Although this crag may not look too attractive at first sight, this place will inspire love to overhang fans and explosive climbing lovers. Its routes are short, hard and very overhanging so, although the crag contains some medium-low difficulty routes, it is an area almost restricted to eighth-grade climbers and climbers with a well-established seventh grade. The crag offers a variety of flagstones, crimps and pockets in a not-so-good-quality-rock wall, where the good job carried out by all its bolters should be appreciated.
The first signs of activity on its walls date back to the 80s, when the first A2s of the Techo Xumi took place by the climbers from Elche. At the beginning of the 1990s, the local climbers Fco. Sánchez "More", José M. Tomás "Greñes" and Fco. Quesada "Tite" bolted the first sport climbing routes and, with the arrival of the new millennium, other local climbers leaded by José J. González "Kiki" at the head, took the bolting baton, raising in a very important way both the number of lines and their difficulty. In recent years, José J. González “Kiki” and other local bolters have carried out a new wave of route development that has practically exhausted any remaining potential for new lines, adding more than twenty new routes and raising the total number of climbs up to fifty.