Here's an example of the climbing about halfway up the dihedral in the east gully:

Hope this helps, maybe someone with better info will chime in. Have fun!

Brad (sartorius78, I think is his handle) climbed the Needle this way at the Spring Gathering. Jerry, Zack, and I climbed directly up the dihedral because we had crampons.highpilgrim wrote:There is a route to the east that does not climb the dihedral. I stayed east, avoided the difficult terrain and while steep it was solid and didn't feel that exposed.
There's more exposure in the east gulley. Two years ago we watched a group come down it by accident, and they weren't at all happy about it. The worst part of the crossover is the first step, so you can always make the decision on the spot which way to go.djkest wrote:Good info here. Perhaps we will do East gully direct instead of the "standard" route. We are comfortable with class 4 climbing, especially on rock. It's crazy route finding and exposure that aren't as fun. To me, it seems like the "crossover" is the sketchiest part, so avoiding that would be A-OK with me.
Another part about the crossover that's bad is how many people miss it on the way back. The crossover (both ways) is the only thing about the Needle that makes it "technically" more difficult than the Peak. I'm pretty sure search and rescue have been called to pluck off folks that descended too far and found themselves cliffed out. But, yeah, the downclimb back into the east gully can be pretty daunting for the uninitiated.Jim Davies wrote:The worst part of the crossover is the first step, so you can always make the decision on the spot which way to go.