Ogmore-by-Sea - Estuary
From South Wales Bouldering Guide Wiki
Line 9: | Line 9: | ||
<br> | <br> | ||
− | <b>Ogmore Estuary Left Hand Traverse. Something like Font 6b/+<b> | + | <b>Ogmore Estuary Left Hand Traverse. Something like Font 6b/+</b> |
+ | <br> | ||
+ | [[File:Estuary 1.jpg]] | ||
+ | <br> | ||
+ | Sitting start from crozzly edges at the right hand end, move slightly up, then traverse left at half height on the wall, following a line of obvious holds and feature at the same height. Go for the top where the wall runs out. Footwork important! | ||
==Comments:== | ==Comments:== | ||
<br> | <br> | ||
<discussion /> | <discussion /> |
Revision as of 19:52, 13 November 2012
Back to Ogmore-by-sea
Description
The climbing on the Estuary Wall is different to the other areas Ogmore-by-sea has to offer. The climbing offered is on a 100' long, and 20' high vertical wall, which is more like traditional limestone. The top of the wall peters into a gorse populated grass bank; hence much of the interest regarding this area is concerned with traverses. The landing is uneven and rocky along most of the wall, so bring a mat or two, although it's possible to do plenty of climbing here without ever getting more than a foot off the ground.
The buttress containing the Right Hand Traverse stays dry in all but the highest tides, and the rest is climbable up to an hour or so before high tide. A useful refuge if you are heading to Hardy's Bay or the Trench and get it wrong!
Ogmore Estuary Left Hand Traverse. Something like Font 6b/+
File:Estuary 1.jpg
Sitting start from crozzly edges at the right hand end, move slightly up, then traverse left at half height on the wall, following a line of obvious holds and feature at the same height. Go for the top where the wall runs out. Footwork important!
Comments:
powered by commenterra | Recent comments |