Thunder

17/04/2026

wild_elly, dw3lla, freedom_runs, mshbee, estonian_pirate and meeeeeeeeeeee

Most people visit Thunder Canyon from the bottom, wandering up from the junction after absieling in from Claustral or Ranon.

After all you get to visit the best bit while also doing another of the Classic 3. The tops not worth it. Said they.

By they are all worth doing once say I.

We’d actually planned this several times. Once we canned it because Gadget and H couldn’t make it.

Then they canned it because I couldn’t make it.

Then we canned it because Jason couldn’t make it.

And we all but canned it this time because Kris and Muz were going to a running race.

But the race fell through so at the last minute Thunder was back in business. Baby!

We head out along the ridge with a couple of options of where we might drop in.

Stupidly I ignored my own advice about wearing long pants in favour of lighter weight and more room in the keg. This meant by the end of the walk in I’d have a bit less skin to carry out too…

About mid ridge we gain a rocky outcrop. The views were stunning and the walking a lot less cutty.

We have more scrub to push through but it’s not as bad from here out.

Finally we get to a spot we think we should drop in so as not to miss a short uppersection of canyon. We follow a minor tributary down hoping it offers an easy break but it cliffs out much too high for our ropes.

We push back out and gain a small nose that leads down, down, down, cliff out.

At least there are ledges below us that have decent trees to reanchor from. Still we seem to be a long way up.

We set a rope and I absiel down and spend a stupidily long time looking for options to get us into the creek. Problem is I can see another ledge below but still can’t tell how far down the creek is. It sounds like a fair cascade or waterfall below.

I have the irrational thought that we are directly above Westaway Falls. The eap shows them a fair bit down stream but I’m second guessing.

I call Jason down for back up. He shares concern about the water echoing below and whether we are missing a good bit of canyon. I show him a couple of options including one a little up stream.

I can see the creek bed there. Says he. He has better eye sight than me but I make out the rocky creek bed amid the dark shadows.

Come on down we call.

We get everyone down to the ledge and Kristo leads the abseil to the Canyon.

Oh Wow this looks like the start of Empress. he calls.

We’d gotten our entry spot on at the start of a short but pretty section, that as Kristo said, had the start of Empress Canyon vibes.

We make our way down stream. some tricky ledge walking and spidermaning keeps us dry for the time being.

The canyon opens a bit and we make our way down a pretty gorge. There’s some scrambling, wading and downclimbs. Basic good fun.

I have the anchor, calls Kris from down canyon right.

But there is an awesome looking slot up here. Calls Jason from back abit canyon right. We check out the slot. It looks great and jason is super keen to drop in but Kris has already set rope. Wait til you see this abseil thou, He calls.

We head down. He is right this abseil looks amazeballs.

Of course this means we’ll need to do a second trip to do the slot option.

Kylie fishing for glowworms
Ms H Bee dropping in

once down…

Glowworms behind waterfalls

While I have visited this section many times from below it always blows me away and coming in from the top was just a bit extra special .

And before long we come to the Claustral Junction. From here down the canyon is well known to all of us and the rest of the trii is prettt cruzy

Remember just like it takes 7 wipes to know for sure you only needed 6, you need to do the canyon yourself to know whether it’s worth it.

They are all worth doing once and I’d definately repeat this one.

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Imp Grotto

05/03/2026

Kristo, Jason, Dave, Hywaida, Kylie and meeeeeee

After our mini epic in Mathers we were like what a 20min walk in, 2hr canyon 1min walk out? Yes Please.

We’d kept Imp Grotto until last as it would be a short morning giving us plenty of time to get the gear washed and dried for the trip home.

It was another one I was really looking forward to as it sounded like the prefect bang for buck canyon.

We pulled up at the bridge, found the secret entrance to the entry track… It’s such a cool ecperirence you part the ferns and the trail appears in an area that looks all but cliffed out.

Magic

Less than 15min later we are at the start of the canyon.

How cool is that.

Of the canyons we visited this trip, in terms of look, Imp Grotto is probably the most reminent of the Blue Mountains canyons we are use to.

I head over and set the rope and we are into it like a Hobbit in a cake shop

Kris leading the way

On a scale of 1 -10 its a 15 on the fun dial.

And pretty darn pretty to boot

Lots of little jumps
Absiels big and small
Jason on anchor duties. Hywaida keeping an eye on things
H’s turn ©Dave
©Kristo
Kylie on the big one. There a bit of hydraulic at the bottom but at these water levels it was relatively tame
Jason, as LARP

And before we know it we are splashing around in the pool under the bridge like some sort of troll living his best life in the absence of Billy Goats Gruff.

And with rain predicted for tomorrow we can’t believe just how lucky we got with the notorious west coast weather.

5 prefect days of canyoning weather.

NZ you’ve been so Fresh.

Chur, bro.

Back to the Canyoning page

polblue

25/01/2026

Kylie, Jason, David, Wisey, Rakesh, Tanya and meeeee

We had been tossing around what canyon to do today before settling on 1 none of us had done before.

We all pile into Jason’s ute and head across the range.

Ah shit, I meant to reach out to Tanya and Rakesh, Says Kylie. They are up here somewhere.

We pull into the car park.

Hey that’s Tanya and Rakesh…

5 become 7 and we waste no time suiting up and making our way down the creek to the first abseil.

I set up rope and everyone by passes it and scrambles down beside it.

I pull the rope up and follow.

The next couple of drops are a little lame. I’m starting to feel bad.

We had convinced Jason to do this one rather than one of his favourite, high adrenaline, high flow trips and this wasn’t really shaping up. but then we came to the first of the “Spicy Slots”

Kylie and H opt to take the less spicy line ©Kylie
Jason goes full spice ©Kylie

And the rest of use follow.

It’s a tricky start into the white noise.

Just as you are able to see again you realise you are about to drop behind a chock stone and you most defilately don’t want to drop down behind the chock stone.

It’s a battle to resist the push and swing yourself over.

You emerge back into the light then drop off the chockstone into the noise once more.

It’s a fantastic abseil

Everyone one is grinning.

there’s an 800m creek walk to get to the next bit. lets just go back up here and do that again. someone suggests

hmmmm we are here now let;s at least check out the bottom section.

Lucky we did.

The 800m creek walk isn’t too bad and goes quick and the bottom section is the best bit.

looks nice and tame from up top

The creek has spit into 2 channels. A sloping abseil (New anchor has since been installed closer to the lip) brings you to the edge in between them

You step over the edge and both streams recombine.

On your head.

Hello Spicy Slot 2

The next 2 abseils come in quick succession

I scramble down the next one but signal up to the others that it isn’t worth it as there looked to be a nice exit from the ledge they are on.

The exit began on a steep loose scree slope but soon got steeper and looser before getting looser and steeper….

Other than the steepness and the looseness it was fairly easy going. The notes said to get to a certain elevation and then traverse around. While that would cut off some elevation gain it looked long and convoluted so we just went straight up and over a minor nose then dropped down onto the road not to far from the car park.

I nodded, pretending to be a hundred times more courageous than I felt.  Lisa Tawn Bergren.

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CE4Y Sickline 8.7: First impressions

Swiss based CE4Y burst onto the scene a couple of years ago with a range of canyon specific ropes made from more technical fibers than the polyamide (Nylon) used in most standard ropes.

The ropes are aimed at being more cut and abrasion resistant while still being light weight.

To achieve this the sickline 8.7 uses a UHMPE (That’s dyneema to us uncouth types) and Polyester sheath and a Polypropylene core.

I’d have to say I was a little skeptical for a couple of reasons.

  1. Previous ropes I’d tried with a polypropylene core I found to be a bit bouncy. CE4Y counter this with stating the sick line is super-static with less than 1.8% stretch.
  2. Both Dyneema and polypropylene can be a bit melty, so they aren’t recommended for abseiling on while dry. This kinda limits their use in a lot of blue mountains canyons which often need a dry abseil to at least get into or out of them. All that said CE4Y claim “tests have shown that abseils up to 50m on dry ropes with a standard sized figure-8 kind of device can not damage the rope fibers due to heat generated by the friction of the abseil device.” and the old option was to throw your rope in a puddle before setting up the abseil
  3. Price

But curiosity got the better of me and I thought I’d give one a crack

Here’s my first impressions

Cost: At around $390au for 60m It’s not cheap but not the most expensive either, being a lot cheaper than the CanyonLUX for example.

Specs: CE4Y lists the rope specs as

ModelBreaking StrengthWeight
Sick Line 8.720kN42g/m

So on the weight and strength you’d give it a tick with it being in the ball park with the premium canyon ropes.

Colours: To paraphrase Henry “Modle T” Ford, You can have any colour you like as long as its a weird rose taupe speckled with blue.

First use:

After the obligatory tie it on to something and run a descender over it a few times I took her out for a spin in Empress

My first impressions.

Handling: It’s soft and supple, knots easily. Not much else to say really

Control: She’s fast!!! Damn fast.

Other reviews I’ve read suggest it will calm down a bit with use but at this stage, a few trips in, I wouldn’t recommend it for beginners or people using a standard figure 8 or hydrobot style descender. You definitely want options to quickly add friction on the go. An experienced friend had a few issues with getting the right friction on a pirana. Finding the different settings either too quick or too slow and not so in between

Saying that, with the right amount of friction on my CRITTR (more than I’ve used on any other rope ever) it ran nicely through the hand and CE4Y were not lying on the super-static call, it felt solid and smooth.

Anyhoo, for now I’m liking it. Once you get the friction setting sorted it feels smooth and not too hot on your hand (I don’t like wearing gloves) and the weight factor is a plus but it needs more play dates before I settle on my final call in a long term review.

Stay tuned.

Or not, go make up your own mind. I aint care, I’m not your mum.

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Long term review

Prusiking

We all know prusiking sucks.

I’ve been a bit lax in practicing it the last few years but I did a training day with UBMBWC where Guy Wittig showed us a slightly different set up that made things much easier and quicker.

Lo and behold last weekend on a trip  we had a rope get stuck. It was the first time I’ve ever been in the situation where we needed to prusik back up to free a rope and every one was volunteering to be the one to go up but I jumped in “i’ll show youse an easy way…”

Only then I had a brain block and stuffed it up and while I was trying to work out the set up Ev jumped on the rope and up she went using the standard technique.

Anyhoo. as soon as Ev gets back down the light bulb goes on and I realise the simple thing I was forgetting. So today I spent a bit of time in the shed practicing with Tal and I thought I’d put together a quick video to share.

To some of you it is probably a well known technique and self explanitory but it’s new for me.

On my waist I’m using my usual descender in ascent mode, it’s a Kong Robot which is just an older version of the hydrabot and IMO still superior to the newer design in a couple of ways.
https://www.kong.it/en/2-products/items … p269-robot

For the training day Guy was using a Mirco-traxion instead, https://www.petzl.com/US/en/Sport/Pulleys/MICRO-TRAXION,

In the video I also mention you can set an figure 8 up in ascent mode and I’ll post a link below to show how that is set up and I’d imagine the same set up would work on crittrs, Piranas, Okas etc but suggest you try it out and practice it in safe situation before attempting to ascend a 30m overhang on it.

You could probably also use a couple of carabiners and a garda hitch, but I wouldn’t recommend it.

Up top I’m using a tibloc, https://www.petzl.com/US/en/Sport/Ascenders/TIBLOC for a single rope ascent and a standard prusik knot on the double rope.

I should say this isn’t meant to replace proper training with a capable trainer so as I said above practice it in a safe, controlled environment before taking it out into the real world

Even in the video you can see me having to think about what to do so practice practice practice until it becomes natural.

Oh, I also mis-pronouce everything from prusik to tibloc to microtraxion……

Maybe I do it on purpose to annoy the pedants or more probably I’m an uneducated bogan…. Aye.

Anyhoo

OK I’ve just scoured the net for a vid on setting up the 8 as an auto locking ascender and this is the best video I’ve been able to find. I’m positive there are better ones out there but I couldn’t find them and TBH I didn’t look that hard