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RAKAPOSHI HIstory
the
history of one of the most
beautiful and difficult
mountain on earth
The history of the RAKAPOSHI is as
ancient as man’s gaze.

The highest and most visible mountain, the
MOTHER OF MISTS, is part of the imaginary of each person,
wayfarer or inhabitant, that has ever set his eyes and foot onto the
Hunza Valley [North Pakistan].

Unlike K2 and other mountains of the Karakoram, the powerful bulk
of DUMANI has accompanied all the
people who have lived or travelled along one of the crucial nodes of the
ancient caravan routes that connected East and West, variants of the
famous Silk Route.

The valley dominated by RAKAPOSHI is
harmonious and powerful, and has cultural and environmental riches. The
valley was the centre of the ancient kingdoms of Hunza and
Nagar, and Rakaposhi with its SHINING WALL
is an unrivalled buttress to the greatest road ever built:
the Karakorum Highway.

But RAKAPOSHI itself is one of the
most magnificent works that nature has produced. Rakaposhi is an
extremely wide mountain, nearly 20 km from east to west, and is the only
peak on Earth that drops directly, uninterrupted, for almost 6000 m from
the top to the base.

Few people have climbed RAKAPOSHI.
Many people have dreamed of doing it.
First amongst these, was the British art critic William Martin Conway
who went in 1896 in order to explore its
southern slopes. He did not find any easy access route, but it was the
first true mountaineering expedition in Karakoram.
In 1938 another enterprising British
explorer, Campbell Secord tried to approach the great mountain
from Jaglot, along the West face and tackling the longe NW Ridge
up to 5800 m [Secord Peak].
In 1947 Secord returned with one of the
patriarchs of world-wide exploration, Bill Tilman
[one of the 20th century’s most important
explorers, who disappeared in the waters of Antarctica in 1977],
to find an alternative route to the same side on the mountain. After
having made an attempt on SW Spur reaching
quota 6200, Tilman again ascended NW Ridge
reaching just over the 6000 m mark.

Exploration of the West face of Rakaposhi was completed in 1954 by an
expedition from Cambridge University, led by the Genevan Alfred
Tissières, who after having abandoned the umpteenth attempt on the
NW Ridge, concentrated efforts on the
Kunti Glacier, along the SW Spur that
leads to the characteristic Monk's Head (6300 m), which is
clearly visible both from north and south. Members of this strong
expedition were the Austrians Anderl Heckmair
[the first climber on Eiger North face in 1938],
Matthias Rebitsch [the great climber and
precusor of modern free climbing, famous for his attempt on the Eiger’s
North face in 1937 and for the hard routes on Laliderer North face and
on Goldkappel] and the English student George Band
[the young mountaineer of the expedition that had
already scaled Everest in 1953, and who, two years later, was to become
the first ascender of the third highest mountain on Earth, the
Kangchenjunga].

In 1958, an Anglo-Pakistani expedition, led
by Royal Navy captain, Mike Banks, succeeded in reaching the
Rakaposhi summit from Monk’s head, following the same route taken
by Tilman. On the summit were Mike Banks himself and lieutenant Tom
Patey. Banks learnt the lesson from his unsuccessful attempt in
1956 at the head of an Anglo-American
expedition. The first ascenders reached the 7788 meters summit without
the use of additional oxygen, but both suffered frostbite in their hands
and feet.

Almost 20 years passed, before, in 1979,
other climbers tackled the infinite ridges of this great mountain and
finally reached the summit. Starting from Biro Glacier, a
Polish-Pakistani expedition reached NW Ridge
and got to the top via a route that was as long as the first
route, but much more difficult [the route was
repeated in 1988 by a Dutch expedition]. Two illustrious names
from Polish women’s mountaineering, Anna Czerwinska and
Krystyna Palmowska, took part in this expedition.

In the Seventies climbers turned their attention to the great inviolate
walls of the highest summits. The Rakaposhi
NORTH FACE, 20 km wide and characterized by huge spurs, was
and is one of the most impressive walls that can be climbed. In 1971 and
1973 the German Karl Herrligkoffer [the
famous Herr Doctor, organizer of the expedition to the Nanga Parbat of
1970 where Reinhold Messner lost his brother Günther] led two
expeditions to the base of North Spur , but
the attempt failed for strategic difficulties due to the complexity of
the ascension.

It was in 1979 that the sharp
North Spur was scaled by a Japanese
expedition from Waseda University led by Eiho Ohtani. The seven
climbers besieged the mountain for six weeks bridling the spectacular
spur with 5000 meters of fixed ropes, distributed on six high quota
camps. Ohtani and Matsushi Yamashita did a bivouac at 7600 meters
before tackling the difficult cliffs of the final crest. Three very hard
lengths, VI (UIAA) and A2, at 7700 meters, had to be surmounted by the
two Japanese climbers before reaching the top. Back to the bivouac, it
took them two hard days to go back to base camp.

The Japanese ascension passed unnoticed until 1984,
when a Canadian team repeated the extraordinary route in the face of
inclement weather. After various weeks spent, uselessly, equipping the
route, the eight young, strong mountaineers decided to abandon their
attempt on the North Spur
[at first the Canadian team’s intention was to
open a new route on North Face]. A few days before abandoning the
mountain, an unexpected spot of good weather made them immediately
change their plans. In seven days the three climbers, Dave Cheesmond,
Barry Blanchard and Kevin Doyle, attained the summit in
semi-alpine style leaving their mark on mountaineering history and in
the pages written by the leader, Dave Cheesmond, to describe the
difficult ascension, "one of geatest modern Himalayan ascents", defined
"the Cassin ridge of the Himalayas" by the first class climber Barry
Blanchard. An attempt to repeat this route was made by a Slovenian
expedition in 1987, but failed.

In 1985 the huge North Face received
another important visit from a strong Austrian team guided by Edi
Koblmüller. They aimed at the spur on left of the great wall, the
North Spur of East Secondary Summit, where
they traced another superb route.

After 20 years from those enterprises on NORTH
FACE, Rakaposhi still hides many incognito and is a challenge for
the future of mountaineering. Although hundreds of mountaineers are
crowded on normal routes of 8000s, and in spite of the poverty of ideas
and ethics makes more and more appear a mirage the evolution of
mountaineering in terms of exploration, inside and outside
oneself, although many speak bad and little write well of contemporary
mountaineering, nowadays mountaineering has still ways to explore and
poles to discover.

One of these is NW Spur, the longest spur
of the world, still unclibed.
This is our RAKAPOSHI DREAM
>>>
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RAKAPOSHI 7788 m -
KARAKORAM - PAKISTAN |
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Musical
Introduction
FLASH
+
F11
<<<
©
HISTORY CREDITS
Leo Klimmer, Manfred Schäfer
Google Image Search
www.w2c.com
www.peterlanger.com
www.k2climb.net
HIMALAYA STILE ALPINO - Andy Fanshawe, Stephen Venables - Vallardi 1996
MONTAGNE D'ISLAM - Vertical Rock - N° 20 janv./fév. 2002
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