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⚖️Colorado Statutes — Recreational Use & Premises Liability

Colorado Revised Statutes
CRS § 33-41-101 et seq. — Colorado Recreational Use Statute

Colorado's Recreational Use Statute limits the duty of care owed by landowners to recreational users of their property when no fee is charged. Under CRS 33-41-101+, an owner of land who permits any person to use the land for recreational purposes without charge does not assume responsibility for or incur liability for any injury to such person or property. Federal land managers (USFS, NPS, BLM) and Colorado State Parks benefit from this framework when land is open to recreational use without charge.

This statute applies to the conditions information PeakScout displays for Colorado climbing areas on public land. Nothing in this statute limits liability for willful or malicious failure to guard or warn against a dangerous condition. If you have questions about your legal rights, consult a licensed Colorado attorney.

Colorado Revised Statutes
CRS § 13-21-115 — Colorado Premises Liability Act

The Colorado Premises Liability Act (CRS 13-21-115) defines the duties landowners owe to different classes of entrants: trespassers, licensees, and invitees. Recreational climbers on public land generally enter as licensees. As a licensee, a person may recover only for injury caused by the landowner's unreasonable failure to exercise reasonable care with respect to dangers created by the landowner of which the landowner actually knew. This is a materially higher bar than the "reasonable care" standard applicable to invitees.

PeakScout is not a landowner or land manager. The Act is provided here for reference as part of your understanding of the legal landscape governing Colorado climbing access. Where both the Recreational Use Statute and the Premises Liability Act apply, the more protective statute generally governs.

By using PeakScout to access Colorado rock or ice climbing conditions, you acknowledge that you are voluntarily participating in inherently dangerous activities, that Colorado law may limit your legal remedies against land managers and PeakScout, and that you bear primary responsibility for your own safety decisions.

This disclaimer supplements — and does not replace — PeakScout's Federal Land Liability Disclaimer. Both apply when using PeakScout for Colorado climbing.

🧗Inherent Danger — Rock & Ice Climbing

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Climbing is inherently dangerous — risk of serious injury or death

Rock and ice climbing in Colorado carry risks that cannot be eliminated by information, technology, gear, or training. Falls, rockfall, ice collapse, equipment failure, lightning, altitude, hypothermia, and delayed rescue are all possible even when conditions appear favorable and all available data has been reviewed. Conditions can change faster than PeakScout can update.

🪨 Rockfall

Natural rockfall and climber-triggered rockfall are ongoing hazards at Colorado crags. Freeze-thaw cycles common at altitude loosen blocks over winter. Routes that were solid in fall may have unstable sections the following spring. No data layer PeakScout displays identifies loose rock.

🧊 Ice Collapse

Ice pillars and curtains (Ouray Ice Park, Rifle, Vail area drainages) can structurally fail without warning, even during stable cold spells. Full-formation collapse at the base is distinct from a leader fall and is not signaled by any temperature metric PeakScout tracks.

⚡ Lightning

Colorado has the highest lightning fatality rate per capita in the US. Alpine routes and desert spires provide zero shelter. Afternoon convective storms build rapidly and can reach summits faster than the descent time on many routes. PeakScout weather forecasts are forecast-grid level and cannot capture localized storm development at specific crags.

🚨 Delayed Rescue

Black Canyon of the Gunnison, Eldo's upper routes, Lumpy Ridge, and most alpine venues have rescue times of 2–8+ hours from the time a call is placed. Helicopter operations are often impossible in the weather that causes accidents. A satellite communicator is essential on any serious Colorado route.

🧰 Fixed Protection Failure

Bolts, pitons, and rappel anchors at many Colorado crags have not been replaced in 20–40 years. Stainless hardware in high-humidity crack systems, desert varnish-drilled holes, and freeze-thaw expansion in bolt holes all degrade fixed gear faster than any inspection schedule can track.

🏔 Altitude & AMS

Many Colorado alpine climbing routes begin above 10,000 ft and summit above 13,000 ft. Acute Mountain Sickness, HACE, and HAPE are real risks for climbers who ascend too quickly from low elevations. PeakScout displays elevation data but does not assess individual acclimatization status.

🧊Ice Climbing Conditions — Methodology & Limitations

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Ice condition estimates are based on temperature data — NOT visual inspection

PeakScout does not send observers to Ouray, Vail, Rifle Creek, Fern Canyon, or any other Colorado ice climbing area. Ice thickness, structural integrity, and formation quality are estimated from sustained temperature records and freeze-thaw cycle modeling only. Ice quality at a specific route on a specific day may differ substantially from any model-derived estimate.

  • No direct measurement. PeakScout does not measure ice thickness, density, anchor integrity, hollow pillars, or dinner-plating. These structural qualities require in-person assessment and cannot be inferred from temperature data alone.
  • Temperature station ≠ route microclimate. The nearest NOAA/Open-Meteo grid point or SNOTEL station may be miles from the ice formation. South-facing drainages thaw faster than north-facing ones; canyon microclimates differ from ridge readings. Station data does not capture aspect or shade effects at specific routes.
  • Wet ice and porcelain ice are invisible to temperature models. Seeping groundwater, subsurface melt, and solar warming can produce wet or porcelain ice that is difficult to protect and prone to sudden failure. These conditions appear in temperature data as "cold enough to be climbable."
  • Ouray Ice Park is separately managed. Ouray Ice Park conditions are managed by the Ouray Ice Park organization and change daily based on piped water flow and temperature. PeakScout temperature data is not a substitute for Ouray Ice Park's official condition reports.
  • A single warm day destroys ice. 48–72 hours of above-freezing temperatures can eliminate a route that was fully formed. PeakScout data updates are not real-time and may lag actual conditions by hours or days during weather transitions.
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Required Pre-Climb Verification for Ice Routes

Before climbing any Colorado ice route: (1) check Ouray Ice Park's official condition page for Ouray venues; (2) consult Mountain Project, Sendage.com, or local shop beta with trip reports within 72 hours; (3) assess conditions directly from the base of the route before committing to a pitch. PeakScout temperature estimates are a starting point, not a go/no-go decision.

🪨Rock Conditions — Rapid Change & Data Limitations

Rock conditions at Colorado climbing areas change rapidly and are not captured in real time by PeakScout. Condition indicators displayed are derived from precipitation, temperature, and seasonal data at a regional level — not route-specific inspection.

  • Wet rock after rain or snowmelt. Sandstone at Red Rocks/Golden/Morrison areas and desert crags (Shelf Road, Penitente Canyon) is particularly vulnerable — climbing on wet sandstone causes irreversible hold damage and increases fall risk significantly. No wet-rock advisory in PeakScout reflects actual crag conditions; it reflects regional weather data only.
  • Conditions change within hours. Morning frost at altitude can make slabs lethal at grades that are moderate in dry conditions. PeakScout does not provide intraday condition updates. Assess at the crag.
  • Freeze-thaw winter damage is cumulative. Each winter, freeze-thaw cycles at high-elevation Colorado crags (Cathedral Lake, Taylor Canyon, Lumpy Ridge) fracture rock and dislodge features. Routes that were solid the prior season should be treated with caution at the start of each new season until first-ascent traffic establishes current hold soundness.
  • Flash floods in desert crags. Shelf Road, Penitente Canyon, and canyon-bottom crags in the San Luis Valley and Front Range foothills are subject to flash flood risk during monsoon season (July–September). PeakScout weather data does not assess flash flood risk at specific canyon-bottom climbing areas.

🦅Seasonal Closures — Raptor Nesting & Land Manager Schedules

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Seasonal closure schedules displayed by PeakScout are informational only — verify with the land manager before travel

Raptor nesting closures (peregrine falcon, golden eagle, prairie falcon, white-throated swift) affect many of Colorado's most popular climbing areas. Published schedules reflect historical patterns and regulatory baselines. Actual closure dates, affected route sectors, and closure boundaries can change based on nesting activity observed each season. PeakScout displays published schedules, not current-year confirmed closures.

Common Colorado climbing areas with annual or periodic seasonal closures include:

  • Eldorado Canyon State Park (CDPHE). Annual raptor monitoring triggers partial or full climbing area closures typically running February through August. The South Draw and other sectors have had recurring closures. Verify current status at Colorado Parks & Wildlife before any Eldo visit.
  • Garden of the Gods (City of Colorado Springs). Seasonal raptor closures apply to specific formations (typically January through July/August). Drone use is prohibited year-round. Dogs must be on leash. Verify closures at the Garden of the Gods visitor center or gardenofgods.com.
  • Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park (NPS). The Park requires a wilderness permit for all technical climbing routes. Some zones are seasonally closed for peregrine nesting. Verify current closures and permit requirements at nps.gov/blca.
  • Lumpy Ridge / Rocky Mountain National Park (NPS). RMNP closures are imposed annually for raptor nesting, particularly on Twin Owls and The Book formations. Check nps.gov/romo for current season closures.
  • South Platte / Pike National Forest (USFS). Route closures in the South Platte corridor (Elevenmile, Dome Rock, Turkey Rocks, Cynical Pinnacle area) are managed by Pike National Forest. Check with the South Park Ranger District for current restrictions.
  • BLM San Luis Valley Crags. Shelf Road (BLM Canon City Field Office) and Penitente Canyon (BLM San Luis Valley Field Office) have had periodic seasonal closures. Verify current status before travel.

Violating a seasonal closure is a federal or state offense depending on the land manager and may result in fines and future access restrictions for all climbers. PeakScout assumes no responsibility for closure enforcement or for trip planning based on published-schedule data that has been superseded by a current-season determination.

🏠Park-Specific Rules — Informational Only

PeakScout may display park-specific rules (permit requirements, drone prohibitions, dog restrictions, fee schedules) as informational context. This information is sourced from published land manager websites and may not reflect recent amendments. Always verify current rules directly with the land manager before your trip.

Area / Land Manager Key Rules (Informational — Verify Before Travel)
Eldorado Canyon SP (CPW) Day use fee required; no drones; dogs on leash in day-use areas only; seasonal raptor closures; route registration encouraged
Garden of the Gods (COS) Free park entry; no drones year-round; dogs on leash; commercial guide permit required; seasonal raptor closures Feb–Aug; rock scrambling outside designated areas prohibited
Black Canyon NP (NPS) Wilderness permit required for all technical routes; self-registration at South Rim Visitor Center; no drones; dogs prohibited in wilderness; annual raptor closures in effect
RMNP (NPS) Timed-entry permits required seasonally; wilderness permit for overnight; no drones; dogs prohibited on trails; raptor closures on specific formations; commercial guide permit required
Shelf Road (BLM) Day use fee; camping fee; no drones; dogs on leash; fire restrictions in effect seasonally; verify at Canon City BLM Field Office
Ouray Ice Park Seasonal day use fee; guided programs available; route tagging with personal gear when not climbing; no unroped travel in gorge; conditions managed by Ouray Ice Park organization

📊Route Grade & Difficulty Ratings — Community Data Sourcing

Any route grade (Yosemite Decimal System, NCCS, WI/AI ice grade, M-grade, or free solo difficulty) displayed or referenced by PeakScout is sourced from community-contributed databases (Mountain Project, Sendage, or similar). PeakScout does not independently assign or verify grades.

  • Grades are subjective consensus values. There is no regulatory authority for climbing grades. Grade inflation at Colorado sport crags (Rifle) and grade deflation at alpine routes (Ellingwood Arête) are both documented. Do not treat any numeric grade as an objective difficulty certification.
  • Rock grades assume dry, in-season conditions. A 5.10c slab at Lumpy Ridge rated for summer conditions may be a serious mountaineering proposition when plastered in verglas in May. Grades do not carry implied conditions of safety.
  • Ice grades vary by season and week. WI3 in a good season at Ouray may be WI4 in a thin year. Colorado ice grades reflect typical conditions in prime season — not the conditions on any specific day.
  • Errors in community data are reflected by PeakScout. Stale grades, closed routes still listed as open, and misidentified formation names are known problems in community climbing databases. PeakScout displays what the source database provides.

🔧Bolt & Anchor Conditions — Not Monitored

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PeakScout does not monitor bolt or fixed protection conditions at any Colorado climbing area

Bolts, pitons, and fixed anchors at Colorado crags are maintained (or not maintained) by the American Alpine Club, the Access Fund, local climbing coalitions, individual route developers, and volunteers operating on an irregular schedule. The age, spec, and current condition of any fixed piece of protection is unknown to PeakScout. Treat all fixed protection as suspect until you have personally assessed it at the route.

  • Rebolting is ongoing but incomplete. Many Colorado sport and trad routes were bolted with 1/4-inch or 3/8-inch hardware in the 1980s and 1990s that does not meet current safety standards. Rebolting campaigns by the American Alpine Club and local crags (Rifle Climbing Coalition, Front Range Climbers Coalition) are active but not comprehensive. You cannot determine from PeakScout which routes have been rebolted.
  • Inspect all rappel anchors before weighting. Slung horns, fixed pins, and chain anchors at the top of Colorado routes are replaced by volunteers on no fixed schedule. Anchors that held thousands of rappels last season may have been damaged by freeze-thaw, UV degradation, or rockfall since their last inspection.
  • Desert sandstone bolt placements. Shelf Road, Penitente, and other sandstone crags have documented failures of older ⅜-inch sleeve bolts in soft stone placements. Do not assume a bolt in a desert crag is sound based on visual inspection alone.
  • Report bad bolts to source databases. If you encounter a bolt or anchor you believe is dangerously compromised, report it to Mountain Project, the Mountain Project bolt tracker, or the relevant local climbing coalition. Do not report to PeakScout — we have no mechanism to flag route-level protection issues.

🏔NPS, USFS & BLM Climbing Management Policies

Colorado climbing areas on federal land are managed under a complex patchwork of Wilderness designations, climbing management plans, and categorical exclusions that vary by district and are updated periodically. PeakScout displays publicly available policy information but is not a substitute for confirming current requirements with the specific land management office before your climb.

  • Wilderness Act restrictions. New fixed hardware (bolts, pitons) is prohibited in designated Wilderness areas without specific climbing management plan authorization. Routes within Wilderness boundaries may have bolt moratoriums. Check the relevant Wilderness Plan for the district before equipping new routes.
  • Commercial guide permits. Guide services operating on NPS land (RMNP, Black Canyon, Colorado National Monument) and USFS land generally require a Special Use Permit from the land manager. PeakScout does not vet, endorse, or verify the permit status of guide services referenced in any PeakScout content.
  • Drone prohibitions. Drone use is prohibited at all National Parks by default and at many National Monuments and Wilderness areas. BLM and USFS policies vary by district. Check with the relevant land manager before flying a drone at any climbing area.
  • Leave No Trace and chalk use policies. Some areas (Colorado National Monument, RMNP) have informal or formal guidance restricting chalk use to white/natural chalk or discouraging tick marks. PeakScout does not display chalk policy information for individual climbing areas.

🧭Not a Substitute for Professional Instruction or Guide Services

PeakScout is a data aggregation and briefing platform. It is not a guide service, a guide referral service, or a substitute for the judgment of a licensed professional mountain guide or qualified climbing partner.

  • Colorado licensed guide services. Colorado does not license mountain guides at the state level, but AMGA-certified guides carry nationally recognized credentials. For referrals to licensed guide services in Colorado, consult the American Mountain Guides Association. Local guide services operating in national parks must hold a permit from the relevant NPS unit.
  • Instruction is the appropriate entry point. Beginning and intermediate climbers should obtain professional instruction before attempting routes where a fall or mistake can be fatal. PeakScout does not assess your skill level or experience. Condition data on a route is not evidence that the route is appropriate for your current ability level.
  • Self-rescue capability. In remote Colorado terrain, rescue may take hours. Climbers should be self-sufficient in first aid, improvised anchors, assisted rappel, and emergency bivouac. PeakScout cannot assess your preparedness or equipment.
  • Partner selection. PeakScout does not vet, assess, or endorse any climbing partner, guide, or service. Partner selection for technical Colorado climbing terrain is entirely outside the scope of this platform.

⚖️Limitation of Liability

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Limitation of Liability (Colorado State Addendum)

TO THE MAXIMUM EXTENT PERMITTED BY COLORADO LAW, INCLUDING THE COLORADO RECREATIONAL USE STATUTE (CRS 33-41-101+) AND THE COLORADO PREMISES LIABILITY ACT (CRS 13-21-115), PEAKSCOUT SHALL NOT BE LIABLE FOR ANY INJURY, DEATH, OR PROPERTY DAMAGE ARISING FROM: (1) reliance on ice formation estimates or temperature-based ice condition data; (2) rock condition or climbing season indicators; (3) route grade or difficulty ratings sourced from community databases; (4) seasonal closure schedule information; (5) bolt, anchor, or fixed protection condition information or the absence thereof; (6) park-specific rule or permit information; (7) any other feature of PeakScout used in connection with Colorado rock or ice climbing planning or travel; or (8) failure to locate, engage, or follow the advice of a licensed guide or qualified climbing partner. THIS LIMITATION SUPPLEMENTS THE FEDERAL LAND LIABILITY DISCLAIMER — BOTH APPLY TO COLORADO CLIMBING USE.

✍️ Acknowledgment & Typed Signature Required

To confirm you have read and understood this disclaimer, type your full legal name below as your digital signature. This constitutes a legally binding acknowledgment under Colorado and federal law.

By signing, I acknowledge
  • Rock and ice climbing are inherently dangerous activities that can result in serious injury or death
  • PeakScout condition data is not a substitute for on-site assessment — rock and ice change rapidly
  • Ice climbing condition estimates are based on temperature models, NOT direct visual inspection or field observation
  • Seasonal raptor nesting closures are based on published schedules and may change — verify with the land manager before travel
  • Route difficulty ratings are sourced from community databases and are not independently verified by PeakScout
  • Bolt and anchor conditions are not monitored — all fixed protection must be inspected before use
  • Gear recommendations on PeakScout are informational only and are not a substitute for proper training and equipment selection
  • Rescue in remote areas (Black Canyon, alpine routes, desert canyon systems) may take hours or not be possible in adverse conditions
  • PeakScout is not a substitute for professional instruction, licensed guide services, or a qualified climbing partner
  • Park-specific rules (drones, dogs, permits) displayed by PeakScout are informational and may be outdated — verify directly with the land manager
  • I have read and understand the Colorado Recreational Use Statute (CRS 33-41-101+) and the Colorado Premises Liability Act (CRS 13-21-115)