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To Bolt or Not to Bolt? Feds Revive Wilderness Climbing Debate
Federal proposals have reignited the decades-old debate over the installation of permanent climbing anchors in the wilderness, reopening a rift between climbing advocates and conservationists about what kind of human impact is appropriate in congressionally protected wild places.ย ย
The outcome could impact Wyoming climbing routes in popular destinations like the Wind River Range โ where climbers often rely on fixed anchors. โSo this should be very concerning to Wyoming climbers,โ said Access Fund Interim Executive Director Erik Murdock, whose group is opposed to bolting bans in the wilderness.ย
Conservationists, however, say wilderness designations deserve the most stringent protections.ย
The United States Forest Service and National Park Service proposed guidelines in November for managing climbing. The directives explicitly prohibit fixed anchors as โinstallationsโ in wilderness areas. Both federal agencies are gathering comments on the proposals.
The issue comes as the sportโs explosive growth has prompted land managers and officials to forge nationwide regulations to protect natural resources. Wyoming has experienced the issue firsthand in Tensleep Canyon, where Bighorn National Forest officials enacted a route development moratorium in 2019 in response to climber conflicts.ย
Federal maneuvering is not expected to impact the Tensleep Canyon Climbing Management Plan proposal, which officials have been developing since the moratorium was enacted. Forest officials collected scoping comments this fall on that plan, and it moves next toward the environmental analysis stage.ย
But on other Wyoming crags, the policies could change what tools and safety measures are available to alpinists.
A tangled history
The draft federal directives conflict with legislation introduced earlier this year in Congress, which can make it difficult to follow the thread on a sport already clouded by jargon and nuance.ย
Complicating the issue even more is a long history of push and pull regarding fixed anchors in wilderness that has entailed prohibitions on new bolts, advisory group negotiation efforts and flare-ups at parks like Joshua Tree.ย
Hereโs the latest:ย
In March, U.S. Reps. Joe Neguse (D-Colorado) and John Curtis (R-Utah) introduced the Protect Americaโs Rock Climbing Act.
he legislationย directs the heads of the Forest Service and Interior Department to create a uniform policy and issue guidance that allows โthe placement, use and maintenance of fixed anchorsโ for climbing in all of the countryโs federal wilderness areas.
The same month, U.S. Sens. John Barrasso (R-Wyoming) and Joe Manchin (D-West Virginia) introduced Americaโs Outdoor Recreation Act. That legislation would also recognize that recreational climbing โis an appropriate recreational useโ in wilderness and mandates that guidance allows fixed anchors along routes. Climbing advocacy groups like the Access Fund championed both bills. Darin Westby, who directed Wyoming State Parks and Cultural Resources when Barrassoโs bill was introduced, also voiced support.ย
But wilderness advocates like former executive director of the Jackson Hole Conservation Alliance Franz Camenzind say the legislation undermines the Wilderness Actโs foundations. By making exceptions for what are permanent installations on the landscape, he said, it sets a dangerous precedent. Thereโs no place for anchors in the wilderness, he maintains.ย
โWhatโs the next one, bikes in wilderness?โ Camenzind said. โI think itโs an incredibly slippery slope.โย
Then in November, the park and forest services issued proposed recreation guidelines that would have different implications for wilderness climbing. While both provide that climbing is appropriate, even in wilderness, they consider fixed anchors and other permanent equipment prohibited โinstallations.โ There could be exceptions; directives would allow a forest supervisor to authorize placement based on whatโs known as a โminimum requirement analysisโ review process.ย
Simply put, this means climbers cannot place permanent gear in wilderness without earning an exception.ย
This time, conservation champions showed support while climbing and outdoor recreation advocates cried foul.ย
โFor generations, weโve agreed that some places are so special that their remoteness, wildlife, and natural and cultural resources should be preserved for visitors to enjoy,โ Kristen Brengel with the National Parks Conservation Association said in a statement about the NPS policy. โThe Park Serviceโs guidance is a critical step to reaffirm the Wilderness Act, while also providing opportunities for visitors to enjoy rock climbing in these beautiful, wild places.โ
Climbers, however, say it appears to misunderstand the fundamental ways fixed gear ensures safety, because sometimes itโs used even on routes where most of the gear is placed in a โtraditionalโ temporary fashion. Bolted top anchors used for rappelling down, for example, are common, even on routes otherwise protected with removable โtradโ gear. That makes the guidance a de facto ban that creates onerous red tape, they say.
Murdock with the Access Fund argues the language represents an entirely new interpretation of the 1964 Wilderness Act by classifying bolts as prohibited โinstallations.โย
โThe federal agencies have been not only allowing but managing climbing in wilderness and fixed anchors as an appropriate and acceptable activity since the Wilderness Act was passed,โ Murdock said, โand many of those areas included climbing even before they were designated as wilderness. So this basically flips the management model on its head.โ
That leads to several problems, he said. The proposed directives jeopardize the sportโs safety and threaten iconic routes including El Capitan in Yosemite, The Diamond on Longs Peak in Colorado and USFS areas like the Wind River Range. And though it allows for exceptions, that process would be onerous for climbers and land managers alike.ย
โSo if someone wants to replace a sling at the top of a mountain that you cannot get down to otherwise, that would require a minimum requirement analysis,โ Murdock said in an example of how it โis not a good fit for the practical nature of managing climbing and wilderness.โ
Several climbing and outdoor recreation groups have lodged opposition to the agency wilderness proposals. These include American Alpine Club, Outdoor Industry Association and Outdoor Alliance.ย
Camenzind, however, maintains that wilderness exploration should be for those who are self-reliant, experienced and prepared enough that they donโt need the kind of assistance fixed gear provides.ย
โIn wilderness, recreation is supposed to be of a primitive nature,โ Camenzind said. โItโs very clear if youโre not an experienced climber, that you have your limits. And that some rock faces just may not be meant to be climbed.โ
Wyoming wilderness climbingย
There are many climbing routes in Wyoming wilderness. The Wind River Range is home to three federally designated wilderness areas and numerous high-profile climbing destinations like the Cirque of the Towers. โYou need to have fixed anchors to get off of those peaks,โ Murdock said of many Wind River routes.ย
Fixed anchors in the Winds are typically small, stainless steel bolts, said Nate Liles with the Central Wyoming Climbers Alliance. Itโs not a big eyesore, he said. โItโs virtually invisible until you are right on top of it.โ
Liles thinks that offers one example of general confusion around climbing in wilderness areas. Climbers donโt want to pepper wilderness routes with bolts, he said. โWe want our ability to use fixed anchors to be protected.โย
The Bighorn Mountains and Absarokas are also home to wilderness designations. Neither Yellowstone nor Grand Teton National Park have congressionally designated wilderness.ย
The USFS language also mandates that climbing management plans be developed where forest officials determine climbing is causing adverse resource impacts or use conflicts โ on both wilderness and non-wilderness lands.ย
A process that fits that description has been underway in Tensleep Canyon for years. Bighorn National Forest this fall released a draft Tensleep Canyon Management Plan โ a document it hopes will help guide development and address management challenges related to the canyonโs growing popularity.ย
The โโproposal for the non-wilderness area home to more than 1,300 established sport-climbing routes could spell the end of a route development ban thatโs been in place since 2019. Instead, the plan proposes actions to more selectively manage the proliferation of bolted sport climbing routes along the canyonโs cliffs. Proposed actions address growing use (improving parking lots, installing vault toilets) as well as climbing-specific regulations (prohibiting the manufacture or manipulation of natural climbing holds, closing some walls to route development.)ย
The plan received more than 130 public comments. While some quibbled with the finer points of development closure standards, the overall tenor was supportive of the plan.ย
โI will say that the biggest takeaway is really excitement around additional resourcing to Tensleep Canyon,โ Bighorn Climbersโ Coalition President Christa Melde said, adding โwe are excited to see that moratorium lifted.โย
Powder River District Ranger Thad Berrett does not expect the federal proposals to impact the Tensleep plan. โI think that we did a really good job of being in line with what the directives are saying,โ Berrett said.ย
Tensleepโs is a good example of a plan tailored to the specific qualities of its area, Murdock said. It likely helped that the climbing community has been very involved in developing the plan.ย
โOn the flip side, you can see that the national guidance does not do that,โ he said. โSo we have to give some credit to the folks at the Bighorn for actually addressing all of the different elements that you need to manage a successful climbing infrastructure.โ
General guidance for managing climbing across the country is overdue, he said. Through the decades, regulation of climbing on Americaโs public lands has been inconsistent, piecemeal or absent.ย
Liles with Central Wyoming Climbers echoed Murdockโs view. โWe donโt want [climbing] to go wild West,โ he said, โwe want reasonable, sensible management that isnโt a de facto ban.โ
Words by Katie Klingsporn. This article first appeared inย WyoFile,ย an independent nonprofit news organization focused on Wyoming people, places and policy. Top photo by Joshua Wise.