This is the largest piece of rock, and to the left of the other outcrops. Access is via the metal bridge on the upper track to the Rock-Art site. From the bridge walk up the slabs, over the fence, then continue slightly diagonally leftwards to the bottom of the Icefield. Most parties usually arrive at the cliff near British Bikes.
The climbs are described from left to right, commencing with Raspberry Jam at the extreme left-hand end of the cliff.
The majority of the bouldering and climbing at Yarrowyck is located on private property, and the land owner was a climber and has granted access to all climbers anytime, EXCEPT for all crags east of the ridge line which are too close to the land owners house and are off limits, in particular 'Captain Pugwash Memorial Buttress'.
Please do not leave garbage around, leave gates as you find them and do not harass stock. Climbing at Yarrowyck is a privilege, not a right.
The access tracks are in the Nature Reserve which is managed by NPWS which takes you to the Aboriginal Rock Art site. Bouldering or climbing in the reserve is not clear so please avoid this and check the boundaries when exploring.
https://www.nationalparks.nsw.gov.au/visit-a-park/parks/mount-yarrowyck-nature-reserve
Did you know that you can create an account to record, track and share your climbing ascents? Thousands of climbers are already doing this.
★ British Bikes 11 - View from Icefield cliff
Toby Brunckhorst at Icefields - Icefield
Get a detailed insight with a timeline showing
Login to see the timeline!