Description

The Beauty Mountain Boulders, also known as Beauty Top Boulders, are the oldest established boulders in the region and are featured in John Sherman's book "Stone Crusade." In fact, the earliest recorded climbing at the New took place as toproping on some of the larger boulders at this area. There are some nice problems here, but they are unfortunately covered in an absurd amount of graffiti. A resurgence of climbing at this crag in 2021 was driven by Chris Marley as he opened several double digit lines in the Rich N' Rock N' Roll Cave and on the Jesus Boulder. With these additions, this sector now offers some of the easiest access to high concentration double-digit bouldering in the whole region. The incredible views from this cliff-top area are frequented by non-climbers and the views may distract you from the unsightly defaced rock. Climbing (carefully) on top of the Monofossilic boulder affords possibly the best sunset vista of the New River Gorge.

Topo images often do not match the current state of graffiti. Not every link-up variation in the Rich N' Rock N' Roll Cave have been included.

🚶‍♂️ Approach summary - Mellow. Under 5 minutes.
💎 Notable problems - "Inversion" V2, "Hack Traverse" V2, "Monofossilic" V5, "Rich N' Rock N' Roll" V7, "Between Beauty High Start" V7, "Rock On" V9, "Mark of the Beast" V11, "Mark of the Beast Sit Start" V13
💧 Dry time - 1 to 4+ days. Most of the boulders dry in 1 to 2 days, the topout of "Rich N' Rock N' Roll" and "Rock On" takes several days to dry fully.
🍂❄️🍃 Seasonal Beta - Year round. This area stays especially cool and has a nice breeze even in the summer.
🚗 Drive from downtown Fayetteville - 15 minutes
🚗 Drive from Summersville - 35 minutes
🚽 Bathrooms - None. Please go elsewhere, options include flush toilets at the National Park Visitor Center and pit toilets along the drive in at the Endless Wall parking and Short Creek parking.
📶 Cell phone service - 4/5, good.
🐶 Dogs - Must be leashed at all times. This is National Park land.

Beauty Mountain Boulders

The area is access sensitive!

Parking is definitely a concern for this area. When parking, be sure to park in a developed pullout, all the way off the road. Also be sure to leave by nightfall (though it's a great place to watch the sunset, don't linger too long after the sun dips below the horizon). The locals that live around here are extremely annoyed when they have trouble getting down their road/driveways, their guests have nowhere to park, or they have strange cars parked in front of their houses after dark.

🚗 Driving Directions:
From Fayetteville, turn right onto US-19N and cross the NRG bridge. Take the second right onto Lansing-Edmond Road. Drive about 3.5 miles, then take a right onto Buckhorn Road (there's a tiny post office on the right corner). Almost a mile down the road, Buckhorn Road makes a big curve to the right. Follow the curve and continue down Buckhorn Road for another 0.4 miles. There, the road makes a sharp right turn with a white 'No Parking' sign straight ahead. Take a left onto the gravel road and park in one of the pullouts on your right.

🚶‍♂️Hiking Directions:
From the first pullout after the left turn, follow the trail away from the road and to the right along the powerlines. After about 3 minutes (2 power poles) you'll cross a tiny creek and enter a rhododendron tunnel. As the tunnel of rhodos opens up, turn left down the first obvious trail and another 150 feet to the first boulders. The trail has small steep, muddy hills and the trail is poorly maintained but well traveled and not too long. Total hiking time: 7 minutes.