TOPO Canyoning | CLIMBING7.COM
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A huge, monumental and unmissable canyon! Opened by Khaled Abdul Malak in 2015, wadi Halfain is probably the most beautiful canyon on the Sayq plateau, a notch above even wadi Qasheh or wadi Aqabat Al Biyout. From Al Manakhir, a small high-altitude village at 1,870m on the Sayq plateau, the wadi opens due east onto a gigantic waterfall almost 250m long, before descending over 1,000m in a concentrated sequence of splendid vertical cascades where the water flows and forms multiple pools of translucent water. Incredible scenery, beautiful geological formations and a final 90m abseil watered directly to the ground to round off the adventure! All abseils are equipped with 1 or 2 bolts, and lunulas in places. It was a long and demanding trip, 14 to 16 hours of descent in 2 days, with a splendid bivouac halfway down, difficult to get out in one day. Thanks to Khaled for this 5-star discovery!
Type ✦ Water canyon
Location ✦ Al Manakhir, Sayq Plateau
Region ✦ Dakhiliyah, Western Hajar
Country ✦ Oman
Difficulty ✦ v4-a3-V
Vertical drop ✦ 1000m
Max abseiling ✦ 50m
Duration ✦ 14h to 16h (2 days)
Interest ✦ ★★★
From the road from Nizwa to Muscat, turn right into Birkat Al Maouz. Pass the village and turn left at the fort to enter the gorge. Further on, a checkpoint (4×4 compulsory) and you start on the road that will take you over 1500m up to reach the Sayq plateau. Before arriving at Sayq, take the road leading off to the right on a descent and left-hand bend. A few kilometers further on, you come to the village of Al Manakhir. Park as far down the road as possible.
Cross the village and the last houses to find small terraces behind. Follow the path, which joins the bottom of the canyon parallel to the gorge. It climbs up and down a little, then comes to a sort of small pass with an incredible aerial view over the whole wadi to the E15 road, in the distance, heading towards Muscat. Continuing a little further, on the right we see the 250m waterfall (not equipped), the base of which we'll actually reach via an approach path.
Continue on, following the varied signposting (red and mauve arrows, green and red triangles...). At the bottom, after a number of bends, fork right to quickly reach the foot of the large waterfall on a fairly steep Bedouin path. Then descend the opposite side of the scree, improvising in the foliage. It becomes a little more steep and you can see the first pools of water. The 1st abseil is on a small ledge to the right.
Facing east, Wadi Halfain is very steep in its very vertical central section, often in the shade. Watery all year round, the flow is fairly low (except after the rains) but the swimming pools are full and compulsory. In winter, given the altitude, it's essential to bring a full wetsuit (3mm is sufficient), and at least a shorty in hot weather.
17 abseils to be climbed, some in a row for the big cascades. The belays are equipped, but you'll need to bring plenty of rope (8mm) and emergency quick links.
Leave the couloir of the large final waterfall to find a final ledge to climb either to the right with 1 bolt or to the left in a hole (possibly using a piece of rope). You then leave the gorges of the Wadi Halfain and it opens up. Follow the wadi bed. Avoid the chaos by climbing to the left and then descending to the white rocks.
There are still a few small pools scattered around the limestone slab. Further on, you come to an ancient wall that marks the start of an old falaj, perhaps dating back thousands of years. Simply follow it, and after a 2-hour walk and several slight bends, you'll come out on the track to the parking lot.
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