Heather Murray on P2 of Sea Gypsy (II 5.9+ R), Acadia National Park, Maine, moving into slammer jams above the route’s friction crux. Photo by Celin Serbo / www.serbophoto.com
Heather Murray on P2 of Sea Gypsy (II 5.9+ R), Acadia National Park, Maine, moving into slammer jams above the route’s friction crux. Photo by Celin Serbo / www.serbophoto.com
ONCE A SUMMER PLAYGROUND for the East’s wealthy elite, the rocky, verdant Mount Desert Island (MDI) comprises most of Acadia National Park, on Maine’s north coast. In 1919, what was then Lafayette National Park became the first national park east of the Mississippi, taking its current moniker 10 years later.
MDI climbing started in the 1930s with ascents none documented by Fritz Weissner. However, it was Jeff Butterfield, Geoff Childs, John Harlin III, Casey Newman, Paul Ross, and Ed Webster who scored the bulk of the FAs in the 1970s and ‘80s and you’ll find more than 240 routes today. In 1980, Harlin and Webster FA’ed their Sea Gypsy, a two-pitch 5.9+ R on the Precipice. Harlin remembers “brushing a stripe through the black lichen, which I felt a bit guilty about, though I consoled myself with how good the route was and that lichen doesn’t have feelings.” He and Webster had met just that week in a climbing shop; Webster recalls Harlin carrying his late father’s piton hammer on the climb.
Sea Gypsy (II 5.9+ R) is shown with the red line and is located 50 feet left of Chitlin Corner, the obvious open book. Photo by Celin Serbo / www.serbophoto.com
Sea Gypsy (II 5.9+ R) is shown with the red line and is located 50 feet left of Chitlin Corner, the obvious open book. Photo by Celin Serbo / www.serbophoto.com
The 225-foot Precipice lies on Mount Champlain’s east side, only a half-mile from the ocean and with stunning views. Dense vegetation once covered the crag, but a 1947 fi re conveniently removed it, exposing the clean granite. Bar Harbor is the gateway to the park; your access point is the Sieur de Monts entrance. From here, hook into the Park Loop Road, parking in the right lane 100 yards past the Precipice Trail. Follow a climber’s trail from the road’s west side to Sea Gypsy (10 minutes). The route lies 50 feet left of Chitlin Corner, the obvious open book.
While the Precipice has many three-star outings, few match Sea Gypsy for variety. Pitch one has two variants: the traditional start climbs the left side of the Sea Gypsy Buttress, while a popular alternative tackles the right. After following good natural gear, they unite 40 feet up atop the buttress, where loom 10 feet of unprotected 5.8 slab to a bolt. Clip this, and then continue up to a short, but tricky 5.9 section, following a ramp left (5.7 R) to the two-bolt anchor. Pitch two continues up and right on friction past a bolt (crux) to a shallow left-facing dihedral capped by a three-foot roof crack. Crank through on perfect jams and follow the crack to a two-bolt anchor. Two 95-foot rappels get you down in time for debriefing and cocktails in Bah Hahbbah.