Fairhands and Fair Weather in the Grimsel Pass

2 Sep

Five years ago Ric and I had a superb trip to the granite playground of the Grimsel Pass and surrounding area in the Swiss Alps, ticking some long slab routes and the mega-classic Sudgrat on the Salbitschijen. However, unseasonably wet and chilly weather had us running for cover to the limestone of the Jura pre-Alps, meaning a return trip was always on the cards. This August, a last-minute aligning of the stars found us heading back to the Grimsel, intent on climbing the one that got away last time; Fairhands Line (6a+).

A view of the Handegg granite cliffs and slabs in the Grimsel Pass
The hulking mass of Sector Hangholzegg on the Handegg, with Fairhands Line shown in red.

 

Fairhands Line is a ten pitch, 330m classic, taking a striking line of cracks and slabs up the blunt crest on the right of the Handegg. The route is partially bolted but has a distinct “alpine” feel and climbs more like an E1/E2 than a sport climb. The rock quality is mostly impeccable, barring a few loose flakes and blocks on pitches 3 and 4. Having arrived in good time and on a fine forecast, we wasted no time and jumped on the route on our first day in the Pass.

A view of the Handegg granite cliffs and slabs in the Grimsel Pass from near the bottom of Fairhands Line
Ric sweating his way up to the base of Fairhands Line with the route looming above. The first two pitches climb up to and along the tapering slabby pillar above Ric.

 

We slipped, slid and sweated along the damp, muddy approach path, but given it’s only twenty minutes from the road we could hardly complain! Anticipating other parties vying for the route, we had started early and started up just as another team appeared below us on the scree. The first pitch is a good warm up, with some interesting moves up a groove to the crest of a slabby pillar. Playing to our strengths, Ric went again up the first of the 6a+ slab pitches, making delicate balance moves up the rounded arete on the right of the slab, before a hard leftwards traverse to reach easier ground.

A climber in orange climbing a steep granite corner system on a route called Fairhands Line in the Grimsel Pass
In my element on the steep corners and cracks of pitch 3. Only a handful of bolts so a good set of medium cams required! Photo credit: Ric Hines

 

Pitch 2 was reasonably well-bolted but the soaring corners and cracks of the 6a third pitch relied mainly on trad gear. However, holds and cracks were plentiful and I could enjoy the steep, physical moves and growing exposure while placing cams as needed. This turned out to be one of the highlights of the route, with the juggy hand-traverse into the final crack providing a fine finale to the pitch.

A view across the Handegg granite cliffs and slabs from a few pitches up Fairhands Line in the Grimsel Pass
Brilliant views back down the pass, across the Handegg slabs from a few pitches up Fairhands Line. Photo credit: Ric Hines

 

A view down the fourth pitch of a granite rock climb called Fairhands Line in the Grimsel Pass
The exposure builds on pitch 4 after pulling out of the awkward groove. Still in the shade at least! Photo credit: Ric Hines

 

The difficulty eased marginally on the next pitch, which continued in the same crack line, albeit with some Creagan Dubh Loch-esque granite weirdness to contend with. A particularly awkward exit to a steep groove nearly had me parting company with the rock in my haste to make progress! By this point, the local alpine ninjas that had wafted up the route behind us climbed past and we didn’t see them again until the campsite that evening!

The next four pitches were all superb, but slightly easier, allowing us to make good time and climb as much as we could before the sun finally caught us. Pitch 8 stood out for it’s steep, wide crack, which gradually rolled over into thin parallel seams, necessitating opposing footwork and some clamping to reach the slab above.

A climber in blue climbing a steep granite slab on a route called Fairhands Line in the Grimsel Pass
Ric about to embark on the slab crux of pitch 9 – desperate stuff in the heat after all that had gone before!

 

We took a well-earned breather on the ledge below pitch 9, anticipating a battle on the crux 6a+ slab above. The sun was now cooking us and the rock was hot to the touch – not exactly ideal for climbing thin, technical slabs. The first half of the pitch is straight forward, with a razor-flake leading up to a foot-rail at the start of the difficulties. A hard mantel to good foot-holds allows a bolt to be clipped, before a desperate, thin sequence ensues. The next bolt seemed a long way away, but Ric valiantly pulled through, with some interesting contortions resulting in him ending up horizontal at one point – how he stayed on we will never know!

I seconded as best I could, employing as much technique as I could muster (and the odd move of French-free, ahem) to finally arrive at the penultimate belay drenched in sweat and mildly strung-out. The route wasn’t about to capitulate easily though. The final pitch may well be the psychological crux, with horrendous bolt spacing, little opportunity for trad gear and serious fall potential. I sketched up with a bit of jibbering, perplexed at the odd choice of bolt placement, to thankfully arrive unscathed at the top of the route!

To cap off the climb, the unique descent follows the relentlessly steep emergency stairs at the side of the Gelmerbahn funicular railway. Being Europe’s steepest funicular, this descent is vertigo-inducing and no joke on the knees! It was fun seeing the bemused faces of the tourists sitting in the train as they rolled by us bedraggled climbers – what a way to end the day!

A view of the Handegg granite cliffs and slabs in the Grimsel Pass
The enormous slabs of Sector Olberg on the Handegg – the longest route here is 800m long! The upper parts of Chatzenpfad and Engeliweg are shown in red.

 

The following day was a bit of a write-off – a late start, extreme heat and residual tiredness saw us only climb a few pitches before scampering off for an early beer. Day three was an entirely different matter and we climbed ten (mostly mellow) pitches on the ridiculous Handegg slabs. This place makes The Etive Slabs look like a scrappy, vegetated, tick- and midge-infested, minor crag. Hmmm.

Looking down at a climber at the top of a sweep of clean granite slabs with the valley below
Ric approaches the belay at the top of pitch 5 of Chatzenpfad (4c). Pitches 7 and 8 are incredible and well worth heading up for!

 

A climber in orange on a steep brown and pink granite slab with blue sky above
Bagging a few bonus pitches of Engeliweg (5b) after finishing Chatzenpfad, while not even getting close to the upper slabs! Photo credit: Ric Hines

 

A dramatic view of mountains in shadow with the sun shining on granite slabs and thunder clouds building above
Dramatic light and shade on the Alplistock as thunder clouds build in the oppressive afternoon heat.

 

The following day looked wet from early afternoon, so needing a quick hit to beat the weather we headed up the neighbouring Susten Pass and climbed Plattenweg (5b) – a seven pitch sport route on lovely, rough gneiss. We managed to beat the rain and set about making plans for a bigger route the next day.

Clearly visible from the road towards the top of the Grimsel Pass, the sweeping tongue of the Sommerloch Slabs had always looked inviting and Baal Integral (6a), taking a natural line straight up the middle, was the clear choice. The weather was still roasting and tactically we should have gone for a later start to climb more in the afternoon shade.

A view of sweeping tongue of white and brown granite slab set in a mountainside surrounded by alpine meadow
The Sommerloch slabs from the approach path – a clean sweep 250m high.

 

Things started well, with a clean corner crack on the left of the lower slabs providing an easy lay-back up to the first overlap. A tricky step left and some dimples in a quartz vein led up to the first belay at the base of the main slab.

A climber in green in a corner on the left side of smooth brown and white granite slab with an overlap above
Ric cruising up the superb first pitch of Baal Integral – the route follows the corner-crack before breaking out left through the overlap onto friction slabs above.

 

Friction slabs are mostly “type-two” fun as far as I’m concerned and despite the immaculate rock, the combination of day-five tiredness and spaced bolts resulted in a distinct loss of psyche. Ric was unfazed however, so took the reins and floated us up three more pitches of (admittedly) fantastic climbing.

A climber in green in the middle of a smooth brown and white granite slab with overlaps above
Running it out on the second pitch – despite the (spaced) bolts, the climbing remained insecure and tenuous enough to make this pitch a little worrying!

 

As the rock became steeper and more featured, my enthusiasm increased and as my toes had now gone totally numb, they also ceased to be a concern.  Foolishly, I took the lead for pitch 5 but as soon as my confidence had returned, it was immediately dashed as the bolts ran out. Unwilling to commit to the run-out to the belay, we decided to bail. What’s the point in bolting two thirds of a pitch?

 

A climber in blue climbing a crack on the left of a smooth grey granite slab with overlaps above
Tentatively skulking up to our high-point on pitch 5 – bizarrely, not far above where the crack runs out, so too do the bolts. Photo credit: Ric Hines

 

A view down a steep white granite slab of a climber abseiling down with alpine meadows and lakes below
A familiar sight – abseiling down endless slabs in the heat of the afternoon!

 

A view from a mountainside looking over an artificial dammed lake towards granite cliffs and jagged mountain tops with clouds above
Looking out over Raterichsbodensee towards the Garstenhorner from high on the Sommorloch slabs.

 

With another fine day in prospect, we elected for a change of scene and to go a bit higher in an effort to beat the heat. Day six saw us hiking up to the Pfriendler Pillar in the Susten Pass for the 230m, 6-pitch Troimli (5b). This sharp pinnacle of rough gneiss is much steeper than the granite we’d climbed during the week and promised to provide an entirely different style of climbing, in more traditionally alpine surroundings.

A mountaineer standing on a boulder above a cloud inversion in the valley with alpine peaks covered in glaciers and blue sky above
A majestic, beautiful, awe-inspiring piece of nature; sculpted by the hands of the divine potter. The mountains are nice too.

 

A view of a jagged, pyramid-shaped, white and brown rock peak above a green alpine meadow, below a blue sky
The stunning Pfriendler Pillar in the sharp morning air – Troimli starts up slabs on the left side of the frontal face before following a line close to the left edge, right of the shadow.

 

The walk up to the Pfriendler felt like a slog after a whole week on the go, not helped by a route-finding error in the boulder field below the crag. There were no complaints though, as the surroundings and views were breathtaking! Within an hour we were heading up the route with my head in an entirely different place on the steep, juggy gneiss.

A climber in blue climbing a corner-crack on the left of a smooth white and brown slab with a steep rock face above
At the start of the difficulties on pitch 1 – the corner steepens and the holds run out, requiring an exposed move onto the face on the left. Photo credit: Ric Hines

 

Every pitch was challenging enough to maintain interest but never particularly hard, save for a tough move to surmount the roof on pitch 4, which probably warrants 5c. What they all had in common was their quality, especially pitches 3 and 4 which were outrageously steep and exposed but festooned with massive holds!

Looking up at a climber on a steep rock face with the ropes trailing down back towards the camera.
Enjoying the steepness of the jug-laden third pitch after dispatching the awkward chimney slot. Photo credit: Ric Hines

 

A dramatic view of alpine mountains with rocky summits and glaciated slopes above green alpine meadows and a green glacial lake with blue sky and clouds above
Looking over towards the Sustenhorn (left) and the Gwachtenhorn from near the summit of the Pfriendler.

 

In contrast to our first trip to the area, the weather remained superb for the whole week, leaving us no choice but to climb every day and generally have an excellent time. Given the sheer quantity of routes on offer and the ubiquitous quality, it seems highly likely that this visit won’t be our last!

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