In the 2004 edition of Ron Doughton's book "Bushwalking in the Budawangs", the chain is of course mentioned. But I was interested to see that a previous edition of the book includes details of an alternative:
Once entered, Nibelung Pass provides about half a kilometre of tightly twisting track until the cliff lines on both sides converge, leaving only two choices to enter the Monolith Valley proper. One is a scramble up a short rocky section, modified only by muddy handholds and a chain, beside the northern side (right hand) of the track. The second is more civilized (i.e. easier) and consists of a series of ledges leading to the top of the southern...
This is from a snippet which I got when I did a Google Books search, but I haven't been able to coax the rest of this paragraph out of Google Books.
Is anyone familiar with this alternative route which avoids the chain? And if someone has an earlier edition of the book, could they please post the remainder of the description (it's on page 25). Thanks!
I'm surprised that Ron Doughton mentions that the second route is easier, because the first route is straightforward. When the chained route is dry, it's easy to ascend without using the chain. And when it's wet and muddy, it's easy to ascend by using the chain. Perhaps the author had some type of bad experience with the chain.