Face climbing up the front of the pillar immediately to the right of Cuchulain's classic third pitch. Good gear despite appearances, although it gets a bit spacey at times.
3 classic corners stacked on top of one another, broken up by comfy belay ledges. Currently the hardest multi-pitch on the mountain. Take plenty of small gear including a full set of RPs.
25m 25
25m 25
15m 25 Crux pitch
25m 21 Step left and continue up the flared crack, or continue direct up the dirty hand crack (19).
A variant pitch for the third pitch of Laendler and a classic in its own right. Starting and finishing on the same belay ledges. Unrelenting difficult finger-locking.
Blast up the middle of the Laendler Face. Sure to keep you smiling for a day or two. Take a biggish range of gear from tips to the #6 camolot. Doubles up to #4 camalot, maybe some triples of tips to #1 could also calm your nerves.
Start 30m R of Laendler at a prominent NW-facing crack splitting the front of a column (as for Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door).
25m 17. Up the crack (hands then offwidth then squeeze chimney) to ledge.
25m 24. "The Fire Cracker" - On right side of ledge up past a flared hand jam start heading towards the roof, climbing on the right side of the fin. Traverse left under roof and finish on a ledge a few meters up and left.
20m 16. Step back right and climb the line above, eventually break out left on face holds to access the ledge and the start of "the squeeze".
10m 17. "The squeeze" - take some big gear!
25m 19. Straight up twin cracks via some tricky layway moves. Belay on high ledge or take a few extra mid sized cams and link pitch 5 and 6.
12m 23. More tricky moves eventually give way to hand jams. Provides an exciting end to this climb.
10m 10. Head up the ridge until you can sneak around left to the start of pitch
25m 18. As for Rock-A-Day Johnny. Up recessed L-facing corner on R to niche, move L and up to ledge, then up short crack on L to block belay.
25m. Scramble to the top.
Descent is best by walking down the first suitable gully in the Heathcliff direction (about 300m from the top of the route) - this is very easy and much quicker than the standard descent gully. You should come down directly in front of the main buttress of The Rocks.
Follows the prominent ridgeline on the western edge of Frew's Flutes. A bit of a choose-your-own-adventure type deal, there are pitch descriptions in the Climb Tasmania guidebook but they don't help much. Just follow your nose, avoiding sections of loose and dirty rock.