Pennsylvania |
Haycock Mountain
| Forecast | High / Low | Precip. | Wind (gust) / Humidity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
May 23
|
75°
60°
|
65%
45% PM
|
3 mph
(5 mph)
73% humidity
|
|
| Conditions: Chance of moderate rain showers. 0.29 inches of rain possible. | ||||
|
May 24
|
79°
61°
|
30%
30% PM
|
4 mph
(10 mph)
70% humidity
|
|
| Conditions: Chance of light rain showers. 0.39 inches of rain possible. | ||||
|
May 25
|
81°
64°
|
25%
14% PM
|
4 mph
(10 mph)
66% humidity
|
|
| Conditions: Slight chance of light rain showers. 0.21 inches of rain possible. | ||||
|
May 26
|
87°
64°
|
25%
20% PM
|
2 mph
70% humidity
|
|
| Conditions: Chance of thunderstorms. | ||||
|
May 27
|
89°
69°
|
20%
13% PM
|
1 mph
68% humidity
|
|
| Conditions: Slight chance of thunderstorms. | ||||
|
May 28
|
88°
69°
|
25%
14% PM
|
1 mph
69% humidity
|
|
| Conditions: Chance of thunderstorms. | ||||
|
May 29
|
82°
69°
|
25%
--
|
4 mph
72% humidity
|
|
| Conditions: Chance of thunderstorms. | ||||
Forecast updated 18 minutes ago
Climbing Resources
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| RockClimbing.com | |
| Sunrise / Sunset: 5:35 AM / 8:20 PM | |
| Elevation: 554 feet |
Climbing Area Description
Very popular bouldering area in SE Pennsylvania. About 1.25 hours from Philadelphia.
Close to a hundred established problems, much more in potential.
Climbing is best described as very crimpy; lots of seams, small flakes, dime edges and ledges. Occasional slopers when coming out of caves or around aretes. Strong, static technique is valued over athletic, dynamic sequences here (even the throws need pinpoint accuracy here).
Best times are spring and fall (winter can be good, but it gets cold and stays damp after snows; summer is brutal with poison ivy and bugs).
A favorite of Philadelphia area climbers (and more, approaching the area).
Close to a hundred established problems, much more in potential.
Climbing is best described as very crimpy; lots of seams, small flakes, dime edges and ledges. Occasional slopers when coming out of caves or around aretes. Strong, static technique is valued over athletic, dynamic sequences here (even the throws need pinpoint accuracy here).
Best times are spring and fall (winter can be good, but it gets cold and stays damp after snows; summer is brutal with poison ivy and bugs).
A favorite of Philadelphia area climbers (and more, approaching the area).
