The Best Classic Bouldering Spots Around the U.S.
Words and photos by Nathan Hadley. Photographs from a spring trip to Joe’s Valley, UT.
Hiking back to camp with bouldering “crash pads,” used for protecting fall.
Compared to the nationalistic conquering of high peaks, boulder climbing, or “bouldering,” had whimsical beginnings. Bouldering allowed for grown men and women, metaphorically, to still climb trees and rationalize it as training for mountains. From reading early accounts of bouldering and from first-hand experience, it seems that climbers have an irresistible urge to scale anything that rises above their heads, 10-foot boulders included. Bouldering is, quite justifiably, the best foundation and training ground for any grand rock wall, but it is also fun, and a way to get outdoors and enjoy the company of friends.
Friends gathered to work out this particularly high “boulder problem”.
The gentlemen and women of the British Isles, as well as the French, were first on the scene in recorded bouldering history. One Scottish climber, bouldering as early as 1880, wrote that bouldering provides the climber practice “at least as good” as a golfer who putts on his drawing room carpet. By 1898, the earliest diagram of a boulder with descriptions of unique “problems,” possibly the first bouldering guidebook, had appeared in a hand-drawn guide of a particular boulder in the British Lake District.
In France, the first documented attempts at bouldering were in fact a bit earlier—the 1870s. Indeed, many argue that the true birthplace of bouldering as a serious sport was Fontainebleau, a magical-boulder-forest-garden just outside of Paris. Though the Scottish and the British may have started bouldering around the same time, they did not continue with it with the same consistency as the Parisians. Fontainebleau nurtured bouldering until the world was ready to legitimize the intrinsic value of the activity, which was not until the late 1900s.
I am someone drawn to the adventure of the high mountains—hiking in them, scrambling their ridges, and climbing their walls. But bouldering is a welcomed change of pace. Constant movement is replaced with short efforts in which every movement is thoughtful and precise.
Getting into bouldering is easy, and has become the standard entrance into the sport of rock climbing. Indoor rock climbing gyms are sprouting up everywhere and they are a good place to start. Find out if there are any boulders near you. Usually they’re not too far away.
Pierre Allain, who popularized climbing in Fontainebleau in the 1930s and 40s, called bouldering the “school of climbing,” but also was one of the first to assert that bouldering had value in and of itself. In Alpinisme et Competition, Allain wrote, “And—to tell the truth—it isn't solely with an eye to mountain routes that we go to Bleau and climb there, it's above all because we make a game of it, one that arouses our passion in and of itself. It's good training? All the better, but even if that weren't the case, for the majority of us nothing would have changed.” Keep the young tree-climbing spirit within you alive.
Icing fingers in the river after stressing them with a full day of bouldering.
Region by region, the best classic bouldering spots in the U.S.:
- Northwest: Squamish, British Columbia; and Leavenworth, Washington
- California: Yosemite, Joshua Tree, and Bishop
- Mountain West: Joe’s Valley, Utah; and Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado.
- Southwest: Red Rocks, Nevada; and Hueco Tanks, Texas.
- Midwest: Devil’s Lake, Wisconsin; Jackson Falls, Illinois; and the Black Hills, South Dakota.
- Southeast: Horse Pens 40, Alabama; Rocktown, Georgia; and Stone Fort, Tennessee.
- Northeast: The Gunks, New York; Great Barrington and Farley, Massachusetts; and Rumney and Pawtuckaway, New Hampshire.