The Ravages of Time - Chinaman's Bluff, Dart Valley10 Pitches of crack and slab climbing.Murray Judge Andrew Mcfarlane 3rd Jan 1999.The track up the Dart Valley skirts around three sides of Chinaman's Bluff, a massive bush covered rock rising 530m from the valley which has resisted the dart glacier in ancient times, forcing the ice to flow over and around it, leaving ice scoured walls 300 metres high to the north and overhanging cliffs on the west and south. The road from Queenstown is now sealed past Glenorchy to the Rees River bridge and the gravel road to Chinaman's Bluff has been recently upgraded but the last five kilometres is still vulnerable to washouts after heavy rain. The Dart walking track reaches a small grassy flat after an hour and a small creek leads into the bush from midway across this flat, a further fifteen minutes in open beech forest to the base of the cliff where the route starts on a clear section of rock towards the left side. In November Ashley Pickworth and I explored the approaches to the lower cliffs, climbing across narrow bushy ledges from the slopes on the right but we were stopped by steep rock and abseiled back to the base. On the left side we followed a dry creekbed up through the beech forest to a traverse right below a white rock wall to a narrow ledge which provides access to the main bushy ledge above the lower walls. On New Years Eve I returned with Andrew Mcfarlane and we cleaned and climbed the route over three very hot and dry days. Gear - take a few medium to large nuts, a good range of friends with doubles on larger sizes and 12 quickdraws.
Route description
Descent - abseil from trees down the slab to the belay on the prow and down to the ledge. Traverse to the top of the lower wall and abseil down this, or continue traversing the bushy ledges descending gradually to the left side of the cliff (keep the rope on for this section).
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