Notchtop Mountain

Other routes I've climbed on Notchtop: 
Instant Clarification (5.9+, 3-4p)         Optimismus + Mornin' (5.9, 6p)     •     South Ridge 2007 (5.9, 5-6p)       South Ridge 2021 (5.9, 5-6p)  
Category: Colorado (RMNP)Summit Elev: 12,129 ft Rock Type: Gneiss & Biotite Schist
This page contains two trip reports:

1.

Date: June 26, 2007 (Tue)Trip Report #: 45Partner: Mark

2.

Date: June 5, 2021 (Sat)Trip Report #: 465Partner: Nate Arganbright

Route: South Ridge (sort of) (5.9, 5-8p)

This had been my second climb in RMNP. It was fun to return 14 years later and climb it again.

Trip Report #2 (June 2021)

(second time climbing the South Ridge (sort of) of Notchtop)

Intro

Nate and I decided it was high time to get into the alpine. One of the few major summits we had not climbed the previous summer was Notchtop. Also, I had climbed the South Ridge of Notchtop 14 years previous on my first trip to RMNP, so I was eager to return. So to Notchtop we went. 

Our plan was to climb the Direct South Ridge. This spectacular route that ascends the exposed south arete of Notch Spire. We ended up climbing the first three pitches of the Direct South Ridge and finishing the route by climbing to the right and up 5.9 terrain just right of the final two pitches of the South Ridge. The climbing was good, but we were a bit miffed at how we couldn't figure out a reasonable way onto Pitch 4 of the Direct South Ridge. In fact, if I recall correctly, Mark and I had finished via the same way when we climbed the South Ridge in 2007.

Note: This 2007 trip report is given at the bottom of this page due to the similarity between the route Mark and I took in 2007 and the route Nate and I took in 2021. In 2007, Mark and I had climbed the first four pitches of the South Ridge and done the 5.9 finish to the right of the South Ridge; while in 2021, Nate and I had climbed the first three pitches of the Direct South Ridge, and then Pitch 4 of the South Ridge and the 5.9 finish; since the two routes share the same first pitch, the route that Mark and I climbed in 2007 was only two pitches different than the one Nate and I climbed 2021. This explains why I called the route Nate and I did the "South Ridge (sort of)".

Below is a trip report and photos from our climb of the "South Ridge (sort of)"

Time Stats

Route Overlay

Pitch-by-Pitch Photos

Approach

3rd

From Bear Lake trailhead, hike the Flattop Mountain trail, the Fern-Odessa Trail, and the Lake Helene Waytrail. Hike up to the base of the South Ridge.

Late spring conditions on the approach.
Above treeline.
Notchtop. Late spring conditions.
Notchtop glowing in morning light
Approaching. We went left around the buttress to access the ledge leading to the base of the Spiral Route.
The ledge leading to the base of the Spiral Route.

Approach Pitches

~5.4, 3p (Spiral Route)

Climb the first few pitches of the Spiral Route to the large ledge below the South Ridge headwall.

Starting up the Spiral Route.
The south ridge is above.
Still another 2 pitches to go on the Spiral Route.

Pitch 1

5.6, 80'

(shares Pitch 1 with South Ridge)

Climb up and left towards the arete and belay on a small ledge beneath a right-facing corner.

Fun in the sun.

Pitch 2

5.9, 130'

Jam a good crack up the dihedral and turn the obvious roof. Follow the corner to a smaller roof that is passed on the right. Work up and right, then back left to a small ledge just right of the arete.

Nate leading the crux pitch.
The wide crack Nate is in and the roof is probably the crux.
Looking up the pitch.

Pitch 3

5.8, 90-120'

Climb straight up a prominent crack through a triangular roof and belay on a small ledge. There is also a belay stance left of the arete a bit further on.

Fun crack climbing on Pitch 3.

Pitch 4

5.8+, 150'

(Same as Pitch 4 of South Ridge)

Traverse right across a slab and climb steep crack to a ledge at the bottom of a large, open book dihedral.

(Note that the actual Direct South Ridge route goes up here, but we ended up going right when we were a bit miffed at how we would continue on the Direct South Ridge. The guidebook description did not seem to match the terrain and the climbing between the belay at the top of Pitch 3 and the splitter on Pitch 5 above did not look trivial. Later conversations with Bernard Gillett indicate that going directly up from the belay at the top of Pitch 3 is probably the way to go.)

Traversing right.

Pitch 5

5.9, 190'

(to right of both South Ridge and Direct South Ridge)

Climb up cracks to the notch in one long pitch. The route we took involved a nice 5.9-ish finger crack section. We could not figure out what route this actually was, but it was right of the South Ridge and Direct South Ridge. Whatever the case, it was quite good climbing.

The start of the final pitch to the top.

Top!

A bit less than 12,129'

The route ends on the top of Notch Spire. This is not the true summit of Notchtop. We actually stopped at the top of our long Pitch 5 since some thunderheads were brewing and we wanted to get safely down the descent before any storm materialized. From the top of Pitch 5 the first set of rappel anchors are visible just across the way.

(no photos)

Descent

4/5 rappels + scramble

There are two options for descent: (1) Scramble along the summit ledges to the West Gully and descend the West Gully (4th). (2) Rappel the bolted anchors on Instant Clarification (two ropes needed). The top rappel anchor is near the top of Notch Spire, but from the true summit of Notchtop you can access a lower top anchor by descending a ramp that heads down from the notch between Notch Spire and the summit. We chose to rappel Instant Clarification.

The first rappel, located just across from where the route tops out.
Rappelling.
We couldn't find the third bolted rappel, so we had to leave a cordelette. See my Optimismus + Instant Clarification trip report for detail on the rappel route, when we nailed the rap anchors.
The final rappel into the West Gully. This rappel is not necessary if the West Gully is snow free, because you can scramble down a path.
Slogging down the West Gully. This is typically snow free during the summer.
View back at Notchtop. Gray clouds brewing (but nothing ever materialized).
Back at the ever-crowded Bear Lake Parking Lot.
Rap locations. Route overlay created in 2023 when Nate and I climbed Optimismus (5.9, 6p) and Instant Clarification (5.9, 3-4p) on Notchtop.

Trip Report #1 (June 2007)

(first time climbing the South Ridge of Notchtop) 

(copied from my original trip report, which also includes a climb of Petit Grepon South Face)

previous and next adventures

(June 2007)
(June 2021)