Name: Canyoning Core Skills Practice Session |
Starts: Sat May 31, 2025 08:00 |
Return: Sat May 31, 2025 11:30 |
Registration opens: Mon Mar 31, 2025 |
Event category: Practice |
Difficulty grade: A4 [?] |
For members only: Yes |
Screening used: Yes |
Max participants: 5 |
Organizer: Andrew Kretz ![]() |
Profile info: |
What is your experience canyoning and/or rappelling?
Do you acknowledge that you will need to bring your own gear?
Do you acknowledge that this is not a course, the trip leader is not a guide, and that no formal instruction will be provided?
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Canyoning Core Skills Practice Session (8am to 11am, May 31, 2025)
During this practice session we will perform some of the competencies included in the American Canyoneering Association (ACA) Core Skills checklist.
This is not a course and I am not a guide. No formal training is provided.
This practice session will not take place in a canyon. We will practice in low-risk conditions, such as on a flat/ low angle slab or on high-angle faces with a top-rope belay. Location will likely be somewhere on the North Shore.
You don’t need to have canyoning experience for this practice session, though there are some things you most definitely need to do to prepare:
Complete V7 Acacemy’s Canyoning Level 1 -- a free, online canyoning introduction course (Sections 6, 8,10, & 11)
Know how to tie the following:
- Figure Eight knot on a bight / Rethreaded Figure 8 knot
- Water knot
- Clove hitch
- Munter hitch
- Girth hitch
- 3-wrap Prusik hitch
- Double Fisherman Bend & Figure Eight bend
- Valdotain tresse (tied with a VT)
Understand and use proper verbal commands for belaying, rappelling, and up/ downclimbing
Understand and use proper hand signals.
In addition, participants will need to bring their own gear. If you already climb, you likely have most of what you will need:
- Climbing or canyon harness
- Helmet
- Whistle
- 4-5 locking carabiners
- Adjustable Friction Descender (rappel device)
- Lanyard / cow tail
- Foot loop (cord sling or webbing)
- VT prusik
- Ascender (mechanical ascender or friction hitch)
- 3-5 meters of 1 inch tubular webbing
- Rope – static and semi-static ropes are the standard in canyoning
Core Skills
The core skills we will practice can be divided into two broad categories: Basic Rigging and Vertical Movement. The objective of this practice session is to move through each core skill as a sequence of a larger progression – that is, first rigging a natural anchor, then setting up and using using a hand line to traverse to a rappel station, followed by setting up a rappel system, and finally rappelling. See below for the skills to be practiced.
Basic Rigging
Rig a single-point natural anchors using a simple webbing wrap or a cinching wrap (i.e., wrap 2 pull 1)
Set up and use a fixed safety/ hand line (using a static block)
Set up and use a releasable system for rappel.
Demonstrate setting rope length for safe descent using appropriate communication
Vertical Movement
Rig a rappelling device
Rappel using different starting positions that include (a) traditional (standing) (b) sitting (c) soft start
Set up and use a self belay with a VT prussik
Rappel and brake to a stop mid-rappel
Lock off rappel device while rappelling
Lock off while rappelling using a leg wrap
Use a rope grab and foot loop to remove tension from rappel device while on rappel
Demonstrate proper bottom belay (Fireman’s belay)
Recommended Resources
American Canyoneering Association (2020). ACA Core Skills Checklist. Retrieved from https://www.canyoneering.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/ACA-All-Skills-Checklists- 12-21-21.pdf
Canyoning Level 1 (n.d.) V7 Academy. https://www.v7academy.com/courses/canyoning-level- 1
Clark, Kevin (2021). Canyoning in the Pacific Northwest: A Technical Resource.
How Not 2 Canyon (n.d.). How Not 2. https://hownot2.com/blogs/canyon-rope-systems? srsltid=AfmBOorFIyrPA3SFGNQ_0kxX6QERuYvTM4Wmsel8PQ0x9nVSE4h3NG4m
Knowledge Base (n.d.). Canyons and Crags. https://canyonsandcrags.com/knowledge-base/