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3: The Gardom’s Area Gardom’s Edge Birchen Edge Chatsworth Edge Dobb Edge Stumphole Cavern Gun Buttress The Dobb’s knogg. Simon Wilson bouldering at Dobb Edge (page xx). Photo: Adam Long 3 A B Int gard A3.indd 240-241 04/02/2010 16:47:36 Gardom’s Area – Map Gardom’s Edge to Cu rbar N 0 1km Gardom’s North Bouldering A621 fiel d hef to S to Baslow Birchen Edge Ga Gardom’s Edge Nelson’s Monument Nelso Moorsidee Rocks Gardom’s E i BByne Eric South Bouldering Campsite Stumphole Cavern Robin Hood Inn B6050 to Cheste A619 rfield Chats Chatsworth Edge Dobb Edge ge Gun RRock 19 by John Camateras OS Ref SK 274738 to 273726 Alt. 260m Gardom’s is the quiet, understated crag of the Peak. It’s not brash and noisy like some crags, it just gets on with it, and with varied climbing, pockets of seclusion and good views who can blame it? Gardom’s can offer peace and quiet, which can be a blessing on those busy weekends, when all the ‘popular’ crags are teeming. Yet in case you’re feeling lonely there’s always a couple of parties around Apple Buttress. There are great classics, modern testpieces, hidden gems for the explorer and last but not least plenty of excellent bouldering. above Black Wall. In winter, or after heavy rain, this path can be boggy and it’s better to follow the main road to the short steep path up the side of Battlement Buttress. Conditions and Aspect The wooded sections of the crag can provide welcome shade but can also hold dampness. Generally, unless you are escaping the heat, it’s best to visit in the afternoon when the sun moves round. The less popular routes should be treated with care if they are lichenous or vegetated as this can alter the grade considerably, especially if damp. Having said all that, judicious route choices can yield sheltered all-year climbing with many classics across the grades. The climbing can be affected by the trees and vegetation. Some of the north-facing climbs need a few dry days to come into condition, whereas the cleaner south-facing climbs can dry quickly and provide sheltered winter sun-traps in the afternoon. The Climbing The Quarries Pillar Wall Gardom’s South Boulders Gardom’s Edge walls to A619 / Robin Hood’s parking 242 Froggatt to Black Rocks 3 A B Int gard A3.indd 242-243 0 250m N Moorside Rocks ss ss tre ttre But u B e l ll App Wa ’s ker rta e d Un ad Ore A621 ’s yer nda Mo Nowa all k W th lB ac or ’s N rs m o d de Gar Boul A big rambling crag, over a mile long with about 230 routes and 60 boulder problems scattered along its length. The climbing is excellent across the grades. The bouldering is concentrated at either end but there is quality all the way, with the best problems mostly at higher grades but there is enough here for a visit by anyone. Parking and Approach For the northern buttresses, park just off the A621. Walk back down the road and go through the gate and take the right-hand path. Continue to a second gate and emerge from the trees at the top of the crag For the southern buttresses and Moorside Rocks, park in the car park next to the Robin Hood Inn just off the A619 and walk back down the road. Cross the stile on the right and follow the path up the hill until Moorside Rocks appear on the right. Continue along the path through a gate and Gardom’s south will appear shrouded by trees. Moorside Rocks is in the next field to the Eric Byne campsite. Access: The edge is owned by the Chatsworth Estate. At present there are no access problems. Battlement Buttress Below the boulders directly above the A621. Sadly it has become overgrown. For the avid ticker, Scotswood Road, E4 6a (1983), takes the righthand end of the roof of the first wall. Roadside Attraction, E2 5c (1983), follows the arête and provides an interesting boulder problem start. The crack in the wall to the right provides the start to two routes; Boiling Oil, E2 5c (1983), which takes the wall to an old tree and Battlement Wall, HVS 5a (1959), starts up the crack, moves right to a ledge and then traverses diagonally leftwards until it is possible to crawl off. The green corner is Rampart Corner, S (1959), and the roof of the right-hand wall can be crossed via Sooty and Sweep, E5 6b (1985). Continuing southwards from the Battlement Buttress the edge deteriorates. Routes have been recorded such as Portcullis, Turret Chimney, Drawbridge Slab, Dungeon Gully, The Keep and The Watch Tower but are either poor, very short or have been reclaimed by nature. Froggatt to Black Rocks 243 04/02/2010 16:47:37 21 22 23 31 32 31 32 33 34 The compact circuit above the busy A621 is a great and easily accessible circuit. Powerful roofs are the order of the day. The bouldering mainly faces north, although it is sheltered enough to be tolerable in winter too, and, as it is very clean, it dries quite quickly for a north-facer. A great place for shelter on a windy day. A nice place, although it can be hard to ignore the road just below. Approach: Just follow the normal approach to the crag, crossing the stile on the right. The first problems are on a low roof just before the 41 main area, down and right from the path. 1 Leaf Climb V4 (6a) 41 Traverse the lip right to left, with feet off the lowest wall, to finish up a flake. Continuing a bit further left to finish past a sloper is harder: V6 (6b). 13 36 46 47 48 40 North Boulders – Gardom’s Edge 39 40 On the left of the main central area is a low roof: 42 43 44 45 42 43 48 49the 50 roof at right angles to 44 A45bum46scraper, 47 crossing 51 49 50 4 First Roof Right V9 (6c) 59 60 57 58 53 5 54 First55Roof56Middle V5 (6b) 52 62 66 Left 65 Roof 67 V468(6b)69 70 63 664 First 3 A Tasty Graunch V7 (6b) 61 62 65 66manoeuvres. 64 pressing 67 68 69 70 63 more 14 18 21 22 25 26 27 Drop down a couple of levels to a big roof that 73 looms 74 over 75 the76busy77road78below. 79 80 72 71 72 81 82 81 82 91 92 93 94 95 96 8 Neil’s Roof V9 97(7a) 98 99 100 101 92 737 74Roadside 75 76Roof 77V6 (6b) 78 79 80 A hard variation gains the holds on the lip of the 98 99 from 93 roof94of the 100 the starting 95 last96problem 97 directly shelf on the next problems. 11 9 10 rop big D drop roof variations. Start right in the back of the roof. Use a layaway in the roof above to reach the lip, then skedaddle left to finish up the flake and arête. D D 10 Mark’s Roof V8 (6b) As above, but heave-ho over the centre of the roof e page xxx. a bseecphoto d on on bulging slopers: a b c d e 11 Mark’s Roof Direct V9 (6c) The hard version tackles the obvious non-holds c dnear g hright side of the upper roof. b Dylan’s e fthe b c dVariant e f g hdoes this with the aid of the right arête gh a b c d- V7 e f(6c). 17 12 13 14 15 16 19 244 Froggatt to Black Rocks 3 A B Int gard A3.indd 244-245 20 22 21 b 7 9 12 Little Arête V2 (5c) The little nosey arête, from a sitting start. 13 Seamstress V1 (5b) The short wall. From the back of the roof, travel out along the left-hand lip on small holds to gain, and finish up, 14 Prowstress V3 (6a) 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 a the flake on the front. Known, as Mark’s Roof Left- The prow is a bit of a frightener. Hand in the Peak Bouldering guide. a Finish83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 27 ing earlier, using the crack as a layaway sloper, is 22 1525 Ledge Crack V0– (5a) 26 From the ledge, jam the delightful crack. Percydiddit, V7 (6c). 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 9 Mark’s Roof Left-Hand V6 (6b) 101 102 103The104 108 of109 first,105 easiest106and107 longest three110ever-hardening 7 11 A left-hand variation gains the nose of the lip, and 71 91 10 a the central line to exit up the right side of the roof. 61 2 big d 37 38 39 37 38 52 5 6 A621 36 51 4 1 30 The pointed, jutting nose has good moves above a nasty block. 2 Joint Care V7 (6b) 17 12 35 30 29 Mantelicious. From a sit start, move out on small 53 holds 54 to55the lip 56 and57get grinding. 58 59 60 A bit shite. Traverse the low roof right to left, with enough rules to make it into the grade. 3 28 26 25 23 24 33 34 35 21 Gardom’s North Boulders 24 abc d e fgh a b c dFore added f g h joy, you can start up Mark’s Roof, yard along the lip, reverse Roadside Roof, then shimmy along again to the start of Mark’s Roof. Repeat. V8. 16 Ledge Wall V1 (5b) The tricky wall right of the crack, with a confidence-testing smear move. a A right-hand version, mantelling onto a bulge on the arête, is easier, V0 (5a). 17 West Wall V2 (5c) A tricksy28move up the mini little wall, avoiding the 29 arête. 18 Alcove Nose V4 (6b) The hanging nose at the back of the alcove using a thin flake. V8 (6c) from a sit start in the crack. 19 Alcove Arête V1 (5b) The short arête on the right of the cleft. 20 Ben’s Bulge V8 (6b) The centre of the bulging wall to the right, on undercuts, slopers and leg jams. 21 The Grasper V5 (6b) The very sloping, bulging arête to the right feels quite high. Froggatt to Black Rocks 245 04/02/2010 16:47:40 55 Gardom’s Edge – Gardom’s Buttress 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 81 82 83 84 85 86 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 91 92 93 97 98 99 100 101 94 95 96 79 80 87 88 89 90 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 D D D a b c d e a b c d c d e fgh bc d e fgh abc d e fgh abc d e fgh abc d e fgh e 81 82 83 84 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 91 92 93 97 98 99 100 101 94 85 95 86 96 87 88 89 90 22 27 25 26 North Boulders – Gardom’s Edge 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 a 22 D 25 D 28 27 29 D 26 e Thirty metres right is aan undercut b c dblock. 26 Soft Groove V5 (6b) A tough classic taking the obstinate arête; powerful, technical c dand gh e fdynamic. 27 Soft Arête V0 (5a) a b c d 22 Soft on the G V8 (6c) e Climb the awkward groove on the right from a sitstart, or from standing, still a tough V3. A reachy problem. a The flake just left is the same grade. bc d e fgh 23 c dPower h28 (7a) a b Full e f g V11 29 superseded by the next Aa hard h b c problem, d e f g although route. g hstart, with hands on the lip, gain a b cFrom d ea flow and follow Soft… The Quarry: About 100m right, a rounded, bulging block sits above an old quarry. 24 8 Ball V12 (7a) 28 Kidneystone V7 (6c) 25 Rock Hard Bishop V5 (6b) 29 Heartland V9 (7a) Ben Moon’s extended low start to Soft… is a powerful and sustained problem. Start on the right of the overhang, and slap along the lip to move up and join the original problem which, by this stage, will be feeling particularly hard. A somewhat ecumenical matter. Spring up the wall using the holds on the two adjacent problems. From the jug under the roof head up and left past slopers and edges in the breaks. Releasing the initial heel-toe cam without swinging off is the crux. A fine problem. Graded for not using the footblock. V4 with it. From the same big hold, follow the right-hand line, with the aid of a finger jam. Andy Banks enjoying a lantern session on Mark’s Roof, V8 (page xxx). Photo: John Coefield. 246 Froggatt to Black Rocks 3 A B Int gard A3.indd 246-247 Froggatt to Black Rocks 247 04/02/2010 16:47:43 0 0 00 121 122 123 124 125 Gardom’s Edge – Black Wall 12 8 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 5 Black Wall Route 2 HVS 5a pre-1950 140 over and make a long139reach 131 10m132 Take 137 138 133 the134thin135flake 136 c 131 13 11 10 flake. Finish slightly leftwards with difficulty using 7 after the boulders. At the end of the trees drop down to the right. The wall can stay damp but don’t let the black lichen fool you into thinking it’s out of condition when in fact it might be okay. Black Wall Nothing VS 4c 14 block, and make a long stretch to gain 161 a sharp-edged 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 11 12 13 the corner above. Climb this and move out right- finish174up a175thin crack.177Reachy. 172to 173 171 wards 178 179 180 176 8 9 10 Black Wall Area: This is 100m beyond the gate, 1 2008 10m The arête. A poor start leads to a ledge. Stretches between good hidden holds culminate in a delicate finish on the left. 0 2 Black Wall Route 1 S 4a leftwards and climb the wall right of the arête to a ledge on the right. Finish delicately back left. 3 Colin’s Route S 4a 1983 10m To the right is a chimney. Start up this and mantel left. Climb the wall veering leftwards. 4 Allen’s Route VS 4b 1951 10m Climb the rounded flake and thin crack to a ledge. A very awkward 5a exit can be bypassed further right at a flake. pre-1950 10m Start at a large protruding fin of rock. Mantel Gardom’s North Bouldering Froggatt to Black Rocks 3 A B Int gard A3.indd 248-249 will test your ability at the grade in all styles. A brilliant route making the most of steep and very exposed terrain. From the ledge climb the thin crack in the left wall with difficulty. Traverse left to an exciting position above the main roof, then battle up the steep and rounded wall to finish. 12 Good Karma E4 6b 1985 9m From the thin crack on Sleeping Sickness make thin moves up the wall above. 13 Brown Crack HVD 4a «« 1890 18m Gardom’s first route, from none other than Puttrell himself. The corner/chimney is a strong natural line giving a classic struggle. c Maintaining the fun at the same grade, Tower Variation, (pre1951), steps out left from the ledge three quarters of the way up and climbs the short exposed crack. 9 Mickey Finn E6 6b ««« 1990 192stylish 19115m A 195 196 197 200 193 194 199 grade, and protectable route198at the linking start of the last climb to the 191 192the193desperate 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 Sickness, via some steep difficult finish of Sleeping 14 The Rattle HVS 5a and brutish moves. A potential E6 flash if you have lots of route fitness. Very reachy. 10 Narcolepsy HVS 5b « 1976 8m A short route which feels a lot higher once you’re on it. Using the thin flake, make bold moves above an ankle-hungry fin of rock. Once on the ledge, start regretting you didn’t bring any gear and Waggy Nowanda 1975 10m The first of the Big Four Gardom’s E3s, which 15m A directionless desperate. Climb easily to the overhangs. Very hard, protectable moves gain the 181flake 182 187 188leftwards 183the184next185roof.186Undercut under 189 190to gain a big slot just above the roof. Swing on to the 181 186 187 188 189 190 183up184 185finish. arête 182 and go this to Och Aye Wall Black Wall Overhang Buttress 248 1960 1718 172Raging E3 6a 177 « 178 179 180 1984 174 175 176 173 Insomnia 1 5 6 11 Sleeping Sickness E3 5c «« 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 152 153hold. 151 a hidden 155 possible 154 a It’s to climb 158 directly 159 160to the 156 157 jammed flake; Green Wall, E4 6a (1985). 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 7 Tsetse Fly E1 5c c.1978 161 14m162Gain 165 ledge 164initial 168 directly 163 the 169 170from 166 of167 Promise 8 a 4 6 Promise HVS 5a the right, make a low traverse right to a ledge. Step 7 2 3 the stubborn bulge. Move rightwards to a flake finish. 144 back 146 to147 148 149 150 145 again 141 up142and143 traverse a conspicuous jammed 15 Black Wall – Gardom’s Edge cautiously traverse off right. b For Black Wall Traverse, HVS 5b, (post-1985), start up Narcolepsy and finish up the wall just left of Black Wall Route 2. 150 to 141 12m route test your 147 148 Two 144to 145 142 A143 149 metres 146 ropework. 9 6 126 127 128 129 130 121 00 0 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 111 trending right to the final flake. 15 Diamond Back E3 5c Pogle’s Wood 1983 10m Climb the right arête on its right-hand side. The final, reachy moves form the crux. 16 North End Girdle HVS 5a pre-1970 20m From Black Wall Route 1 move rightwards tak- ing the crux of The Rattle. It is close to the ground in a couple of places. Elliott’s Buttress Moyer’s Buttress pre-1957 18m Wander up the middle of the wall to the right, Dead Tree Wall Oread Bin Laden’s Cave Froggatt to Black Rocks 249 04/02/2010 16:47:48 20 2 1 30 5 4 3 Gardom’s Edge – Overhang Buttress 30 16 12 11 40 13 14 15 40 121 122 123 124 125 17 17 18 19 20 17 18 19 20 21 19 22 18 23 2422 25 59 60 31 32 69 70 41 60 8 79 80 51 a52 99 100 98 80 Overhang Buttress: This powerful buttress to the right has got something for everyone, but demands a tough, positive approach. The left wall can often be out of condition, but does dry out well. 98 99 100 17 Thunder HVS 5a 90 9 80 08 109 110 908 109 90 110 90 9 100 d9 e d 100 e 9 110 09 110 1956 12m From the grassy ledge halfway down the gul- ly pull onto the face on small but positive holds. Climb the wall diagonally leftwards via two short cracks. Finish up the final corner above or head back right to finish up the right-hand end of the ledge. “Safeguarded by a top-rope held by a ‘stooge’, the route was ascended using complicated combined operations on the small stance halfway up the right corner. Vaya Con Dios was the result of too much elderberry wine after Byne’s 21st birthday party at Machin’s Farm. It was often repeated on a top-rope during sober weekends, until eventually the disappearance of a useful hold gave reasons for believing the route was no longer possible.” 1970 Chatsworth guide 250 Froggatt to Black Rocks 3 A B Int gard A3.indd 250-251 42 43 20 20 70 8 89 90 36 37 38 39 40 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 46 47 48 44 45 21 17 18 19 8 6079 80 35 33 34 43 69 70 8 70 89 29 30 35 59 60 51 53 54 52 53 54 55 55 18 Four Horsemen E2 5b « 139 140 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 131 132 133 134 135 152 153 154 155 49 22 23 24 56 57 56 161 144 168145 169 146 142 166 143 167 162 163 141 170 147 148 149 150 164 165 161 144 168145169 146170 147 148 149 150 162 163 141 164 165 143 167 142 166 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 151 152 155 171 181 191 57 58 59 60191 1981 67 69 70 68 69 70 1951 15m A great line which keeps you guessing all the way. From the niche of the previous route, follow a 71 72break73to the74arête.75Get established 76 77 and 78 descending continue delicately to the top. 71 72 73 74 20 The Igloo E5 6b « 75 76 77 78 79 80 79 80 1986 15m Short, sharp, but somewhat tempting. Climb 83 and84right 85 81 82 down 87 Fin88 the overhang of the 86 last route. ish directly to join Four Horsemen. It is possible to 85 left. 86 87 88 82side-runner 83 84 to the place81a small 89 90 89 90 21 Spanish Fly E6 6c «« 1985 15m 91 The main is a quick 92 challenge 93 94 of the 95 buttress 96 97 and 98 99 100 and extremely powerful route. Cross the roof make hard moves to gain the break above. A small 98 93above94the lip wire 91 can be92placed is more97reliable 95and 96 than runners behind the fragile flake in the roof. a A problem the pit the sloper and lurch101 in102 103below104gains105 106 107 108 es up the wall above on pockets: Afro, V4 (6b). 99 100 109 110 101 102 103 105 106 107 1956 108 109 110 22 Vaya Con Dios E2104 5c «« 20m An unforgettable pilgrimage, and an essential D 156 157 158 159 160 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 159 160 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 58 59 60 61 Climb 67 up68the 62 into 63 the64niche65and go66directly finish. wall on layaways and good holds to a rounded exit. 136 137 138 139 140 151 181 12m A fine route with good runners and a worrying 61 62 63 64 65 66 19 Lightning Wall HVS 5a «« 131 171 50 Nowanda Buttress – Gardom’s Crag 131 151 24 27 28 126 127 128 129 130 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 118 119 120 112 113 114 115 116 131 132 133 111 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 117 111 10 26 50 e 16 9 23 19 50 8 7 6 153 154 156 157 158 159 160 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 27 26 151 152 25 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 30 Editor’s Choice D After climbing predominantly at one crag, you have to question (your sanity!) what constitutes an Editor’s Choice. However I’ve got to make my choices and, quite frankly, there’s a bit of a recurring theme running through my selection. These were routes I’d mainly avoided 28 or just plain awkward, but they because they looked green, uninviting 30 of rediscovering a left me pleasantly surprised, with a warm feeling good route that had been neglected. Some of these routes less travelled give you a pioneering feeling of adventure and perhaps even a glimpse of what it must have been like for those intrepid explorers of routes new. 29 182 183161184 162 185 186 187 188 190 163 164 165 189166 167 168 169 170 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 Lightning Wall / Four Horsemen: if these 31 were on a clean south-facing wall they’d be right up there. What great moves! What a 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 great position! And, an added bonus, both low in the grade. Rythmic Itch: this route is often overlooked due to its “famous” 172 173 174 175 176 171194 195 177 short 178 chock192 193 179 180 neighbour, but don’t be fooled – this baby is just as good. 199 up200the Gardom’s experience. Move 196 197 198 stoned crack, engage body parts, invocate 171 172 196 192 193 174 all 194 195 178 179any180 Chunky Doorstep: award yourself a star just for seeking this one 173 198175199 176200 197 deities you can think of, and propel177 your body leftout. A lovely set of moves that lead to the top and a nice picnic 41 spot. wards along the wide break, around the arête, and Did I mention the belay off a millstone? struggle 182a standing 181 into 185 186Finish 187 with 188 ease. 183 184 position. 189 190 The Quarries: I’ve got to hold my hands up on this one. I put these 36 off for some time, but one sunny winter’s day after a dry spell I gave 182 183 184 Ordinary 23 181 Overhang Buttress « 189 1934 190 them a go and was quite pleasantly surprised. 185 186 VS1874b 188 12m A small nibble of the joys of the last route, givMoorside Crack: Are you sitting comfortably? You should be if ing a great little wrestle. Follow the last route until it you’re doing it right. Mind you, standing up is not as easy as you’d 192contort 191 to 195short is possible up the 197 198 199 200 think. 193 194 196crack. 33 32 D c 192 193 194 VS1954b 196 197 198 199 24 191 Infirmary Groove 1956 200 Some of the routes at Gardom’s are like fine wines which need the right 12m A more conventional crack but still tricky. Climb it moving right into a second short crack and a sometimes heathery exit. 33 temperature and humidity. Don’t blow your cork by climbing them on the wrong day but savour the moment and you’ll be well rewarded. Nowanda Buttress To the right, a series of walls give a fine collection35of routes. The routes on the left walls can sometimes be green, while those on the right have a much sunnier aspect. 25 Traction VS 4c 38 a 40 39 John37 Camateras 1956 6m A direct line up the centre of the buttress via a curvy crack and capping overhang. 26 Bloc Steno V5 (6b) A direct start to Traction up a blunt34 undercut rib and groove. V1 (5c) if the right arête is used. 27 Gardom’s Gate VD 1949 8m The prominent groove leads to a ledge. Step up then traverse left on jams to an easier finish up the sidewall of the upper block. Froggatt to Black Rocks 251 04/02/2010 16:47:52 42 41 Gardom’s Edge – Nowanda Buttress 25 50 31 Och Aye Wall – Gardom’s Edge 41 66 67 then 65 overhang, 68 69 70 62 left63over64the low rock. Swing61up and 124 125in 126 127 128 129 130 123is allowed decide which side you121fancy.122Gear 65 66 67 68 69 70 62 Wanda 64 avoid 63 but Nowanda for61Little the holds. 131 132 133 134 135 33 34 Nowanda HVS 5a «« 71 30 72 73 141 35 Landsick E1 5b « 136 137 138 139 140 1953 74 75 c 138 139 140 77 78 79 80 76 150 142 143 144 145 1953 146 147 148 149 33 89 90 144 pro143 arrange 145 146 147 148 149 150 overhang at two-thirds 141 height.142 Carefully 85 86 traverse. 82 rightwards 83 84 finishing tection before 81a tough, 87 88 89 29 151 156 157 158 159 160 163 164 166 167 168 169 170 32 Seven metres down to the right is a flat-fronted buttress with a prominent right-angled corner on its left-hand side: 41 To the right101of this a deep, 102 buttress 103 104 is 105 106 capped 107 108 109 110 162 wall chimney. Starting on its161left-hand 163 is:164 165 166 167 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 28 Corner Crack D 8m The deep gully. 29 Attraction HVS 5a D 1951 1956 c 10m Follow a series of green, sloping mantelshelves up the blunt arête, the first being by far the hardest. 30 Moyer’s Climb HS 4b « c.1931 15m A diagonal route with a hard start and an even harder finish. Start at the left side of the buttress, climb some gear. 42 A long 38 up and rightwards to 40 39the finish at the right-hand stretch brings edge. 3137 Moyer’s Variation S 4c pre-1950 12m After a hard start climb more easily up the cen- tre of the face. 32 Social Fools E1 5b 1981 10m Beginning under the right-hand arête swing up leftwards and mantelshelf onto green holds close to Moyer’s Variation. Move up just left of the arête to finish. 252 Froggatt to Black Rocks 3 A B Int gard A3.indd 252-253 38 35 a 91 92 crag’s 93 94 E3s 95 96 will 10m The second of the 99 100 151 great 152 153which 154 97test 15598 156 157 158 159 160 your ability to crank on slopers. Follow the last route to the overhang, for the96top.97 98 99 100 92 lurch 93 directly 91 then 94162 95 161 165 a The dog-legged crack in the wall to the right is Grey Crack, HD (pre-1950). a 90 152 153 154 155 1981 36 Landsickness E3 6a «« 10m The aptly named crack up the corner. D 36 82 the83series 13m A tester. 81Follow cracks86to a 87 small88 84 of 85 31 32 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 33 Cobweb51Arête/Little E2 5c/6a 125 121 Wanda 127 128 129 130 124 1994/1999 122 123 12m The arête on either side. Artificial, but on nice 126 12m Fun fun71fun. 72 The 73 crack74at132the75133 left 76 of 134 the77wall 136 80137 13578 79 131 gives a classic jamming test. 28 29 116 117 118 119 120 119 120 114 116 112 54 113 55 56 5711558 59 60117 118 53 52 111 51 30 D 44 45112 46113 47 11448 11549 42 43 111 37 Cave Gully HD 171 172 173 174pre-1950 175 a Gain, HVD (trad), climbs the wall, arête and crack171right 172 of Landsickness 173 174 . b175 Just right, the short slabDand chockstone outside the gully is Capstone Climb, VD (pre-1950). 181 38 Cave Gully Crack S 4b 34 176 177 178 179 180 42 179 Garden 1890 180Face Indirect D « 176 177 178 10m Another ancient Puttrell pitch. A short corner leads to dogleg cracks up the wall above. Heading b c d 8 9 10 2 3 4188 5189 6190 7 1 e186 a b184c 185 181 182 183 187 To the right is an easy way down. d The dirty right steep and pushy: tough for the grade. 10m The crack system just right of the gully is quite d pre-1950 12m The chockeda b crack leads constricting 192 c d191 h a 193 194 195 e f gto 11 chimney. The cruxa may b c be f g h which way to d edeciding face before you enter. h a b c d191 f g192 194 e 193 195 abc d fgh 40 Garden Face Crack HSe4b « c.1931 15m Grunting guaranteed. Start with a move on to a platform on the left, and gain the crack by an awkward move, with protection from monster cams (VS 21 without). Climb the crack to finish. 41 Garden Face Direct VS 5a « pre-1950 10m Start up the previous route and swing right- 31 196 12 197 13 hand wall is Heather Wall, HS 4b (1951), finishing 18 , VS 19 5b 20 (1990), starts left of the roof;16e Small17People left of the arête finishing to the right of the roof. 200 198 14 19915 16 17 18 45 Tartan Route VS 5a « 1951/54 12m A technical and fingery test. Start left of the corner and climb straight up via a tricky initial move. The top can get overgrown so either finish left or exit right through the entertaining squeeze. 46 Capstone Gully M « pre-1950 10m Low grade adventure up the juggy corner line with a caving exit. 20 19 Och Aye Wall: 200 Around the arête to the right is a 196 197 slabby 198 199 wall in a tree-shrouded bay. Despite its initial dirty appearance the necessary holds are clean and even somewhat26polished providing tricky starts. 22 27 28 VS295a « 23 43 25 Aye Wall Indirect 30 24 Och pre-1950 18m Start just to the right of the arête and, using some polished 35 holds, climb to a ledge at 8m. 32 37 38 VS 5b39«40 35 Aye36Wall Direct 33 44 34 Och e 1934 15m The polished direct start is infuriating. Start at slippery footholds, to the left of the centre of the 47 wall, and climb directly to the top. wards on to the face and follow it to the top. There’s a couple of reachy moves which aren’t too bad once you work them out. A direct is only just harder. 41 37 168 169 170 and left at the dogleg is S 4a. c Garden Fence, D 182 183 184 185 186 187 up 190 188 189 (trad), is the short but nice wall to the right. a pre-1950 e 39 Chockstone Climb b dHSe4af g h 42 40 39 42 43 44 45 46 48 47 55 56 57 49 58 50 59 60 45 43 46 44 Froggatt to Black Rocks 253 04/02/2010 16:47:55 1 2 5 4 3 8 7 6 9 17 18Buttress 19 20 Gardom’s Edge 16– Gardom’s 11 12 13 14 17 16 15 18 21 23 20 19 50 27 28 32 33 35 34 29 30 44 43 42 37 38 36 46 45 e 39 40 45 43 48 47 56 55 57 58 59 60 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 72 73 74 75 76 77 68 69 70 78 79 80 80 90 74 75 76 77 78 79 89 71 72 73 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 91 92 93 94 95 96 91 101 101 92 97 98 98 99 99 90 100 94 95 96 97 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 100 Dave Parry on Pogle’s Wood,V4 (page xxx). Al William’s relatively recent discovery shows that there are still high-quality classics at reasonable grades to be found by those that know where to look. Photo: John Coefield 3 A B Int gard A3.indd 254-255 126 124 125 126 D a 122 123 121 pre-1957 135 136 e 132 133 131 134 135 136 c.1931 146 144 145 142 143 To the right of the Green routes141is a small buttress and an old split oak. Behind the tree is a short 152 153 154 155 151 arête. 146 54 Little Arête VS 4c « 152 153pre-1957154 155 156 60m From Moyer’s Climb move rightwards to finish up Tartan Route. Unfortunately, it is close to the top and bottom of the crag on occasions. ancy moves up the inset groove.161At the162ledge 163step164 165 left and finish up again. Micro cams might prove handy for the nervous. 161 162 163 164 165 166 a The wall to the right of Capstone Gully is Nerve Block, E5 6a (1981). b The straight crack in the wall to the right is the aptly named Slime Crack, VS 5a (1931). c The Rink, E2 5b (1956), breaks out Pogle’s Wood: This lies directly below 172 173But-174 171 Moyer’s 44 51 49 52 53 54 pre-1950 leftwards and boldly climbs the wall. 93 D D 125 112 113 145 48 50 49 52 71 121 of a122 124 the seam, reach right for the start ramp123 system. Finish direct up the wall with a scary top move. 111 113 12m The undercut corner is not as bad as it looks 141for purists. 142 143 144 starting from the cheat block. 5a 46 47 The Zigzag Girdle HS 4b 51 116 53 Green Crack HS 4b 47 41 115 112 12m The green arête at the right-hand of the134 131 132end 133 wall direct to a rounded exit. 35 31 114 52 Green Rib E2 5c 25 24 116 111 Pogle’s Wood – Gardom’s Edge 26 22 114 115 10 48 Fantasy HVS 5b 1956 10m The fun wall, starting with awkward moves onto a projecting flake. Arrange bomber cams for a tricky mantel leftwards to gain a ledge; lasso the sapling and finish directly up the steep wall above. 49 Byne’s Crack S 4b « pre-1950 15m The obvious crack. The midway crux is a swine and best suited to big hands and feet. Starting down in the pit and finishing over the overlap on the right adds much enjoyment. 50 The Working Man E2 5b 11m Break out right from 1995 Byne’s Crack onto the face as soon as you can, where flared breaks offer little in the way of substantial protection; RPs useful. A rounded flake and a blind reach bring you to a large ledge. Continue up the bulging wall above. 51 Waggy E7 6c « 2002 11m Start at the right-hand end of the cave just right at two obvious jugs. Using gastons, undercuts and 151 156 9m Ascend the little gem arête by technical bal- 175 17 174 175 17 tress, with one of the best problems on the circuit. 171 55 Pogle’s Wood Left-Hand V3 (6b) 172 173 The left arête may feel harder or easier depending on which holds you deem ‘in’. 182 181 183 184 56 Pogle’s Wood V4 (6b) 181 182 191 192 193 Froggatt to Black Rocks 185 184 185 183 The right arête has gorgeous moves on perfect slopers: see photo on page xxx. a Pogle’s Wood Sit Start V8 (6c) is even better. b A dirty little sit start lies on the 191 (6b).192 193 194 boulder to the right: Wormhole, V4 The name ‘Gardom’s Edge’ hails from its former landowners, Thomas Gardom & Sons, who resided in the parish at Yeld Farm and Bubnell Hall circa 1787 onwards. Legend has it one of the Gardom family was a blacksmith, specialising in wrought iron, his legacy giving rise to such routes as Blacksmith’s Wall and The Smithy as well as the nice twirly Golden Gates at Chatsworth. SJ 166 195 194 195 255 04/02/2010 16:47:56 Gardom’s Edge – Moyer’s Buttress 111 112 113 114 115 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 131 132 133 134 135 61 64 a 60 60 61 e 57 70 58 80 55 90 56 90 100 110 110 146 147 148 149 150 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 161 171 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 156 157 158 159 160 166 167 168 169 170 181 182 183 184 185 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 186 187 188 189 190 59 80 100 136 137 138 139 140 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 131 141 142 143 144 145 70 126 127 128 129 130 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 121 62 116 117 118 119 120 65 62 Moyer’s Buttress Fifteen metres to the right is a magnificent buttress, the showpiece of the edge. Undercut and smooth, the compelling steep upper slab gives an impression of isolated impregnability. 57 The Gritstone Treaty V8 (6c) The brilliant hanging left arête of the block left of Moyer’s Buttress. 58 Mo’s Problem V7 (6c) Climb the right arête of the hanging block, above an appalling landing. Originally done with a ladder used to create a pad platform! 59 Cave Arête HVS 5a « 1950 18m A climb of two contrasting styles. First fight 256 66 63 196 197 198 199 200 your way out of the cave up the crack, then teeter up the arête. Perhaps a good warm up for its neighbour, or it might just put you off. 60 Stormbringer E3 6a «« 1956/76 20m Great God Almighty: E3 number three, and as fierce a test of mantelshelving as you will ever get at the grade. With a side-runner in the chockstone up and left, get the flat hold above the roof. Make a brave mantel onto this – the living end – and continue more easily up the wall above. 61 Monotheism E7 6b « 1998 21m An impressive and bold route busting directly over the centre of the main roof. Follow the slab to the overhang. Make hard moves over this (poor small cam) then crux moves up the slab passing a crucial mono to reach easier ground. Duz Walker on one of Gardom’s most gruesome moves, the perched mantel on Stormbringer, E3 6a (opposite page). A sense of urgency hangs over the picture, recognisable by anyone who has done the route – and not without reason. Duz pressed it out to get stood right up, level with the next holds before taking the fall, in a ropes-between-the-legs-and-everything clatter onto the slab below. Photo: Nick Smith. Froggatt to Black Rocks 3 A B Int gard A3.indd 256-257 04/02/2010 16:47:59 13 51 17 18 19 20 61 15 16 17 18 19 20 14 Gardom’s Edge – Moyer’s Buttress 16 62 Moyer’s Buttress E1 5b ««« 33 34 63 Biven’s E1 5b « 49 46 Crack 47 48 45 44 43 50 63 59 60 73 82 83 82 83 92 93 92 93 102 103 102 103 66 65 63 91 1955/66 72 73 82 83 65 74 69 84 75 76 77 78 76 77 78 79 80 87 88 89 90 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 72 94 95 96 3 A B Int gard A3.indd 258-259 73 76 97 97 98 99 100 98 99 100 69 73 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 a 75 70 71 Elliott’s Buttress Indirect VS 4c « pre-1950 14m From high in the gully shuffle rightwards along the break where an inelegant belly flop or stylish mantel gains the ledge. At its right-hand end continue more easily up the arête before moving back to finish up the wall above. D 72 Seventy One White Mice E2 6a « 1981 15m A technical route. A little bit lower down is a thin crack. Start steadily up this until all the holds run out. A bit of cunning and some rounded holds allow you to reach the break. Finish direct. 73 The Eye ofcFaith E1 5c ««« 1956 25m A Gardom’s classic. This original, right-hand 74 73 start, has now become the less popular version, but it adds a significant amount of tough climbing. Climb the roofed corner and move leftwards with difficulty to gain a thin crack in the nose, crux. At the top of the thin crack move right to the arête and follow it magnificently to the76 top. b A slightly easier, more popular and equally classic HVS 5b start is possible by moving in rightwards from the gully to gain 75 the thin crack. 74 Rhythmic Itch E1 5b «« 1981 25m A good counter line. Start up the roofed corner as before but exit right and climb to the second roof. Either continue direct with a huge reach or, better still, make an exhilarating traverse left towards the 132 133 134 141 142 143 144 1 74 90 “The great challenge of the edge, the abc d e fgh pre-1950 magnificent Moyers Buttress, still awaited 69 Pine Crack S 5a 94 95 96 10m Climb the dirty cleft behind the tree to a spa98 99 It100 a lead despite many 97 vain attempts. cious ledge. Continue up the obvious finger crack. 70 wasn’t until 1955 that Peter Biven, ac98 69 99 94 95 by96Trevor97Peck, displayed 100 a companied one 70 Baton Route VD 1953 of the boldest feats of cragsmanship of the 10m Step left onto the slab to the right of the oak tree and climb to the ledge of Pine Crack. Layback 105 106 leading 107 108the 109 110 era104by successfully route.” the crack in the slab above. Nice. a A direct elimi1970 Chatsworth guide nate start and finish is VS 5a. 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 Froggatt to Black Rocks 131 c 67 68 b 92 93 94 95 96 92 93 131 132 133 134 80 86 71 112 113 114 121 122 123 124 1 Elliott’s Buttress – Gardom’s Edge 121 122 123 124 leading to the same ledge and finish. b Keith’s Arête, 102 103 104 the105 101 106arête107 109pleas108c The 110 64 Perfect Day E5 6b ««« 1979 VD (trad), takes wall and to right. 22m A 65 great route, with good gear but a commitProblem Chimney , HVD 4a (trad), is antly awkward 66 67 68 69 70 ting and technical crux sequence. Follow Biven’s 10m right of Keith’s Wall and has a tricky exit. d Right Crack until it fades. Swing left and make bouldery again is a nice V0– (4b) rib arête problem. 65 past a diagonal crack (runner) 64 moves 69 to reach crux the deep slot above. Don’t dally here, as the rounded Elliott’s Buttress finishing moves, passing a pocket, are still tricky. About 50m right of Moyer’s Buttress lies this tall 65 Perfect Day76Direct77Start78V7 (6c) 80 narrow-fronted buttress. a Onbits cleft dis a ebuttress Justifiably popular locking between positive holds. largely shrouded by a prominent oak: a b c d e The first edge is usually gained by a79jump and is 75 static. 78 Biven’s Crack. 76 Escape 80 74 harder 77 down 67 Pining for the Fjords S 4c traditional slightly 10m Start left of the tree and climb on to the ridge 6684 Keith’s g h67Finish up the awkward crack. b c dtoethefledge. 86 Crack 85 Corner 87 HS884b 89 90 1949 leading 10m The steep corner on the right to a ledge. Climb h b c d e f g 68 1997 the slanting groove on the left to the top. a To the 68 Mr Three Degrees E2 6a c g h a b f d e 84 85 86 87 Crack 88 ,89VD (1981-85), right is Keith’s Other Corner 5m The short arête to the left of the wide finishing 90 acrack b c ofdthee previous f g h route; hard and bold. 258 111 67 68 69 70 85 DD 72 59 60 1955 this to its end and finish rightwards with sustained 91 difficulty. b If you haven’t had enough (doubt58 (1983), steps back ful), Enigma 56 57, E3 5c 55 Variation leftwards on to the wall, and climbs directly101 to a rounded and difficult exit. 54 54 64 12m On the face to the right is a steep crack. Jam 52 53 62 62 21m One of the top E1s on grit – historically signif26interest and variety every step of the way. icant, with Climb up the cracks in the slab and swing right to 27 28 29Move 25 30 up to a sloping a niche on the steep sidewall. break and make some difficult moves (crux) to 71 get 35 on the front face. Climb the slab with a established bit of help from the arête to the top. a For a fresh 81 37 38classic, 35 Way, E3 view on36this venerable 40 39 Imperfect 5c (2009), follows the arête on its steep right side until forced onto the left side at a large foothold 81 just below the top.47 Impressively pumpy. 23 24 52 53 141 142 143 144 151 152 153 154 151 152 153 154 161 162 163 164 arête using a great big rail. Shove some 161 gear in and 162 move up rapidly before your arms fail. 171 75 Elliott’s Buttress Direct VS 4b «« 163 164 172 173 174 1934 25m Another Gardom’s gem. Start down in the 171 rock. 172 173 depths and emerge out onto clean soaring The corner and crack bring you to the top of a huge flake. Step off the polished foothold and climb the upper wall trending rightwards to gain 181 the final182 183 crack. c The short groove and slab to the right is Evasion, HVD 4a (pre-1957). 174 18 181 182 183 18 “From the summit of the Eagle Stone the two Sheffielders saw the fine crags of Gardom’s Edge to the south. This edge is one of the 191most 192 193 194 charmingly situated in the district. Its buttresses, rising to a height of perhaps seventy 191 192 193 19 feet, look down over the wooded and bracken slopes to the cultivated peacefulness of Baslow and Chatsworth. Puttrell and Watson, who found this edge virgin of nailmarks, ascended and named Brown Crack and Garden Face, but the buttresses had a repelling steepness to which they were unaccustomed, and there were few lines of weakness to tempt them to further visits.” High Peak Froggatt to Black Rocks 259 04/02/2010 16:48:00 11 12 Gardom’s Edge – Gardom’s Buttress 13 14 15 51 52 53 61 62 17 18 19 20 17 18 19 20 16 16 54 59 60 66 65 63 64 67 68 69 70 65 Dead Tree Wall – Gardom’s Edge 69 26 21 23 24 22 27 28 25 29 30 35 31 32 35 33 34 37 38 36 39 40 71 72 73 74 75 76 81 82 83 84 85 86 44 42 43 47 48 46 45 55 51 61 52 53 62 50 49 56 57 59 60 66 65 64 91 58 54 63 91 101 67 68 69 70 65 92 93 94 95 96 77 92 93 94 95 96 80 90 81 79 97 98 99 100 97 98 99 100 78 82 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 Dead Tree Wall: The south-facing wall to the 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 101 102 right. 76 Jungle Arête HS 4b 1953 10m Start up the undercut corner. Using the flake 69 arête and follow it more easily to D onto theScramble D swing a large ledge. D off or finish up the rather more difficult finishing groove of Dead Tree Wall. a bHS 4bc « d e 77 Dead Tree Wall 71 72 73 74 81 82 83 84 75 76 85 86 77 78 79 80 88 89 90 87 88 89 91 91 101 90 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 92 93 97 98 99 100 94 95 96 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 Airlie Anderson on Eye of Faith, HVS / E1 (page xxx). Tough enough, but with good protection and great moves, it’s a pleasure from beginning to end. Photo: Ian Parnell. 260 Froggatt to Black Rocks 3 A B Int gard A3.indd 260-261 DD D 1934/52 d theewall follow a 20m Starting fromathebcentre c of bold, rising traverse to a sapling and go on up to 80 Climb the slabby groove in the a large ledge. 83 wall c d e tof ga hard a b behind h exit. Other variations exist. a bc d e fgh 1983/2002 h on Fire VS 5a a b c78d Liar, e f gPants 15m A mini multi-pitch adventure. Just to the right abc d e fgh is a step in the ground. Climb up the wall to a large a b c d e81f g h ledge. Either set up a stance or bravely finish up the wall above via a long stretch. 79 Gossip HVS 5b 83 88 89 90 87 88 89 47 41 79 80 77 78 82 1985 7m Higher up on the right is a short but deceptive- ly steep crack. A good opportunity to see if all that wall climbing has paid off. Big moves between good holds lead to a large break. Move right and continue cautiously up the wall. a At the same grade Rumour (1983) exits left at the end of the initial crack. To the right of the descent path is a narrow green 7m high buttress with a block-filled flake chimney on its right. a Central Overlap, VS 4c (2002), takes the left facet and overlap direct. b Right-Hand Flake, VD (trad) has a hard start then follows flake cracks rightwards or, harder, the hanging flake direct. c Flaky Chimney, M (trad) surprisingly follows the flaky chimney. 84 80 Capstone Rib HVS 5b « 1957 12m A good outing with contrasting climbing. Climb the slabby south face of the tower to a ledge. Make a hard move up the narrow front face via a mono. Finish more easily. Blacksmith’s Wall: A short distance to the right is a buttress capped by a roof. 81 Striker’s Rib E1 5c 1957 12m Worth a crack. Start up the mediocre arête to a ledge where things get interesting. 85 A large cam pro-86 vides protection for the hard finish up the suddenly exposed arête. The next two routes start up a protruding flake. 82 Smithy HVD 1957 12m Climb the flake to a mantelshelf, then finish with exposure in the hanging groove right of the overhang. Froggatt to Black Rocks a b c d e 8 Fifteen metres right, and below the cliff, is a blocky rib; the top of which forms a small tower: 261 04/02/2010 16:48:04 88 51 52 53 61 62 Gardom’s Edge – Gardom’s Buttress 54 59 60 66 65 63 64 67 68 69 70 65 1 2 11 12 A great way to enjoy the view across the wooded valley below. Luke Xxxx catching some air on the spectacular, though reasonable, finish of Hearse Arête, E1 5b (page xxx), Photo: Nick Smith. 72 73 74 75 76 81 82 83 84 85 86 77 78 79 80 91 101 90 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 92 93 97 98 99 100 94 95 96 14 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 a b c d e a b c d e 10 17 18 19 20 17 18 19 20 21 23 24 22 27 28 25 161 162 171 172 171 172 Oread Buttress – Gardom’s Edge 87 29 30 35 31 41 32 33 34 42 43 84 44 35 37 38 36 45 47 48 46 55 51 52 53 61 62 63 39 40 47 56 57 54 85 86 65 66 49 86 Oread VS 4b «« 59 60 69 89 90pre-1950 corner and move left to a ledge. Follow 87 88 89 the90good manufactured holds up the wall behind to a large platform. Are you feeling brave? Use the big flake to 91 make 92 an93airy94exposed 95 96 step onto, then around, 97 and 98 99 100 the arête to a finish up the wall behind. a This can reached a manteling the block more 92 be 93 99 is100 91 also 94 by 95 96 97 98 and in keeping with the grade. b Spring Route, HS 4b route weaving up the rock to the 101 (1963), 102 103is a poor 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 gives a V1 (5c). right. c The right wall of the bay corner is a south-west-facing wall split by two cracks both of which prove to be the meat of the routes. 1962 16m The overhanging crack requires a bit of cun- 3 A B Int gard A3.indd 262-263 a b cd e f g h a bc d e fgh abc d e fgh 192 191 192 pre-1950 7m The juggy cleft behind the tree, 2m right. To the right of Yellow Chimney the Edge deteriorates once again. The jumbled rocks here give boulder problems and micro-routes some of which were even named in some past guidebooks: just how much of an obscurist are you? 88 Drum Roll V7 (6b) As the edge curves up and right, there is a quarriedlooking, undercut slab. Climb the centre of this. Can also be done from a sitter at a grade harder. 84 Bin Laden’s Cave: Hidden in the woods below is another boulder. It’s a few hundred metres along the bottom path from Pogle’s Wood and is neither a home to a terrorist bogeyman nor much of a cave come to think of it, and yet it contains: 89 Bin Lillemule V7 (6c) 85 86 The left arête avoiding the tree. 90 Bin Laden’s Cave V5 (6b) The right arête is worth the detour. ning or a bit of faith in smearing and brings e you to a a b c d arête ledge. Ascend the more conventional to finish on the steep right-hand a face.b c d e Froggatt to Black Rocks 191 1949 87 Yellow Chimney M pre-1950 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 Oread Buttress: Around the arête from the green 262 182 upper part. 18m Not as bad as it first appears. Start up the DD 181 16m The central crackline moving leftwards in the About 12m to the right is a large and rather green 73 This 76 of: 72 bay. 74 is75the start 77 78 79 80 71 corner 85 Nymph’s ArêteD VS 4c « 182 58 12m Starting just to the right, follow an obvious line of wide cracks to a tricky exit. 82 October 83 84Climb 81 84 86 85 HVD 181 88 50 67 68 69 70 64 65 Wall VD 83 Blacksmith’s D a b cd e f g h a bc d e fgh abc d e fgh abc d e fgh abc d e fgh 16 9 26 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 DD 15 89 90 87 88 89 91 13 8 7 6 16 69 71 5 4 3 Froggatt to Black Rocks 263 04/02/2010 16:48:07 87 Ove rhan Forest Green Circuit ging Now 1 Pogl e ress and ’s W ood The bouldering at Gardom’s North has been well documented and justifiably popular for a long time. Away from the roadside and the open moor the rest of this rambling woodland crag has been slower to reveal its secrets, yet gradually, bit by bit over the years, great problems have been turning up among the moss and twisted oaks. Now there are enough problems dotted along the edge to string together a circuit of exceptional character. The problems are well spaced but reward the search, each one a thing of beauty, all varied and on excellent rock. A number are also pretty highball making this a circuit best suited to a team approach. This is a tough collection of problems from V4 to V8, with nine at V6 and above; fear not though, as none are complete stoppers at the grade. Though not a huge circuit each problem is substantial and involving, and whilst very achievable in a day it will certainly feel like a big one! Onward to the forest ye bold hearted explorer. Butt a Bu ttres s 2 Moye r 4 3 ’s Buttr ess The Problems Gardom’s Left-Hand – page xxx 1 Bloc Steno (xx) 2 The Gritstone Treaty (xx) 3 Perfect Day Direct Start (xx) 4 Pogle’s Wood Sit Start (xx) 5 Bin Laden’s Cave (xx) Gardom’s Right-Hand – page xxx 6 Agadoo (xx) 7 A Fearful Orange (xx) 8 Two Headed Boy (xx) 9 Double Bum (xx) 10Business as Usual (xx) 11 English Voodoo (xx) Gardom’s South Boulders – page xxx 12 Captain Cabinets (xx) 13 Suavito (xxx) 14China in your Hand (xx) Moorside Rocks p xx 15 The Jackalope (xx) Bin 5 Lade n’s C a ve Und erta 6 ker Cro JF ’s B cod uttr ess ile 7 Capillia ry C 8 rack App le B 9 uttr ess The Qua rrie s 10 Pill 11 ar W all Gar dom Bou ’s Sou lder th s 12 Moo 13 rsid 14 e Ro cks 15 3 A B Int gard A3.indd 264-265 04/02/2010 16:48:08 71 81 Gardom’s Edge – Undertaker’s Buttress 81 91 4 91 4 3 101 101 3 3 3 2 4 127 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 4 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 8 92 93 944 95 96 97 98 99 100 3 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 6 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 155 102 103 104 3 105 1065 107 108 109 110 141 142 143 144 153145 154146 147 156 149 158 150 159 160 148 157 6 151 152 153 154 155 156 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 158 159 160 151 152 153 154 155 156 c157 158 157 159 160 5 161 162 151 152 153 154 163155 164156165157 166 159 168 160 169 170 158 167 D D D 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 a DD D 172 171 175 180 177 173 a b c d e 161 162 163 164 b165 174166 167 176 169 178 170 9 179 168 7 a b c d e 178 10179 180 171 172171 173 172174 173175 174176175177 176178 177 a b c d e 179 180 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 a b c d 1 2 e 4 1 Gardom’s Right-Hand 4 d e fgh a wide b c dcorner e f g hjust right with (pre-1950), climbs the b c dthe f g hoverlap. e top an squirming exit just abelow abc d e fgh After a gap of 100m or so, the climbing gets going abc d e fgh again. The right-hand side of the crag is characterised On the main buttress the first climb is: by less continuous rock, with more sporadic buttress1981 es strung out among the trees running from Under- 2 Blaze VS 4c taker’s Buttress along to the Apple Buttress area. 8 12m The ‘Coffin Crack’ and wall at the left-hand end of the main buttress. 8 Undertaker’s Buttress Area Approximately 100m past the Oread area is the very conspicuous overhang of Hearse Arête. At the far left of this is an outlier buttress with a small overlap: 1 Gemstone HVS 5a c 2002 c ‘gem’ takes the wall direct 8m This overlooked, ahem, by some initial bouldery moves. Continue past the overlap to an interesting finish. a Milestone, S 4a a 3 Undertaker’s Buttress VS 4c, 4b «« 1951 22m A great route that cleverly manages to avoid the steep ground. Start up Blaze to the chockstone, teeter right and climb the delicate wall to a possible stance. One more tricky move around the arête leads to an easier finish up a short, exposed crack in the right side wall. Found that easy? Then try the main event… 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 4 5b «« 1956 182 183Arête 181 Hearse 184 E1185 186 187 188 189 190 20m The striking overhang yields a spectacu181route 190 lar that has184a186 bit185of Start189up the 186188 187 181 182 183185 190 187everything. 183 182184 189 188 rounded arête below the large overhang to a frustrat181 182 189 190 183 184 A 185 ing mantel. bit of186 bold187 wall188 climbing leads to the 192 193the194 191 stance below steep195 overhang. 200 197 198 some 199 gear, 196 Arrange take a breath and tackle the roof on good holds, no 191 192 191 193 192194 200 194right 196198 199on198 196195197 sneaking off193 to195the now: photo page199 xxx! 200 197 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 5 Coffin Nail HVS 5a 1989 10m This start belongs on a sea cliff. Just to the right of the arête make a scary step across the ‘zawn’ to better holds. Continue cautiously up the arête and wall to the finish of Undertaker’s Buttress. 6 Rest in Pieces VS 5b 1992 8m Start below the damaged flake and climb gently past it taking care not to pull too hard. In fact try and avoid it completely if you can! A quick reach leads to a rounded break and a swift exit. 181 182 183 184 181 182 183 184 191 Undertaker’s Area – Gardom’s Edge 191 Marble Wall: Ten metres to the right is a west-fac- 192 193 194 192 193 194 ing bay, quarried in the distant past, and bounded on the right by a great block of a prow. Some of the holds are still creaky. a On the left-hand side the overgrown corner was Route III, VD (1953). The next two routes start one metre to the right of the corner: b Tales of the Black Widower, E5 6a (1988), takes the wall direct; c Marshall’s Route, HVS 5a (1963), traverses right to a good hold and continues to easier ground. 7 White’s Route HS 4b 1950 15m Start at the thin crack and follow the flake first right then back left to an easier upper groove. If you want a greater challenge, the left crack can be climbed direct at VS 5a. 8 Birthday Climb VD pre-1950 16m The block-filled corner trending steeply left on jugs leads to a ledge and an easier upper rib. 9 Pedestal Climb HS 4a pre-1950 10m A pleasant oddity, better than it first looks. Start below the prow and climb on to the pedestal. Gymnastic moves up and left lead to a good ledge. Finish up the delicate wall above. It’s possible to make a direct start to the ledge up the flake at VS 5b. The rocky land below the edge used to have a nine-hole golf course – belonging to The Baslow Hydro (opened in 1818 and demolished in the 1930s). If you look carefully there are the remains of six greens and five sets of tees. a b b 7 7 9 9 10 10 Bilberry Buttress Undertaker’s Buttress Marble Wall Nursery Slab 3 A B Int gard A3.indd 266-267 Capiliary Crack Tree Buttress Wall Buttress Chunky Doorstep Grooved Wall Apple Buttress 04/02/2010 16:48:15 121 122 123 124 125 121 Gardom’s Edge – Bilberry Buttress 13 Stepped Crack HD « 16 126 127 128 129 130 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 pre-1950 133 is134 131line132 20m One for big boots. The rising of steps 146 147 148 149 150 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 152 153 154 155 The tasty arête problem left of the151corner. b 156 157 158 159 160 152 153 1950 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 15 Gardom’s Unconquerable VS1514c «« 11 14m Bring along some big arms and cams for this 161 162 163 164 one. The leaning corner is best laybacked, probably. photo164 From the ledge escape easily to the 161right: 162see163 right. c A thuggy problem, Willy, V1 (5b), lurches up the leaning holds on the right, 171 with an172optional 173 174 hard move higher up. d Continuing up the wall in 171 172 173 174 the same line is Xxxx Xxxx, E3 5c (2009). d 13 12 a 10 Nursery Slab HVS 5a 15 c 16 Whillans’ Blind Variant E1 5b « pre-1970 Biberry Buttress: Twenty metres to the right is a large corner bounded on its left by a long ridge. 1953 16m A couple of tricky moves up the left-hand arête of the wide corner lead to a ledge. Continue up the right-hand edge of the wall above in an exposed position. a The alternative chockstone start. just right, can link with the cleft above the ledge to give Bilberry Chimneys, HVD 4a (trad). 12 Crottle E1 5b « to join Bilberry Buttress. Step off the block, place a wire, step down. Repeat until you’ve used up all the good holds and then go for it. 3 A B Int gard A3.indd 268-269 166 167 168 169 170 165 166 167 168 169 170 175 176 177 178 179 180 175 176 177 178 179 180 185 the arête. Hopefully there will be some good holds. Once around the corner finish up the right-hand 191 192 193 194 195 wall. 191 192 a Boxing Clever, S 4a (2003), is the bold slabby193rib 196 197 198 199 200 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 between the bay of Gardom’s Unconquerable and Chimney Face, via a series of ledges. Chimney Face: To the right of the bay the path goes behind a sharp-edged block into a wide grassy gully. On the left-hand of this is a pleasant wall which will provide the soloist some entertainment. On the left are twin chimneys split by a narrow rib. The lefthand chimney is not worthwhile, but the rib provides a route: 17 Contempt HVD 4a 1956 8m The pleasant narrow rib is taken directly, with a tricky move pulling round the final roof on the left. a The Chimney, HVD (pre-1950), surprisingly is the chimney to the right with an awkward exit on the right. 1983 12m Climb the thin finger-crack on the side wall Froggatt to Black Rocks 165 186 187 188 189 190 Gardom’s Unconquerable look left along the break. 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 Scary isn’t it? Follow it to a committing swing round the slab. Climb the slab and then the steeper wall above on some great rugosities. a For Nursery Cryme, HVD 4a (trad), start at the right of the slab and climb it diagonally leftwards; shuffle left around the arête until a steep juggy finish heads back up and right. b The obvious, old, left-to-right traverse of the whole prow to finish up the awkward cleft is Nursery Traverse, D (pre-1950). 11 Bilberry Buttress VS 5a « 1951 182top183of 184 181at the 8m An airy traverse. From the ledge 14 10m Make a tricky move up the short arête to gain 268 141 Gardom’s Area – Gardom’s Crag 135 136 137 138 139 140 followed tightly up to the right to an eventual escape 144 145 143 wall rightwards; a good line. b A direct141finish142up the and groove above is E1 5c. 14 Golly V0+ (5b) 136 137 138 139 140 The wall to the right is split by a crack. The next two routes start just to the left of these at polished holds: Meilee Rafe launching up the crucial wide layback on Gardom’s Unconquerable,VS 4c (page xxx).A lack of footholds and a cantankerous angle combine to give this section an urgent feeling. Photo: Nick Smith. Froggatt to Black Rocks 269 04/02/2010 16:48:18 12 11 Gardom’s Edge – Tree Buttress 22 21 18 19 a 25 80 along a foot-ledge and finish cautiously up the arête (with side-runners at the grade). 100 100 110 110 e 15 16 17 18 19 121 122 123 124 125 121 29 30 24 25 27 28 26 pre-1950 23 61 VS624b 63 Third Time Lucky « 64 63 64 65 66 65 67 68 69 70 66 70 195167 68 69 7m Success was had on Nat Allen’s third65visit. Fol- 22 61 62 63 64 66 67 9m Slippery under foot. Make a low traverse left low the prominent groove to the roof and an awk62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 19 Chimney Face HS 4a a desperate dynamic move to gain a small edge just 1953 61 68 69 70 136 137 138 139 140 141 146 147 148 149 150 27 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 161 22 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 24 172 17324 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 171 3 A B Int gard A3.indd 270-271 31 32 30 131 31 28 141 14 33 27 28 29 28 33 pre-1950 151 161 161 171 91 pre-1985 92 down 93 94 94 95the right 95 ground 96 97 9691 again over Back on the 98 on 99 100 there are two more routes: 101 102 103 104 92 93 97 98 99 105 106 107 108 109 enough. 32 181 Albert182Spansworthy E5 6b186 1998 190 189 183 8184 185 187first188pocket 10 its 48m 5Start 6as for7 Agadoo 9and using 36 Right-Hand Crack VS 4c « 90 3 90 make a hard rightward move, above the horrible a bc d e fgh abc d e fgh abc d e fgh abc d e fgh c.1940 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 171 181 181 10m The corner. Pause and reflect on the stuck nuts 13 14drop,15to the16slot and the first bit of gear. Continue from a bygone age but not for too long, there’s one 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 directly up the leaning wall above with long reaches more tricky move before you can relax. 20 on the crest of 17 19418 19 finish 13 between 100 14 19115 breaks 19216 to 198 199 200 193a photogenic 195 196 197 a It’s possible to make an exciting traverse, Gnashthe arête. Very height dependant. 100 er, E3 5c (1996), starting from the corner on midWall Buttress: This is the steep tower of rock to the way ledge to the left of Make it Snappy. Traverse 110 right. Around the corner is a fine south-west facing the break rightwards to finish to the right of The 26 27 28 23 24 25 a collection 30 29 test-pieces. Crocodile. wall with of bold 110 71 1 141 151 29 166 167 168 169 170 centre of the face and continue to the top using91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 4b 102 103 104 105 pre-1950 good finishing holds. Direct start variations can 28 By-Pass Route S 101 106 10721 108 22109 101 14m 102 Climb right-to-left ramp provide a bit of fun. 103 104the 105 106 107diagonal 108 109 110 and 33 Make it Snappy E6 6b ««« 1984 once on the ledge tackle the butch layback crack left 101 of102the 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 The exposed37left 38 arête 39 of the buttress is gained Tree Buttress back corner. 35 31 32 33 13m 40 36 34 D D D by a traverse from the right. It has super bouldery 1956 41 Across a grassy gully is a broad buttress split by a 29 Central Crack HVS 5b « and with decent protection 42 43 moves, 50 and a long fall 46 a 47great,48safe 49 44 45it makes D D offwidth D the above long midway ledge with an old oak tree at its left- 14m Go straight up the undercut zone, ground-up prospect for a b c d e start of jamming, squirming, 41 hand end. the budding E6-er. 48 49 50 Dthe ramp. D Laybacking, D a b c d 42 e 43 44 45 46 47 crying, begging, praying and the use of a knee might e a b c d 22 Tree Buttress VS 4b pre-1950 34 Ecky Thump E7 6c « 1995 help.D Finish D up the back D corner. a b c d e 12m A desperate and fingery sequence only just e 12m Start up the short left-hand rib of the buttress a b c d 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 to a ledge. Cross it rightwards almost to the tree to Meanwhile back up on the ledge: within the safety net gives this climb its bite. Climb a b c d e arête, with a the hand-crack which is not as easy as it looks. 53 wall 51 52 the 54 between 55 56Crocodile 57 58and 59the 60 a ab b cc dde feg h 30 Wall Finish VS 4c « a b c d e f g h 1956 fierce crux to gain the hanging groove and break d e starts bb main 23 The Midas Man E4 6b 1983 7m The crack to the rightaof athe A route for black belts only. ccd ecorner fgh 61 62 above. 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 g h fine a b c dwith 8m As for Tree Buttress to the ledge. Climb the with a bit of jamming and finishes e fsome c dand h a b go f g Puppet e try The Crocodile E3 5c ««« 1975 wall starting with a short, poor crack and then left- laybacking. this easy, b dIfeyouf gfound 61 62 35 h 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 a atcChatsworth, Crack another Brown test-piece. 12m Number four and one of the best E3s around. wards to the arête. Froggatt to Black Rocks 30 1 1 121 131 32 171 172 1736b 174 175 176 177 178 1791985180 Climb up to a good flake and arrange as much psy71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 31 Agadoo E3 26 Gom Jabbar E8 6c 1994 7m The wall to the right is climbed via a pocket, a chological gear as you can. Now all you have to do is 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 7m A serious route. Climb and a crack. Highball V5 with pads and spotters. climb the bold wall to the good break. Sounds easy 73 to 74 the75right76 to 77 78 79 80 flake181 71 72the arête 182 183 185 190 184 186 187 188 189 6m From the crack climb up rightwards into the 270 Wall Buttress – Gardom’s Edge 131 132 133 134 135 26136 137 138 139 140 26 25 25 28 24 22 141 142 143 144 22 145 24146 147 148 149 150 ward exit left. There might be some hidden holds. 79 80 73 top. 75 runner 76 77 the78groove 72 the 74 A low 8m From the marked footholds follow the blind71 below 81 82 in 83 84 85stops86 an 87 88 89 2 flake and good holds to the top. unsuccessful leader falling to the bottom of the crag. 1 81 82 83 84 85 8186 8287 8388 84 89 85 90 86 87 88 89 11 12 20 The Backclip HS 4b traditional 27 Boon’s Wad E2 6a mid-1990s 84 85crack86and 87bulge88 to89the right. 82 The 83 curved 6m The crack itself with some good holds on81 7m A 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 11 98 12 99 either side of the face. boulder problem without a landing. 21 Stern Face S 4b 1 121 12 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 142 143 23 144 145 11 111 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 29 30 39 jamming 40 those tech34 35 36 37 38 39 40 a 39 reason to do them. 37 V3540 36 up the 38 39 40 32 to 33 Climb up a flaky31corner a tree. 34 Continue 62 18 Ball-Bearing Wall HS 4b 90 26 27 28 23 24 25 24 Tree Climb21 S 4b22 23 37 38 36 to practise 13m 34 Two35climbs niques, well there’s got to be 33 34 35 36 37 38 14 next routes the58 midway 51 56from 52 57 53 5459 55 56 57 58 59 60 60 ledge, 51 52The 53 54 55start gained by the ramp start of By-Pass Route, 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 51 can although 53 scrappy 51 52 54 55starts 56 57be added. 58 59 60 0 90 13 117 20 crack to the right, with a tricky overhanging exit. 61 80 17 18 19 15 20 16 12 chimney in the left-hand wall with help from 42 43shaped 48 49 50 46 47 48 49 50 41 47 46 42 touch 43 44 (4c 45 if you 44it!?).45a Tree Neighthe tree don’t bour, S 4b (1950), from the ledge takes 48 50 the wide 41 46 44 47 45 42 43 42 43 4449 45 46 47 48 49 50 20 0 16 11 41 21 18 15 32 60 0 14 31 41 17 13 33 34 35 36 37 39 Froggatt to Black Rocks 271 38 04/02/2010 16:48:21 191 191 112 113111 114 112115 113 116114 117115 118 116119 117120 118 119 120 111 112 113111 114 112115 113 116114 117115 118116119 117120 118 119 120 111 Gardom’s Edge – Capillary Crack 46 46 42 42 45 45 50 50 49 49 48 48 a a 41 41 60 43 44 44 43 47 45 47 37 Quandary Wall HVD 4a 1963 12m The weakness in the right-hand wall to the blocky heathery ledges. Fight your way up to the clean arête and finish in a fine position. 70 80 80 90 90 100 100 38 Red Sky Rib HD « pre-1950 16m The long slabby rib and short wide crack. 39 Split Slab VS 4c 45 16m The slab, overlap, some well-needed small cams and the rounded pocketed wall. Delightful. About 50m further on is a lovely picnic spot in a small quarried bay. Below this lies a small buttress: 40 Chunky Doorstep HVS 5a « 1992 8m The rounded right arête A short flake/crack provides a VD problem to the right. The undercut wall and ramp on the far left gives a scary V4 (6a). 110 Capillary Crack Buttress 110 Forty metres to the south, across an area of tracks and old quarry workings is a fine buttress. On its left-hand side is a fine gang of boulder problems: e 43 Neutral Milk Hotel V2 (6a) Behind the oak tree, climb the arête on its left and the wall above. Slap up the right side of the arête. Shuffle right along the sloping shelf until it is possible to mantel for the break and top. 45 It’s a Gas E1 5c 8m Start as for 1990 Jumping Jack Flash and traverse leftwards along the break to the left-hand arête. From the shelf, finish up the wall above via a shallow scoop. 46 Jumping Jack Flash HVS 5b 47 Broken Buttress VD 3 A B Int gard A3.indd 272-273 181 191 191 182 183181 184 182185 183 186184 187185 188186189 187190 188 189 190 182 183181 184 182185183186184 187185 188186189 187190 188 189 190 192 193191 194 192195 193 196194 197195 198196199 197200 198 199 200 191 192 193 194 192195193196194 197195 198196199 197200 198 199 200 pre-1950 12m The chimney to the right with a squeeze move 48 Ladder Coins V3 (6b) Froggatt to Black Rocks 181 long reach gains a cramped ledge and the hanging crack. From here a series of hard laybacks and finger locks will reward the persistent. 42 Squeeze Your Lemon E1 6a 1986 9m The hanging zigzag crack. a A great addition, 272 152 153151 154 152155 153 156154 157155 158156159 157160 158 159 160 151 152 153151 154 152155153156154 157155 158156159 157160 158 159 160 161 162 163161 164 162165 163 166164 167165 168166169 167170 168 169 170 161 162 163161 164 162165163166164 167165 168166169 167170 168 169 170 171 172 173171 174 172175 173 176174 177175 178176179 177180 178 179 180 171 172 173171 174 172175 173176174 177175 178176179 177180 178 179 180 1977 at half-height. Finish at the ledge or step back right and continue to the top. A Fearful Orange, V5 (6b) gives a low start on a 141 142 143141144 142145 143 146144 147145 148146149 147150 148 149 150 149 150 144 141 142 143141144 142145143146 147145 148146149 147150 148 9m A toughie. Step in left and a dynamic move or 41 Soloman V3 (6a) The left arête from a sit start. e lovely triangular sloper and adds quite a bit of extra climbing, move left to finish. 44 Two-Headed Boy V5 (6b) 1971 131 132 133131134 132135 133 136134 137135 138136139 137140 138 139 140 139 140 131 132 133131134 132135133136134 137135 138136139 137140 138 151 60 0 Gardom’s Area – Gardom’s Crag 121 122 123121124 122125 123 126124 127125 128126129 127130 128 129 130 129 130 121 122 123121124 122125123126124 127125 128126129 127130 128 A nice wall problem on edges just left of the groove to the ledge. Escape up or down the next route. In recent years the scattering of blocks and buttresses along and below Gardom’s Edge have been explored to give a circuit as good as any grit crag, with an extra exploratory air still hanging over them. Xxxx Xxx on one of the sweetest of these, Two-Headed Boy,V5 (opposite page). Photo: Jon Fullwood. Froggatt to Black Rocks 273 04/02/2010 16:48:24 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 Gardom’s Edge – Grooved Wall 126 127 128 129 130 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 56 Tree Groove VS 4b « 1934 12m climbing up the136 next137 groove a 131 Pleasant 134 135 138leads 132 133 139 to140 Gardom’s Grooved Wall Area –– Gardom’s Gardom’s Edge Crag 121 51 a d c 52 60 58 0 0 54 0 b 55 56 57 53 80 80 90 90 49 Gamorilla VS 5a 10m Start up the groove and mantel left to gain a small ledge, a breather and a hanging corner. Now all that’s left is that corner and the centre of the overhang. 50 Capillary Crack VS 4b « 100 100 110 110 e 1981 1951 52 Waterloo Sunset E3 5c «« 1977 18m The last of the fine E3’s to be sampled at Gardom’s. Exciting, bold and balancy. Start on the right of the arête and climb to the break and good protection. Take a deep breath and follow the arête which eventually leads to easier ground. 8m Step off the block onto the rib and climb the finger-crack. Finish over the overhang on the right using a good jug. a The blunt rib on the right is First Blood, V0 (5b) a short problem on fingery holds. b The flake right again is V0– (4b). b Below and left, the low wall offers some bouldering, most notably the crack on the right at V0– (4b). Grooved Wall arête on jams, pinches and layaways. Opposite Capillary Crack across the grassy gully is a fine arête marking the start of a fine wall. Starting down at the foot of the crag just left of the start of Waterloo Sunset is a green groove; 51 Whisky Wall S « pre-1950 12m Climb the green groove to a large terrace. An unprotected traverse rightwards fortunately leads to some good holds and a fine arête. a The slab between Whisky Wall and Waterloo Sunset is Muswell Hillbillies, E4 5c (1986), and climbs the centre of the slab directly. 274 Froggatt to Black Rocks 3 A B Int gard A3.indd 274-275 53 Finale Groove VS 5a « “Several members of the Oread MC were spread-eagled in various undignified attitudes tree. Either move rightwards to the narrow chimney 140 all over Apple Buttress. The Duke of Devon136 continue 133 of134 135 and or 131 make132 full use the tree the 4c 137 138up 139 wall. d Finishing left into Central Groove gives the shire choose this moment to stroll along the easiest line on at HS1474b.148 149 150 141 142 143the144main145wall146 footpath with his gamekeeper. After gazing in 150 145 VS146 142 143 144 141 Right-Hand 57 Groove 5a 147 148 149 1934 silence for a few moments he was overheard to 10m The innocuous-looking groove is harder than 155 160 it151 looks 152 whereas exiting the sentry-box is not as hard 157 154 remark: “Hm, rock climbers – doing no harm, 158 159 153 156 as it appears. 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 doing no harm”. Within a few weeks this kindly landlord was dead. It became a saying 58 Split Crack VS 4b pre-1985 162 again 161 Right 165 crack. 170 167 168it to169 163 is164another 166 Climb 8m a roof among the Oread members who were present and move rightwards to climb a crack in the bulge 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 that day that “We climb on Gardom’s Edge to the top. e The last crack of the wall is Slanting Groove f Directly below, a rib with 172 (pre-1957). 171 , D, 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 with The Duke’s kindly permission.’ ” a central cleft start gives a pair of fun HD climbs High Peak branching and right. 171 172left173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 Hazel focused on185 in hand – the big upper 182 183 181Robinson 190 fissure of N.M.C. Crack,VD (overleaf). This is one of 187with188a fine 184 the jobedge, 189sylvan the best routes of its grade on the186 ambiance and blockbusting line. Photo: Nick Smith. 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 196 197 198 199 200 1951 16m Climb the first bulging crack to the right of the 54 Babylon’s Groove VS 4c 1951 15m Follow the right-hand crack to a small roof. Step right and mantelshelf to a crack just left of the chimney. Either finish up the crack or the chimney. c It is possible to link the start of Babylon’s Groove with the top of Finale Groove (5a); contrived. 55 Central Groove VS 4c 1934 15m The next groove is harder than it looks but at least there is a great big chicken head for recompense. The upper chimney is much easier by comparison. Froggatt to Black Rocks 275 04/02/2010 16:48:26 111 112 113 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 111 63 64 66 62 a 61 b 63 65 a 63 Apple Buttress This has some of the best lower and mid-grade climbs in the area, gets lots of sun and is reliably very clean and quick drying. On the far left, and well up the bank, is a steep, straight crack: 75 64 Apple Crack HD « 59 Layback Crack VS 5a « 1950 7m Quite tough for the grade. The strenuous crack where jamming is allegedly sinful. 60 Flake Crack HS 4b « 1934 11m The steep, wider, right-hand crack has an awkward bulging move. 66 61 Twilight’s Last Gleaming E2 5b 1989 20m Climb straight up the slab passing a small ledge to a wide platform. Move leftwards and climb the arête. Bold. 70 69 62 N.M.C. Crack VD «« 71 bold? The mark of a good route. Start up the wide crack to the right of the arête, move leftwards at the first break and follow the arête to the top. a Apple Arête Direct, E3 5c (1980), is the bold and balancy direct start up the lower arête (or from its left). 73 pre-1950 12m The prominent wide crack in the front of the buttress leads to a large ledge just below the top. b The slab and overlap between 75 Apple Crack and Cider Apple is Cheeky Monkey, E2 6a (1997). 65 Cider Apple S 4a « 1950 18m Climb the right-hand arête and slab to the ledge. Finish boldly up the right-hand edge of the front of the final tower. 75 “In the early thirties Eric Byne and his 74 in the quarried bay right of Apple Buttress. Photo: John Coefield. 131 132 133 134 135 64 59 62 61 121 63 63 60 121 129122 130123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 126 127 128 Gardom’s Area – Gardom’s Crag 130 number 126V6 (page 128 a 129 125 Bum, 126enough 128 129 122 130123 121 122 123 When124 once 125 just isn’t Coefield having124 his Double fierce little 127 xxxx), 127 – Adam 121 122 123 124 125 Gardom’s Edge – Apple Buttress 63 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 131 131 139132 140133 134 135 136 137 138 136 137 138 139 140 139 140 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 131 132 133 134 135 66 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 141 150 146 147 148 141 149142 143 144 145 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 146 147 148 149 150 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 141 156 157 158 159 160 151 152 153 154 155 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 156 157 158 159 160 166 167 168 169 170 b161 162 161 162 65 164 165 166 167 168 169 170163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 163 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 161 162 180163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 178 179 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 171 178 179172180173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 181 182 183 184 185 191 192 193 194 195 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 186 187 188 189 190 186 187 188 189 190 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 196 197 198 199 200 191 192 193 194 195 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 196 197 198 199 200 friend, Clifford Moyer, were cleaning out 75 the (Apple) crack when he found a lovely 68ing feel. A flake leads to a ledge then a corner to a apple which he ate. He discovered it had wide platform. Finish up the tough slanting hand74 73 69 70 been left there crack: see photo on page XXX. 72 a lady whom he met 71 by later and eventually married!” 63 Apple Arête VS 4b ««« 1952 18m The67 classic VS of the crag 68 with good gear and The Peak & Pennines, WA Poucher 72 1930 18m The fine wide crack-line with a mountaineer- the moves aren’t that hard so why does it feel so 276 Froggatt to Black Rocks 3 A B Int gard A3.indd 276-277 Froggatt to Black Rocks 277 04/02/2010 16:48:29 Gardom’s Edge – Apple Buttress 171 172 173 174 175 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 then the flake-crack above. 66 72 Cider VS 5a « 191 192 193 194 1950 195 9m More delightful balance and technique. The 75 70 67 71 72 73 74 c.1931 14m The obvious large steps lead with increasing difficulty to the ledge. Gain the top using the short, difficult crack behind. with an on/off move to gain the break from where things ease. Other variations have been claimed. 69 Velvet Cracks HS 4b 1963 8m The twin thin cracks with no cheat start using To the right is an awkward way down. Just past this is a thin crack in the slab: its neighbour. 67 Bitter VS 5a « 9m The two well-polished cracks in the centre of pre-1970 70 Apple Jack Crack VD pre-1950 6m Ascend the crack with the help of a small spike and a gymnastic move. the slab. A start from the far right is also possible along a slippery traverse. 68 Master of Thought E2 6a « The next two routes provide lovely balancy and technical climbing on the slab to easier finishes. 1979 8m This bold slab gives technical fingery climbing 77 Orchard E1 5a 1953 197 is 198 70m probably best of the girdle traverses. 199 the200 196 This From Layback Crack, move rightwards and continue arête and slab to the right191 leads to192 a steeper 194above. 193 wall 195 A 5b variation start is possible by laybacking the flake in the left-hand corner of the pit to the right. 199 to 200 Apple 198 Buttress cross the delicate slab level round 197 196 73 Double Bum V6 (6c) To the right of Blenheim is a large tree-filled bay. a Wall and Chimney, HVD (pre-1950) follows the Climb the back wall of the pit by launching from the chip to the horizontal pinch, then slopers to a ledge. A shamelessly contrived eliminate, but one very cool move: see photo on page xxx. Using the flake is a little easier. 68 66 Giant’s Staircase HVD 4a « Apple Area – Gardom’s Edge 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 71 Cydrax HVS 5b « 1957 same poor runner. Make hard and precarious moves 9m Good balance, nerve technique 181and 182 189 190on the right. One more 184allow 186gain a yellow 188 foot-ledge 183 will 185 to you to climb the centre of the slab to the right and reachy 187 move brings good holds and an easier finish. 75 69 176 177 178 179 180 74 Blenheim Gully HS 4b 1950 75 Blenheim Buttress HVS 5a « 1950 12m The undercut right-hand corner of the pit with an awkward, undercut start leads to a crack and a small corner. Finish up the wall on the right. with the spike on Bitter. Finish up the final section of Blenheim. slabby left hand arête and V-groove. 78 Beaufort HVS 5b 1956 10m The left-hand flake of the ‘shield’ leads to a large hole and an unique reclining move to gain the flake. Gear (small cams) and one more stiff pull leads to a flat hold and the finish. b The slot behind the three trees situated close together near its right-hand corner is surprisingly called Three Trees Crack, VD (pre-1950). Gardom’s was one of the Peak’s most important sources of millstones, particularly domed ones. The quarrying spanned over several centuries. Both face quarries cut into the scarp and boulders below the edge and large pits (delves) were worked. Running from both the face and the delves below is a complex system of access cart tracks. There are also 3 or 4 millstone-rolling (a practice not to be 76 Blenheim E1 5b «« 1956 recommended!) tracks which descend from below 13m Up the front of the block to the ledge and the the edge to the cart tracks. 14m Do you swing? No, not a 70’s chat up line but a scary old (sand)bag. Step onto the block from its right to a ledge and a poor runner behind a creaky flake. This ‘protects!’ the first bold swing back in to Blenheim Gully. A few moves up this and a large cam protects the second wild swing rightwards on good hand holds to the arête and a brisk finish. Pillar Wall 150m Capiliary Crack 278 Grooved Wall Froggatt to Black Rocks 3 A B Int gard A3.indd 278-279 Apple Buttress The Quarries Dirty Business Froggatt to Black Rocks 279 04/02/2010 16:48:33 0 83 84 85 11 12 90 86 87 88 89 12 11 90 13 14 13 15 14 15 111 16 16 20 17 18 19 121 122 123 124 125 97 98 99 80100 93 97 98 99 100 94 96 95 79 21 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 31 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 9 60 D D 70 DD 131 132 133 134 135 22 81 32 D 23 24 25 33 34 35 84 41 a 43 e a b c d e a b 79 c d 79 80 29 30 37 38 39 40 36 141 142 143 144 145 48 45 50 49 4685 47 82 51 5283 53 e 61 80 81 62 63 54 64 86 55 65 89 56 66 57 88 58 59 60 87 67 68 69 70 c90d e f g h Quarries h b c d e f g The 9b c 90 d e fgh h the right an old quarry track initially runs genb c d e f g To h uphill and then down a slope. Above are a few b c d e f gtly 8m Starting from the mound are two thin cracks; the left-hand one leads to a ledge and an upper crack which 73 provides a very 76 good77finish. 78 99 100 To the right is a felled oak; the next two routes 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 start here: 99 100 109 110 109 110 79 President’s Arête VS 4c « 1950 10m Enter the awkward groove in the arête at the e d obscure problems. One hundred metres from the previous route is a quarried wall which has a grassy 71 tree72 mound to the left of its centre and a large felled at the right-hand end. The routes in this vicinity 81 are82 may take some time to dry after wet weather but well worth it if you find them in good condition. e e e 82 Senator’s Crack HVS 5a « 1961 83 Nervous 84 85Tension E4 6b 83 90 1984 8m Climb the steep wall and thin crack left of the 86(runner). tree stump to the roof Move89leftwards and 87 88 climb over the roof at its widest point. Finish with caution. The route can be started directly, 6b. left-hand end of the wall to85reach the first ledge. 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 1984 Move left round the arête and finish up the side 84 Surface Tension E4 6a wall. a Just left, Ross’s Route, D (1983), takes the 8m As for Nervous Tension to the roof, step right98 99 100wall. 93 and climb 91 92 wards 96 up97the overhanging 95 directly blocky gully, tree and ledges to the top. 89 86 88 80 All the President’s Men E1 5b « 87 101 the right President’s 102 About 103 30m 104 to105 106 of 107 109 is110a small 108 Wall 2006 President’s Arête to the first ledge. secluded bay with two steep corners. The left-hand Leave it, the last of the gear, and any reservations loose and (thankfully) 103 is104very 105 101 102 corner 106 is 107 108 109unclimbed, 110 you might have, and continue up the wall on good the right-hand one gives the well-named: flat holds. 10m Start as for 81 President’s Wall HVS 5a « 15m Start up 85 Hide-Away Climb VS 4c 1949 President’s Arête and traverse right- wards making a series of steps to finish up a short corner. b It’s possible to gain the final corner direct, strenuously up some flake cracks at, E2 5b. 280 Froggatt to Black Rocks 3 A B Int gard A3.indd 280-281 1963 7m The steep green corner crack is surprisingly D although D Dthe exit can be dirty. good, D86DDirty BusinessD Left-Hand V3 (6b) Climb the usually a green left-side c dof thee left arête. b a b c d e a b c d e a b c d e 191 192 193 194 195 191 192 193 194 195 Pillar 199 200 196 Wall 198Gardom’s 197 – 136 137 138 139 140 196 197 198 199 200 Edge 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 131 b a b c d e a b c d 26 27 28 43 44 42 D 126 127 128 129 130 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 121 Gardom’s Edge – The Quarries 93 94 95 96 117 146 147 148 149 150 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 161 171 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 156 157 158 159 160 166 167 168 169 170 94 181 182 183 184 185 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 191 186 187 188 189 190 90 87 Dirty Business / Plan D V3 (6b) / V9 (7a) Climb the steep side of the arête from a sit start, 192 with 200 big holds on the 198 the 193 194 199 two 196 197(V9) (V3)195or without next climb. The stand start is a bit 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200easier for the V9 and a lot easier for the V3. Padding on the tree is recommended. 88 Business as Usual V6 (6b) Once an E5 with a small cam, now a popular highball. Jump for the big hold in the middle of the face, climb direct via the break and ramp to a ‘heart-inmouth’ mantel onto the slabby top. Avoiding the jump start by means of a powerful undercut move bumps up the grade to V8/9 (7a). 91 93 92 upwards. The central line, exploding to the top using the bowling-ball pockets, is very next century. 91 Left-Hand Pillar Crack E1 5b «« 1956 8m The leaning crack will leave you spent. Furious laybacking may or may not reward you with the top. 92 Right-Hand Pillar Crack HVS 5a « 1930 9m Prepare to be humiliated. Using arms and legs and any other spare appendages thrutch your way up the crack. 93 Elliott’s Crack S 4a «« pre-1950 10m Fine climbing up the crack and flake system The right arête taken on its right. Lanking past the first (crux) move is definitely not cricket. on the right-hand side of the wall to a ledge, finish left. a Headless Chicken, E1 5c (1985), starts up Elliott’s Crack and after 5m trends left to finish up Left-Hand Pillar Crack. Pillar Wall 94 English Voodoo V6 (6b) 89 Forward Thinking Sound Engineer V7 (6c) The next rocks of note lie 160m further to the south, about 100m from a high stone wall that crosses the path. This is one of the essential Gardom’s buttresses. 90 Charlotte Rampling E6 6b 1984 10m The beautiful wall and ramp don’t give the climb they promise. Gain the ramp and follow it leftwards, almost to the arête, before moving The prow/arête on the block beneath Charlotte Rampling. Climbed mostly on its left avoiding the crack. a The sitting start is a stiff V8 (6c). Gun Emplacements – if you look carefully on the top of Gardom’s Edge you may find the footings of heavy gun emplacements used for training between 1939 and 1945. Gibbet Moor, behind Chatsworth, was often targeted and unexploded shells can still be found in the peat. Froggatt to Black Rocks 281 04/02/2010 16:48:37 2 1 11 12 13 14 Gardom’s Edge – South Boulders 15 17 16 111 18 19 20 South Boulders – Gardom’s Edge to B to Gardom’s Crag Gardom’s South Boulders 111 8 5 4 3 Byne22 21Eric Campsite 23 24 25 Moorside Rocks 32 31 33 34 35 33 34 35 32 31 41 42 43 Gardom’s South End 121 irch 25 0 en 26 27 28 29 30 Robin Hood Inn P 26 27 28 29 30 N 100m 36 37 38 39 36 37 38 40 39 40 A619 stile h to C ield gated track 91 101 1 The Rocky Jumble 2 3 4 101 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 100 Area 97 98 99 G-Thang Tangarine Area 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 The Wardrobe 25m 102 103 0104 105 106 107 108 109 110 5 D 282 D 1 141 b 141 16 12 11 10 7 8 14 9 16 16 The Main Area The main bouldering section lies now 60m to the right. The tall block, home of Suavito is a good landmark. Behind this is a bulbous series of outcrops, the Gardom’s Crack area. The other main bit here, around G-Thang, is 30m to the right of this. 6 First Slab V0 (5a) The short slab and overlap at the left. a Across to the right the slab is Severe. b Down and right, bridging the cleft, with a difficult pull onto the wall above is Durian, S 4c (trad). 19 7 Small Ones are More Juicy V4 (E2 6b) 17 The highball line linking the pockets over the bulge. 18 8 Tangerine VS 4c « 1963 7m The fine crack is a jammy gem. Finish left on great holds. 9 Kumquat HS 4c 1 10 Arête V3 (6a) 1991 7m From the big diagonal crack, use the seam and pockets to gain the ledge. The cleft to the right, finishing outside the chockstone, is Diff. Climb the arête direct on slopers. Using the arête to the left is V0 (5a). 11 Wall Past The Flatty V1 (5c) A quick move to the right of the arête. 12 Strapadictionary V0– (4b) From the ledge, swing right onto the front face. 13 Forge Ahead V2 (5c) Yank directly over the nose and into the scoop. 14 Scoop Tower V0– (HS 5a) Swing left onto the ledge, then tread delicately into the scoop above. 15 The Mellow Bellow V2 (E1 5c) An exciting series of pulls up the right side of the arête. a Just to the right, The Scoop V2 (5c), starts in the low break, and uses a footlock to gain the next break. A stretching top-out is possible at E1 5c. b The wide chimney is an awkward VDiff. 16 The Sausage King of Meersbrook V10 (7a) To say the landing was bad would be to imply that there actually was one. The short arête to the right has brilliant moves, but some intense padding is required to sanitise the boulders below. Froggatt to Black Rocks a b c d e a b c d e 151 15 13 On the wee overlapped wall in front, and facing Small Ones... D Froggatt to Black Rocks 3 A B Int gard A3.indd 282-283 6 15 a On the left side of the wall, use a high sidepull to This is the southern end of41Gardom’s crag, 44 with 45 gain46the top. 47 48 49 50 42 43 its tidy little bouldering circuit and the gem that is Moorside Rocks. There’s a lot of bouldering devel- Thirty metres right is a pit, a tree and a tall wall 9 from tiny, easy problems51up to52towering containing a couple yet unclimbed lines. oped here, 60 57 of58 as 59 53 54 55 56 V11 highballs. It has a secretive, private nature to it, Below, closer to the path, is a larger, triangular slab. and has a proudly esoteric air. Some51problems 52 are 53 a 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 bit highball, and a few of the easier ones are almost 2 The Teacup V0– (4b) Pull over the left side of the undercut slab using a micro-routes. 61 62 63 64pocket. 65 66 67 68 69 70 Approach: From the Robin Hood Inn, go back 66 67 V0 68(5a) 69 70 The Saucerer onto the busy road, and a little bit61 past62the Eric 63 643 65 Byne Campsite entrance. A footpath sign leads you Pull over the slab to the right, linking the pockets. across the wall. Follow the path, and the mirage of 4 Slob Moorside Rocks soon rises up to meet71you. 72 The rest 73 74 75 V376 (6a) 77 78 79 80 of the circuit is over the wall, 80m beyond these. Slap along the rising right arête from a sitter. A much harder problem is possible just left, going Approach takes 15 minutes. 74 a 75 71 72 73 from small 76 flake. 77 78 79 80 The Rocky Jumble: The leftmost section has a small 5 The scattering of problems on the scree of blocks 83 84 81 82beyond 86 V387(6a) 88 89 90 85 Wing the main circuit. These aren’t anything special, but Just below, is an angular cornered boulder. Climb the right crimps. help to make the little circuit a bit more 85 wall86of the87corner 82 83 84 81 extensive. 88 on89small 90 The first problem is on a boulder, just below the left end of a small quarried outcrop on the edge above, Twenty metres right are a couple more brushed boulders with some unappealing possibilities. 100m from the Gardom’s Crack area.91 small quarried outcrop 13 a rf este 48 V249 (6a)50 47 Wall 44 45 1 46Sidepull 92 93 94 95 96 121 283 04/02/2010 16:48:48 1 60 81 82 83 84 91 92 93 94 95 96 85 86 70 e 70 Gardom’s Edge – South Boulders 90 17 31 A beaut. The angular, overhanging arête with slappy, powerful climbing and a wild swing to gain the top. Spotters advised. 28 G-Thang V3 (6a) The lovely groove on the right side of the boulder. A little easier if the arête is used. The sit start is V5. 20 Scary Rib V2 (5c) 32 35 a 21 284 22 Froggatt to Black Rocks 3 A B Int gard A3.indd 284-285 23 24 25 151 151 27 28 29 30 161 161 2003 30 The Sting V1 (5c) 37 Brazil E6 6b « Moorside Rocks side from the ledge to the obligatory slopey finale. Technical but easy for the grade. 8m Climb the arête of the wall with the assistance 2000 8m Climb Homeless’ blunt arête on its right-hand 38 Moorside Crack VS 5a The big bulbous blobs over the wall to the right. The routes are short but the rock is excellent and the setting very pleasant, perhaps a spot to find seclu115 known 117Cat118Tor. 119 120 114 Also 112 113 sion. 116 as trick moves. 114 Short V4 (6b) 116 117 118 119 120 115 Arête 112 113 31 8m The reachy side-wall has a bold, rounded finish. The slappy arête. 1949-50 7m A good traditional pitch. The boulder-filled 124 125has126 122 123 chimney a hard127 start.128 129 130 1986 10m Move out rightwards from the start of Choked 140 a bold high 134 135and136 132 133 Chimney use the 137 rail138and139make rockover. Highball V3. A tiny hold in the middle 141 36 Homeless E8 6c « of the central groove via dynamic and sustained moves to a desperate finishing mantel. wall below possibility for an awesome 141 142 143 of144the 145 147 a148 149 150 146 give 26 b 42 Slap off two small slopers to the top. a The problem just left, across the gap, using a natural thread, is a great little V1 (5b). 125 126 121 122 123 32 127 128VD 4a129 130 124 Choked Chimney 131 41 36 The arête right, using a queer, undercut hole. 121 a 39 40 29 Stung V1 (5c) 135 136Dumpling 131 132 133 33134 Charlotte 137 138E3 5c139«140 On the next block to the right: The delicate rib round to the back of the block. 196 197 198 199 200 34 Boy racers will prefer the more powerful and brutal 111 direct, with a butt-plug-popping move off undercuts to gain the aforementioned sloper. More like 111 V10 for the short. 19 Suavito V8 (E5 6c) 37 a b c d e 27 Barry Sheene V9 (7a) Use pockets to gain the rib, then pull left onto the ramp. 186 187 188 189 190 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 38 D A delicate thing of great beauty. Start, bridged between the boulders on the left, facing out. Pirouette dreamily to gain the sloping rail out right, and finish direct: see photo on page xxx. 18 Wardrobe Ridge V3 (6b) 33 191 D h a start in the break b c dClimb e f gfrom The rambling ridge. bc d e fgh below at V3 (6a). abc d e fgh b c Hands d e f gV8h (6c) 26 China inayour From a sitting start, gain the bulge and continue laybacking up the right side of the ridge, with an exciting top. Busting directly over the first bulge from the same start is Wardrobe Bulge, V3 (6b). 182 183 184 185 22 Left Crack V0– (4a) b c dRidge e f gV2h (5c) 25 Middle Triplet 17 Captain Cabinets V4 (6b) 181 Moorside Rocks – Gardom’s Edge 192 193 194 195 a b c d e A nice climb up the centre of the face on ripples. the size, shape and quality of a fine gentleman’s wardrobe, hangs one of the Peak’s best highballs. The descent is Leaning Block, M (pre-1950). 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 191 24 Middle Wall V0 (5a) The Wardrobe: Just below, in a tall, jutting block, 171 176 177 178 179 180 103 slab The steep101 arête.102a The the right, 104to 105 106 Left 107 Triplet 108 109 110 Slab, is V0 (5a). The tall arête. 18 172 173 174 175 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 23 Middle Triplet Arête V2 (5c) 100 191 171 181 D 19 90 110 98 99 100 21 Left Triplet Arête V1 (5b) 80 110 97 167 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 G-Thang Area: Further right is another outcrop. 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 80 100 87 88 89 direct. 1949-50 6m The widening and leaning crack requires some 39 Press Gang E3 5c 2003 40 Moorside Rib VS 5a 1963 7m The front face of the rib. Bold and tricky. 41 The Jackalope V6 (6b) A highball classic of the grade, climbing the steep, rounded flare on the front of the block. Insecure and bold, but okay with a spotter. a A fist-crack to the left is a brilliant V0 (5a). 42 Small Worlds E3 6a 2002 6m Starting under the nose, boulder up to a good 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 34 Superbloc E8 7a ««« 2003 The arête is a blockbusting V12 highball, with 152 153 8m 155 160 157 158 159 154 156 climbing, powerful slappy and a ground-up target jug and gain the large break (big cams) and swing left on to the front face. The tall might be able to static up to finishing slopers at an easier grade but the short have to jump. b The narrow chimney to the right is Pillar Chimney, D (pre-1950). Chimney HVD 4a « 170 1949-50 162 163 35164 Straight 165 166 167 168 169 8m Meanwhile… the chimney to the right is a joywriggle. 162 163 ful164 165 166 167 168 169 170 A traverse of Moorside Buttress is Moorside Rocks Girdle, HVS 5b (1957-1969). Very tricky under Superboc and crossing Moorside Rib. 152 153 for154the area’s 156 boulderers. 155 best 157 158 159 160 171 172 173 174 175 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 176 177 178 179 180 Froggatt to Black Rocks 285 04/02/2010 16:48:51 Gardom’s First Ascents 1890 Brown Crack, Garden Face Indirect James W Puttrell, William J Watson Inevitably, Puttrell kicked things off. 1930 N.M.C. Crack, Right-Hand Pillar Crack Frank Elliot The latter route is impressive being stiff at a modern grade of HVS. c.1931 Slime Crack, Garden Face Crack, Moyer’s Climb, Green Crack, Giant’s Staircase Clifford Moyer, Eric Byne 1934 Och Aye Wall Direct Jack Macleod Flake Crack Rupert Brooks Overhang Buttress Ordinary Eric Byne Dead Tree Wall, Elliott’s Buttress Frank Elliott Presumed to be the Direct Central Groove, Right-Hand Groove, Tree Groove Clifford Moyer, Eric Byne c.1940 Right-Hand Crack Eric Byne, Ivy Byne 1949 Gardom’s Gate, Oread, Keith’s Corner Crack Keith Axon President’s Wall Cyril Machin By the original traverse. The Direct was added in the 1985 guide 1949-50 Choked Chimney, Straight Chimney, Moorside Crack Members of the Oread MC 1950 Blenheim Buttress David Penlington Cider David Penlington, Eric Byne, J Adderley 1950 Sept. 3 White’s Route, Cave Arête Wilfred White, Joe Brown, Slim Sorell The upper section was added in 1942 by Eric and Ivy Byne Gardom’s Unconquerable Joe Brown, Slim Sorell, Wilfred Wright Layback Crack Wilfred White, Joe Brown, Slim Sorell Née Apple Buttress Layback President’s Arête Slim Sorell, Joe Brown, Nat Allen. 1950 Tree Neighbour, Blenheim Gully David Penlington, Eric Byne, J Adderley Cider Apple P Knapp, Eric Byne, S G Moore Scoop Tower Keith Axon, Eric Byne, George Sutton Mark Turnbull added the Direct start on Aug. 28 1991. 1951 Publication of “The Sheffield Area” guide including: Portcullis, Turret Chimney, Drawbridge Slab, Dungeon Gully, The Keep, The Watch Tower, Black Wall Route 1, Black Wall Route 2, Capstone Climb, Pillar Chimney, Cave Gully Crack, Chockstone Climb, Garden Face Direct, Apple Jack Crack, Wall and Chimney, Three Trees Crack, The Chimney, Chimney Face, Moyer’s Variation, Grey Crack, Cave Gully, Och Aye Wall Indirect, Capstone Gully, The Zigzag Girdle, Byne’s Crack, Pine Crack, Elliott’s Buttress Indirect, Blacksmith’s Wall, October Climb, Milestone, Birthday Climb, Pedestal Climb, Leaning Block, Tree Buttress, Tree Climb, Stepped Crack, By-Pass Route, Red Sky Rib, Broken Buttress, Whisky Wall, Apple Crack, Elliott’s Crack, Yellow Chimney, Nursery Traverse and Tower Variation. 1951 Feb. 3 Allen’s Route J R (Nat) Allen, Don Chapman Un- 286 dertaker’s Buttress Joe Brown, Slim Sorrell March Corner Crack Richard A Brown March 20 Tartan Route Richard A Brown Finishing left into Och Aye Wall, Ernie Marshall did the current route in 1956 June 14 Heather Wall Richard A Brown, W Sellars, R Lowrey Sept. 7 Babylon’s Groove Don Chapman, Nat Allen Sept. Whillans’ Blind Variant Don Whillans Capillary Crack (nèe Bronto Wall), Lightning Wall, Third Time Lucky Nat Allen, Don Chapman Nat got it third go. Finale Groove David Penlington, John Fisher 1952 June 6 Dead Tree Wall David Penlington A more direct variation known as Jungle Corner Apple Arête Dave Penlington, Ernie Marshall, R Hardy 1953 Feb. Baton Route Ernie Marshall also called Marshall Aid March 19 Route III Ernie Marshall, N Osbourne May 3 Jungle Arête Ernie Marshall, P G Titterton Also called Dead Tree Arête Aug. Nowanda Ernie Marshall Sept. 20 Ball-Bearing Wall, Bilberry Buttress Ernie Marshall The latter being a new direct finish to an older route. Nov. 14 Orchard Ernie Marshall, Eric Raynor. 1953 Landsick Peter Biven 1955 Sept. 7 Moyer’s Buttress Peter Biven, Trevor Peck A much desired project first top-roped by Moyer and Byne in 1932. Biven’s Crack Peter Biven With much aid from slings to facilitate cleaning. FFA 1966, Jack Street. 1956 April Traction, Contempt, Attraction, The Rink, Fantasy, Thunder Ernie Marshall Richard A Brown came close to the latter route in 1951 being repulsed by ice near the top Left-Hand Pillar Crack Allan Austin, Brian Evans 1956 Infirmary Groove, Tartan Route Ernie Marshall Biven-Peck Connection (started with tension) No longer de- scribed, this historical but flawed ascent wandered up the front of Moyer’s Buttress after tackling the crux of Stormbringer. 1956 The Eye of Faith Peter Biven, Trevor Peck Probably by the hard start 1956 Vaya Con Dios Allan Austin, Ernie Marshall, Brian Evans Led without runners 25 years after the first top-rope by Clifford Moyer and Eric Byne. 1956 Hearse Arête (with aid) Peter Biven, Trevor Peck, Ernie Marshall Blenheim, Beaufort Don Morrison Wall Finish, Central Crack Joe Brown, Nat Allen. Publication of “Further Developments” including The 1957 Rattle, Slanting Groove, Green Rib, Little Arête and Evasion 1957 Capstone Rib, Smithy, Cydrax, Striker’s Rib Eric Finney, Peter Fieldsend 1959 Battlement Wall, Rampart Corner Les Millsom, Maurice Dunkley 1960 Promise Les Millsom, Maurice Dunkley 1961 Senator’s Crack Fred Williams 1962 Dec 24 Nymph’s Arête Ernie Marshall Matthew Coutts on the rounded crux of John Allen’s Jackalope V6 (page xxx). Like many of Allen’s additions from the 1980s, it is short, technical and brilliant, and as bouldering and highballing are becoming more popular, his micro-routes are becoming some of the classic ticks of any crag. Photo: Niall Grimes. Froggatt to Black Rocks 3 A B Int gard A3.indd 286-287 04/02/2010 16:48:52 Gardom’s Edge – First Ascents 1963 Spring Marshall’s Route, Tangerine, Velvet Cracks, Moorside Rib, Quandary Wall, Hide-Away Climb, Spring Route Ernie Marshall, BB Hall, K Unwin 1970 Publication of “The Chatsworth Gritstone Area” including Black Wall Traverse, North End Girdle, Moorside Rocks Girdle, Nursery Slab and Bitter. 1971 Sept 12 Split Slab P Allen, G Millar 1975 Sleeping Sickness John Allen, Chris Addey The Crocodile Gabe Regan 1976 Stormbringer Dave Morgan, Bill Briggs, Richard Hasko The crux mantel was first done in 1956 on the BivenPeck Connection Solid Air (1 pt) Andy Parkin FFA in 1979 by Steve Bancroft and renamed Perfect Day Narcolepsy Ernie Marshall 1977 Waterloo Sunset Martin Boysen. 1977 April 17 Jumping Jack Flash Ron Kenyon, John Woodhouse, Graham Hoey c.1978 Tsetse Fly Mike Browell, Jeremy Frost 1979 Perfect Day Steve Bancroft Master of Thought Gary Gibson 1980 Apple Arête Direct Gary Gibson (solo) 1981 April 5 Four Horsemen, Blaze Gary Gibson, Hazel Carnes; Gamorilla Gary Gibson (solo). 1981 Aug. 21 Rhythmic Itch Gary Gibson, Hazel Carnes 1981 Spring Landsickness Ian Riddington 1981 Nov 13 Nerve Block Gary Gibson 1981 Social Fools Gary Gibson Seventy One White Mice Gabriel Regan, Chris Addy, Steve Webster 1981 Publication of “Derwent Valley” 1983 Crottle Chris Jackson, Bob Conway, Adey Hubbard 1983 Boiling Oil Graham Parkes, Chris Craggs Roadside Attraction Chris Craggs, Graham Parkes Enigma Variation, The Midas Man, Scotswood Road Keith Sharples, Chris Craggs, Graham Parkes, Ian Riddington 1983 Diamond Back Chris Craggs Colin’s Route, Liar, Rumour, Ross’s Route Ross Cullen 1984 April 4 Raging Insomnia Keith Sharples, Graham Hoey, Ian Riddington 1984 April Make it Snappy Neil Foster, Alan Rouse 1984 Nervous Tension, Surface Tension Gabriel Regan, Peter Dean, Jed Storah 1984 Charlotte Rampling Johnny Dawes A nest of turfs and ropes were placed on the landing to ease the nerves. 1985 Spanish Fly, Agadoo John Allen 1985 Sooty and Sweep Andy Barker Green Wall Paul Pepperday Good Karma Matt Boyer, Paul Mitchell Headless Chicken Paul Mitchell 1985 Publication of Derwent Gritstone including, Keith’s Other Corner Crack, Stern Face, Gossip and Split Crack. 288 Froggatt to Black Rocks 3 A B Int gard A3.indd 288-289 First Ascents – Gardom’s Edge 1986 May 14 The Igloo John Allen, Mark Stokes Squeeze Your Lemon John Allen 1986 Muswell Hillbillies, Charlotte Dumpling Steve Bancroft, Mike Clarke Tales of the Black Widower Simon Jones, James Hall 1988 1989 June 11 Twilight’s Last Gleaming J Zonn Coffin Nail Kevin Topliss, Steve Wigmore 1990 It’s a Gas Tony Warwick Small People J Judson, A Judson 1990 Mickey Finn Paul Mitchell 1991 Aug. 28 Small Ones are More Juicy Mark Turnbull, Andy Ratcliffe Strapadictionary, Kumquat, Scoop Tower (direct) Mark Turnbull 1992 Feb Rest in Pieces, Chunky Doorstep David Simmonite 1994 April 24 Gom Jabbar Simon Jones 1994 Aug. 14 Cobweb Arête Tem Bevis, John Bates, Mike Shaw 1995 May 29 The Working Man David Simmonite, Roy Bennett 1995 SummerEcky Thump Andy Popp 1996 Aug. 4 Gnasher Simon Jones, W Bradwell mid-1990s Boon’s Wad Leo Holding 1997 Mr Three Degrees Andy Crome (solo) Cheeky Monkey Ellison Allcock 1998 Monotheism John Arran 1998 Aug. 21 Albert Spansworthy Mark Turnbull, Richard Heap, Dave Thomas 1999 Sept 03 Little Wanda Brian Rossiter, Nigel Baker (both led) 2000 Oct. 1 Brazil Jon Read 2002 April 7 Waggy Pat King 2002 Sept. 1 Small Worlds Jon Read, Debora Field 2002 Oct 8 Pants on Fire, Central Overlap, Gemstone Simon Triger, Steve Clark 2003 Feb. 1 Homeless Miles Gibson 2003 March 27 Boxing Clever Jonathon Box and party Press Gang Paul Mitchell 2003 Superbloc Miles Gibson Second ascent by Dan Bouldering First Ascents 8 Ball Ben Moon A Fearful Orange Jon Fullwood Barry Sheene John Welford Ben’s Bulge Ben Moon Bin Laden’s Cave Mo Overfield Bin Lillemule Jamie Lillieman Bloc Steno Simon Wilson Business as Usual Mike Lea, 1989 Captain’s Cabinets Jon Fullwood China in Your Hands Adam Long Dirty Business/Plan D Rob Smith/Jon Fullwood Double Bum Jon Fullwood Drum Roll Paul Mitchell, 2002 English Voodoo Jon Fullwood First Roof Right Rich Heap, Spanish Kev Full Power Jerry Moffatt G-Thang Al Williams The Gritstone Treaty Pat King, 2002 Heartland Christian Klemmow The Jackalope John Allen, 1985 Joint Care Andy Harris Kidneystone Christian Klemmow Kumquat Mark Turnbull, Andy Ratcliffe, 1991 Ladder Coins Jon Fullwood Mo’s Problem Mo Overfield Neil’s Roof Neil Kershaw Neutral Milk Hotel Jon Fullwood Percy’s Roof Percy Bishton, 1999 Perfect Day Direct Start Ben Moon Pogle’s Wood Al Williams Pogle’s Wood Sit Start Rich Heap Rock Hard Bishop Johnny Dawes The Sausage King of Meersbrook Iain Farrar Small ones are More Juicy Mark Turnbull, Andy Ratcliffe, 1991 Strapadictionary Mark Turnbull, Andy Ratcliffe, 1991 Suavito Thomas De Gay, 2000 Soft on the G Al Williams Soloman Pat King Two-Headed Boy Jon Fullwood Neil Kershaw learning not to push too hard on China in your Hands. He’s wearing a nice jumper, and a nice hat. Photo: Adam Long. varian in 2008, ground-up. Also climbed ground-up by Mick Adams in 2009. 2006 All the President’s Men John Camateras, Noel Camateras 2008 June 6 Black Wall Nothing Steve Clark, Lynn Robinson, Chris FitzHugh 2009 Oct Imperfect Way Jon Fullwood, Ben Heason Climbed onsight. Various traditional routes checked by the guidebook team and added to this guide: Bilberry Chimneys, Durian; Flaky Chimney, Gain, Garden Fence, Keith’s Arête, Nursery Cryme, Pining for the Fjords, Problem Chimney, Right Hand Flake, The Backclip Froggatt to Black Rocks 289 04/02/2010 16:48:52