western Oregon Rock Climbing, Volume 2, Umpqua" 2007, Mountain 'N Air Books. There are currently 20 routes on Acker. 3)Most climbed routes are the Peregrine Traverse (5.6) and Eagle's Dare (5.9). 4) I was invited on Black Magic the other day. The guide rates the second pitch .10c(pitch 1 starts above the dry waterfall)I'm siding towards 5.11a which was my original rating. Would love to get a second opinion from anyone who's climbed it. 5)The Acker Rock Lookout can be rented in the summer between July and October (~$45/night). The stars at night are impressive. When on the Forest you can camp pretty much anywhere that makes sense for free except improved campgrounds (~$10). NW parking passes are not required.

Viewing: 1-3 of 3


Parents 

Parents

Parents refers to a larger category under which an object falls. For example, theAconcagua mountain page has the 'Aconcagua Group' and the 'Seven Summits' asparents and is a parent itself to many routes, photos, and Trip Reports.