Canyon GuideCanyon Guide

Pleiades Canyon

V3 A4 II
United States
Ver en la app
3h 10min
Duración
21m
Rápel máx.
4
Rápeles

Información

Located in the La Sal mountains, just outside of Moab, Pleiades is A short but amazing canyon that follows Brumley creek as it cuts through a sandstone layer. Brumley creek is a spring fed creek located in the La Sals and maintains a fairly cold temperature year round when it flows. Wetsuits are highly recommended when the canyon is flowing, which can be at anytime its not frozen. The Mill Creek Gauge in Moab has been suggested as a way to evaluate relative flow in Brumley creek. Mill Creek Gauge readings of 3-8 CFS suggests that there could be flow suitable for intermediate level canyoneers with C Class experience. 0-3 CFS indicates lower flow, suitable for more levels of canyoneers comfortable with the possibility of some flowing water. 8-20 CFS suggests higher levels of waters, potentially not suitable for canyoneering or for experts only. Do not use this as a hard rule. Groups should evaluate the flow of the canyon prior to descending to make sure its suitable for them. Mill Creek Gauge: (click "legacy real-time data" to see CFS) https://waterdata.usgs.gov/nwis/uv?site_no=09183500&fbclid=

Rápeles4

Cómo llegar

Driving: From Moab, drive south along Highway 191 towards Spanish Valley. Take Old Airport Road East until you reach La Sal Loop Road. Take La Sal Loop road south, up into the mountains, eventually turning off onto Geyser Pass Road, a graded dirt road, suitible for 2WD/low clearance vehicles. Take Geyser pass road up just short of 3 miles till you reach a small parking lot and trailhead for the Squaw Springs Trail. Hiking: Hike south along the trail for about 0.5 miles, -130'. The trail works its way down till it reaches Brumley creek. Depart the trail, following the creek downstream for a short while until the canyon begins to briefly narrow. This small narrow indicates that you're near the first rappel, and is a good spot to put your wetsuit on if the are appropriate for one.

Descenso

Before descending R1, evaluate the flow and water temperature from above. See the Introduction section for more details. R1: 30' from a fallen tree in the watercourse. Several anchors may be present, some set up to avoid the waterfall. Please avoiding adding and using anchors far outside the watercourse to prevent unnecessary erosion After descending R1, continue down the creek for another minute, downclimbing a small drop until the 2nd rappel is reached. This is the last place to exit the canyon before commiting to the rest of it. R2: 60' from a tree down a two tiered drop. Some may choose to rig this as 2 rappels to avoid a difficult pull. The canyon begins to deep and narrow, leading into a dark sculpted sandstone slot R3: 30' from a boulder canyon left R4: 65' from a boulder canyon left down a low angle chute R5: 70' from bolts canyon right. additional bolts may exist canyon left which puts the rappeler more in the flow.

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