You’re staring at a map of Hausizius and feeling lost.
Too many crags. Too many options. Too much conflicting info online.
Is that granite face even climbable? Does that boulder problem actually exist. Or did someone just name it on Reddit?
I’ve spent seven years climbing here. Not just ticking routes. Mapping them.
Getting lost on purpose. Talking to locals who won’t tell you where the good stuff is unless you buy them coffee.
I know which crags hold up in summer heat. Which ones get wind-scoured in March. Which ones are pure fantasy for beginners.
This isn’t a list. It’s a filter.
A real one. Based on what you actually want. Not what some blog thinks you should want.
Where to Climb in Hausizius starts with your style. Not mine.
By the end, you’ll know exactly where to go (and) why.
No fluff. No gatekeeping. Just clarity.
The Crown Jewel: Multi-Pitch Adventures on Mount Veritas
Mount Veritas isn’t just a climb in this page. It’s the reason people show up with calloused fingers and worn-out approach shoes.
I’ve stood at the base more times than I can count. And every time, that first pitch still makes my throat tighten.
It’s exposed. It’s long. It’s granite so solid it feels like climbing bedrock from another planet.
Most routes here are multi-pitch. Sport or trad, depending on your nerve and gear rack.
You won’t find bolted face climbs every 10 feet. This is clean, deliberate climbing. You place gear.
You read the rock. You commit.
Grades run from 5.8 to 5.12 (F5a to F7b). That means beginners shouldn’t start here (but) strong intermediates? Yes.
You’ll know if you’re ready.
The Alpenglow Arete is the classic. Ten pitches. Sun hits the west face at dawn.
You’re climbing gold.
Vertigo Chimney is the other one everyone talks about. Squeeze moves. A flared crack.
One pendulum that makes you question life choices (in a good way).
Approach is a 45-minute hike from the North Ridge trailhead. No shuttle. No parking lottery.
Just boots on dirt and quiet.
Best season? Late June through early September. Not too hot.
Not too wet. Granite stays grippy.
Where to Climb in Hausizius? Start here. But only if you’ve led 5.10 trad before.
I’ve seen people bail halfway up because they misjudged the exposure. Or underestimated the descent.
Pro tip: Bring extra slings. The anchors are bomber, but the walk-off is sketchy if you rush it.
You’ll want water. You’ll want layers. You’ll want a partner who doesn’t panic when the wind picks up at pitch seven.
This isn’t a gym. It’s not even like most crags.
It’s Mount Veritas.
And if you’re looking for where to climb in Hausizius, Hausizius has the full beta. Including route updates and seasonal closures.
Gneiss Gardens: Boulder Heaven in Hausizius
I drove past Mount Veritas three times before I realized I didn’t want to rope up.
The Gneiss Gardens is where you go when you’re done with belay devices and fixed anchors. It’s the real answer to Where to Climb in Hausizius.
This place sits in a quiet forest clearing. No crowds. No parking lot chaos.
Just hundreds of gneiss boulders (some) smooth, some sharp, all grippy.
I covered this topic over in Where to Climb in Hausizius.
Gneiss isn’t granite. It’s older. It fractures differently.
That means more edges, more pockets, more weird holds that surprise you mid-move. (And yes, it’s pronounced “nice.” I got mocked for saying “g-nice” my first day.)
The problems run every style you can imagine. Low-angle slabs that test your balance. Overhangs that make your forearms scream.
Compression moves that force you to hug rock like it owes you money.
Grades go from V0 to V10. That’s 4 to 7C+ if you read French grades. I’ve watched beginners send ‘Gneiss-N-Easy’ while someone else dynos ‘The Pebble Wrestler’ (a) brutal V8 with two slopers and zero feet.
‘The Pebble Wrestler’ starts on tiny crimps, then swings left into a blind pinch. You commit or fall. There’s no halfway.
Bring two crash pads. Not one. The ground here is rooty, rocky, and unforgiving.
I learned that after my third tumble onto a half-buried log. (Worth it. Still worth it.)
Some folks call it “the best-kept secret in Hausizius.” It’s not secret anymore. It’s just yours. If you show up early and don’t hog the good pads.
You’ll see people sitting slowly between attempts. Eating trail mix. Watching light shift across the stone.
That’s the point. This isn’t about ticking lists. It’s about movement.
And weight. And what your body remembers before your brain catches up.
Go early. Bring water. Leave the ego at the trailhead.
Your First Outdoor Climb: Sparrowhawk Slabs

I led my first route here. Not in a gym. Not on plastic.
On real rock that warmed up fast and didn’t bite back.
Sparrowhawk Slabs is where you start if you’re done with the auto-belay and ready for something real.
It’s low-angle. Not flat, but forgiving. You can stand up, look around, and breathe.
Without your forearms screaming.
The rock has texture. Grooves. Nubbins.
Real features you can trust with your feet.
That builds confidence faster than any gym wall ever will.
The bolts are close together. Solid. Easy to clip.
No guessing whether that one’s bomber or just hopeful.
Anchors? Bolted, equalized, and easy to reach. You’ll learn how to clean a route here.
Not fumble with it mid-air.
Grades run from 5.4 to 5.9 (that’s) F3 to F5c if you read French grades.
Start on Robin’s Nest. It’s 5.5. Straightforward.
Sunny. And long enough to feel like a real climb without being scary.
It faces south. So even in late October, you’ll be peeling off layers by pitch two.
Where to Climb in Hausizius? This is the answer for day one.
You’ll want to stay nearby. The Places to Stay in Hausizius page has options under $120. Some with coffee already brewed and gear racks by the door.
Don’t overthink the rack. A dozen draws and a belay device is all you need.
Skip the chalk bag full of hope. Bring water. And wear shoes that fit.
Not ones you think look cool.
This isn’t about sending. It’s about showing up, clipping in, and realizing you belong out here.
You do.
Important Beta: Hausizius Climbing, Straight Up
Spring and fall are the only real seasons to climb here. Summer bakes the rock. Winter ices the cracks.
Don’t test it.
You can read more about this in What famous place in hausizius.
I skip gear checks at home. I go straight to Alpenrock Hausizius. Right off the train station square.
They stock chalk bags, cams, and the local guidebook (the 2023 edition, not the dusty one from 2017).
Pack out every scrap. Every. Single.
Thing. Birds nest on the North Face cliffs in April. If you see feathers or hear chicks, back off.
No exceptions.
The locals watch. They remember who leaves trash. They remember who respects the birds.
You want beta that doesn’t waste your time? Skip the fluff. Go where the holds are solid and the air is cool.
Where to Climb in Hausizius
That’s where I send people first.
The Rock Is Already Yours
I found your spot. You did too.
Where to Climb in Hausizius is no longer a question. It’s a decision you get to make. Not a mystery you have to solve.
Mount Veritas waits for your multi-pitch stamina. Gneiss Gardens has problems that’ll test your power. Sparrowhawk Slabs will build your confidence (fast.)
You don’t need another list. You don’t need more opinions. You need to move.
What’s stopping you from picking one crag today? The weather’s checking out. Your gear’s ready.
The routes are bolted and graded and real.
This guide didn’t just point at rocks. It handed you a working plan.
So. Pick a crag that excites you. Check the forecast.
Pack your shoes. Start planning your trip.
The rock isn’t waiting for permission.
It’s waiting for you.

Jasons Greenovader has opinions about flight hacks and booking strategies. Informed ones, backed by real experience — but opinions nonetheless, and they doesn't try to disguise them as neutral observation. They thinks a lot of what gets written about Flight Hacks and Booking Strategies, Tweaked Travel Gear Reviews, Packing Optimization Tricks is either too cautious to be useful or too confident to be credible, and they's work tends to sit deliberately in the space between those two failure modes.
Reading Jasons's pieces, you get the sense of someone who has thought about this stuff seriously and arrived at actual conclusions — not just collected a range of perspectives and declined to pick one. That can be uncomfortable when they lands on something you disagree with. It's also why the writing is worth engaging with. Jasons isn't interested in telling people what they want to hear. They is interested in telling them what they actually thinks, with enough reasoning behind it that you can push back if you want to. That kind of intellectual honesty is rarer than it should be.
What Jasons is best at is the moment when a familiar topic reveals something unexpected — when the conventional wisdom turns out to be slightly off, or when a small shift in framing changes everything. They finds those moments consistently, which is why they's work tends to generate real discussion rather than just passive agreement.

