Dalkey Quarry is located 14 km
South East of Dublin city centre on the coast of the Irish Sea. Dalkey Quarry
used to be used for extracting granite for building in the 19th century,
quarrying started in 1815 and the rock was used to build the still standing DĂșn
Laoghaire. Now Dalkey is most famous for being one of the most famous crags in
Ireland.
Geology
Dalkey Hill is made of granite
and so the quarry makes for great climbing, like in Yosemite the rock here is
hard and durable. It is good for placing your cams and other such gear. The
rock here would have cooled from molten rock under the earth’s surface,
allowing large crystals to form, as opposed to above where is would cool quickly
and result in small crystals such as in basalt.
The
Climbing
Climbing in the quarry started in
1942 when the first climbs were recorded, many of the routes done then are
still challenging climbers today. Since then the quarry has undergone a real
spring clean and now there are over 300 climbs (as listed in the current
guidebook). Climbs are nearly all single-pitch and range from 10-35 meters. The
grades allow for nearly all levels and go up to E7 (6b equivalent). Nearly all
the climbs follow cracks up the cliffs.
There are lots of videos on YouTube and Vimeo of Dalkey so check them out! (but the quality of them aren't great!)
Sources
http://www.alpinesports.ie/media/catalog/product/cache/2/image/9df78eab33525d08d6e5fb8d27136e95/d/a/dalkey.jpg
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dalkey_Quarry
http://www.maths.tcd.ie/~moroneyk/Images-Large/61427.jpg