A Crag Guide gives an extensive view of all sub areas and climbs at a point in the index. It shows a snapshot of the index heirachy, up to 300 climbs (or areas) on a single web page. It shows selected comments climbers have made on a recently submitted ascent.
At a minor crag level this should be suitable for printing and taking with you on a climbing trip as an adjunct to your guidebook.
This guide was generated anonymously. Login to show your logged ascents against each route.
Warning
Rock climbing is extremely dangerous and can result in serious injury or death. Users acting on any information directly or indirectly available from this site do so at their own risk.
This guide is compiled from a community of users and is presented without verification that the information is accurate or complete. By using this guide you acknowledge that the material described in this document is extremely dangerous, and that the content may be misleading or wrong. In particular there may be misdescriptions of routes, incorrectly drawn topo lines, incorrect difficulty ratings or incorrect or missing protection ratings.
You should not depend on any information gleaned from this guide for your personal safety.
For more information refer to our Usage policy
Contributors
Thanks to the following people who have contributed to this crag guide:
Adrian Kladnig
Jason Brown
Donald Gibson
Tony Gibson
The size of a person's name reflects their Crag Karma, which is their level of contribution. You can help contribute to your local crag by adding descriptions, photos, topos and more.
Some content has been provided under license from: © Australian Climbing Association Queensland (Creative Commons, Attribution, Share-Alike 2.5 AU)
Table of contents
- 1. The Overhangs 10 in Cliff
- 2. Index by grade
1. The Overhangs 10 routes in Cliff
- Summary:
-
All Boulder
Long/Lat: 151.179257, -33.768292
- Description:© (Atrax)
-
Not to be confused the 'The Overhang'.
- Approach:© (Atrax)
-
To the left and slightly separate from the main crag, an area of overhanging sandstone up off the path
- Ethic: inherited from North Shore
-
Respect to the enviroment and keeping crags clean will maintain a healthy and important relationship between the climbing community, local councils and National Parks. Carry out what you take in and enjoy what the North Shore has to offer.
If you come across an area that is being developed or you think could be under development, please show all due respect to the developers and do not climb the projects listed on thecrag.com
|
||||||||
| Route | Grade | Style | Popularity | Selected ascents | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
Lip Traverse from the obvious horizontal break right of the roof all the way along the lip to finish in the wide corner crack. | V7 | ||||||
| 2 |
Starts by underclinging a large flake just right of the big corner crack. Right to a large pocket on the arete and then up. | V5 | ||||||
| 3 |
2a
Contrived. Start: Undercling the large flake and go straight up to a match with both hands in the thin break. | V4 | ||||||
| 4 |
3
The corner crack. | V0 | ||||||
|
||||||||
| Route | Grade | Style | Popularity | Selected ascents | ||||
| 5 |
4
The best problem on this wall. From the wide corner crack traverse left keeping below the roof to finish at or near the crack. | V1 | ||||||
| 6 |
5
Centre of the wall, there's an old (ex?) carrot and a drilled pocket. Up and right from here. | V2 | ||||||
| 7 |
6
As for #5, but haul up left on slightly less dodgy holds | V3 | ||||||
| 8 |
7
Crack. Yuck? | V0 | ||||||
| 9 |
8
Flake system through the roof | V3 | ||||||
| 10 |
9
Light coloured scoop further left. Standing start trending left. | V3 | ||||||
2. Index by grade
| Grade | Stars | Name | Style | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| V0 | 3 | |||
| 7 | ||||
| V1 | 4 | |||
| V2 | 5 | |||
| V3 | 6 | |||
| 8 | ||||
| 9 | ||||
| V4 | 2a | |||
| V5 | 2 | |||
| V7 | Minuteman |


