There was a large Indian camp on the Platte River near the present site of Casper, Wyo., that was known to the early trappers as the old Sioux Camp. To the North, near the present site of Bridger, Mont., on Clark’s Fork River, was another large and well known Indian camp. They were cross-roads of the nation and trails led in all directions. Halfway between was Ten Sleeps. The Indians measured distance by the number of sleeps. It was ten sleeps from here to each of the main camps.
–The sign in town
Getting There
Wyoming’s best known for the iconic Tetons, Yellowstone, and Jackson, but most of the state is open, vast plains and badlands. You’ve got to drive East out of tourist towns to really see the state.
Push into the Bighorn National Forest and you drop down into Ten Sleep Canyon, a mecca of limestone sport climbing along its 10mi-long canyon walls.
The Climbing
The climbing is unlike any limestone I’ve climbed on (most of which I don’t like)–I’ve heard it’s even better than what you find in Europe. It’s well-known, but not terribly well-traveled, making for an awesome community and bomber routes that aren’t glassy.
The climbing starts at 6,000ft and continues up the canyon for 10mi up to 9,400ft. If you’re used to living at sea level, you can admire the views while calming your heartrate on the approaches.
The rock has a fair number of pockets, but is incredibly featured for limestone. The majority of the climbing is vertical to +/-10deg with crimps, sidepulls, shpraggles (def: pinching a whiffle ball), underclings, and pinches. You’ll be very rewarded with good footwork. It’s sewn up with bolt anchors at least every 5 feet; it’s the only place I’ve found where it’s actually possible to z-clip.
You’re in heaven if you’re a 5.11 to 5.12 climber; you can have a blast climbing 5.10s and 5.11s all day, or jump on the ton of excellent climbs through 5.12. 5.13+ tend to get very thin, very mono-pockety, and a bit overhanging. There’s so much climbing, you’d be hard pressed to visit the same crag twice. Get your onsight, flash, or quick redpoint in order instead of revisiting the same project!
Must-Do
At the end of the climbing day, take the old grated highway back to town to catch sunset. There’s free dispersed camping along the old highway. Sites are pretty darn level with fire rings, some exposed along the cliff, and others tucked back in trees.
Town and Amenities
We’ve been through some pretty remote small towns in our travels, and unlike others, Ten Sleep is quite a gem. Its town is about 1/2mi long. Crazy Woman Cafe has amazing huckleberry ice cream and tater tots (get a basket to go to heat up for breakfast the next day!). Aunt Sally’s general store has amazing fresh veggies–we stocked up on sweet zucchini squash, crispy cucumbers, and fluffy kale.
Camping
Dispersed camping
Along the old highway.
Ten Sleep Rock Ranch
Located at the bottom of the canyon, Ten Sleep Rock Ranch offers tent camping, a few cabins, showers, and WiFi.
Ten Sleep Brewery
One mile past town is the Ten Sleep Brewery, built in a family barn with a cozy taproom. We stay here every visit, no question. The people are great, the beer is great, they have local music in the evenings. They have showers and toilets.
Here you can camp for $3/person, shower for $2, catch up on the world with free wifi, enjoy beer and great company. You’ll find fellow climbers, hunters, locals, various 4-footed pets, and traveling passer-throughs. It’s a family-run brewery where you’ll find Cole and Justin Smith working and enjoying the company of their patrons, and JD, who runs The Smokewagon BBQ on the weekends. And they love meeting new folks and hearing where you’re from. It’s surprising how the brewery, in such a small town, is a hub for so many people. Some nights none of the patrons were even from Wyoming!
Where else can you get $9 growler fills to enjoy under the stars? The sky’s dark enough here to see the milky way with the naked eye.
Our motto: Good beer for good sending! It was a better sending trip than I had expected–we didn’t go back to the same wall twice in the whole 2.5 weeks. It’s so much fun to climb different routes every day, but at some point this trip I’ll buckle down and “project” something. I had my mental game in order to redpoint two 5.12a’s on lead, plus make quick work of many 5.12+’s following Jeremy!
The brewery’s Golden and Porter are really amazing, and the brewery is helping to build the local community with events like the hunters’ and climbers’ festivals. It was a bit sad to leave the brewery after saying our goodbyes to the regular faces.
Top North American Climbing Destinations
- The New River Gorge, West Virginia
- Squamish, British Columbia
- «you’re here» Ten Sleep, Wyoming
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