Posts Tagged ‘K2’

Polish winter expedition to K2, 2002/3 /Version english and polish/.

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

Posted by himalman

Polish winter expedition to K2, 2002/3 (8611m) led by Krzysztof Wielicki, Poland’s most accomplished Himalayan climber and conqueror of 14 “eight-thousanders”.The expedition has broken the altitude record that man has ever achieved in winter on K2 (Chogori)During the expedition as a base camp tent was used Marabut’s tent – K2

K2 is considered the ultimate climb. It is located in Karakoram, on the border of China and Pakistan near the Silk Route. The history of its exploration is long and dramatic. Until today only almost 200 people reached the summit, but none of them in wintertime. Poles achieved much in the struggle with this mountain during summer. Our climbers led or marked out four routes there. The first Pole, and at the same time the first woman to climb the K2 summit was Wanda Rutkiewicz.

K2 will be climbed from the northern side. The current leader of the expedition Krzysztof Wielicki successfully ascented the mountain in the summer of 1996.

Only 8 out of 14 highest peaks over 8000m were climbed in the winter. Poles were the first to climb them all and are still continuing the idea of the Polish Program of Winter Exploration of the Himalayas and Karakoram. Himalaism still remains a high-class sports challenge.

The current expedition is a tribute to Andrzej Zawada, a creator of the idea of climbing the highest mountains in the winter.

The leader of the expedition Krzysztof Wielicki is the fifth person to climb all 14 highest mountains in the world. Three of them (including Mount Everest) he climbed first, alone and taking new routes and in the winter.

K2, otherwise known as Chogori, is the world’s second highest peak after Mount Everest, extending to a height of 8611 m above sea level. It is located in the Baltoro Mustagh Range situated within the Karakoram Region that lies along the border between China and India. K2 is perceived as the world’s most difficult mountain to climb.

The vast Baltoro Glacier slowly flows down its slopes. An Italian team was the first to ascend to the peak of K2, doing so on July 31, 1954. Since then, no more than 200 climbers have reached the acme. One out of every seven of them have perished on the mountain’s slopes.

The first woman to stand atop K2 was Wanda Rutkiewicz. No one has yet succeeded in scaling the peak in winter. Extreme weather conditions reign in the region around K2. In winter the temperature descends to negative 45 degrees Celsius, while wind speeds reach as much as 200 kilometers per hour.

The last attempt at conquering the peak in winter, undertaken by a team lead by Krzysztof Wielicki, also ended in failure. The expedition began on December 16, 2002 and ended on February 28, 2003. Immediately after his return to Poland on March 18, 2003, Krzysztof Wielicki stated, “The mission of ascending the peak has not ended, but rather been suspended. I will not give any dates, but I assure you that I will return to K2. One does not combat a mountain, one struggles against adversities. These adversities include snow, hurricane winds, and exhaustion.”The Polish expedition arrived at an altitude of 7700 meters before suspending the ascent.

more : Netia K2 Polska Wyprwa Zimowa

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Wanda Rutkiewicz – National Treasure of Poland. /Version english and polish/

Monday, October 12th, 2009

Posted by himalman

Wanda Rutkiewicz (Polish), the third woman to reach the Summit of Everest, is regarded as the greatest woman climber ever. 8 Summits of the 14 8000 meter peaks. Wanda was born in 1943 in Plungiany (before World War II it was part of Poland, now it is Lithuania). After World War II, she lived in Poland.She had eight 8000 meter summits before she died on Kangchenjunga somewhere over 8000 meters while attempting via the southwest face route. Kangchenjunga would have been her ninth 8000 meter peak Summit.

Wanda’s Summits: Everest 10/16/78, The third woman ascent, the first European on the top; Nanga Parbat 7/15/85, with Krystyna Palmowska and Anna Czerwinska. They became the first women’s team who scaled this peak. (The first woman on Nanga Parbat was one year earlier – Liliane Barrard with her husband Maurice). K2 6/23/86, The first ever woman ascent to the top. She waited on the top for Michel Parmentier (France, died on Everest in 1988) and the couple: Maurice and Liliane Barrard (France, both died during descent from the top of K2). Shishapangma (the true Main Summit) 9/18/87 with Ryszard Warecki. Gasherbrum II 7/12/89 with Rhony Lampard from Great Britain. Gasherbrum I (Hidden Peak) 7/16/90 with Ewa Panejko-Pankiewicz. Cho Oyu 9/26/91 solo. Annapurna 10/22/91 South Face, solo. Wanda Rutkiewicz died 5/12/92 or 5/13/92 on Kanchenjunga. She climbed with Carlos Carsolio. They started together at 3:30 am 5/12/92 from camp IV – 7950 meters. After about a dozen hours of climbing in a deep snow Carlos reached the top. He went down and met Wanda around 8200-8300 meters on the way down. She decided to stay there on a bivouac and started for the top the next day. She did not have food, anything for cooking, not equipment for bivouac. No one ever saw Wanda again…

Rutkiewicz – Summit Everest

* Previous story : – Famous Climbers

** Source : – http://himalman.wordpress.com/

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Jerzy Kukuczka – the ultimate legend, part 4, final.

Sunday, October 11th, 2009

Jerzy “Jurek” Kukuczka has entered mountaineering history as ‘the second man to conquer all 14, 8000ers” after Reinhold Messner. Jerzy Kukuczka - Lhotse south faceThe description hints sort of a ‘second best’ rating – but nothing could bemore off. In fact, many consider Kukuczka the greatest mountaineer ofall. In this series, we examine why.

Poor miner sets Alpine excellence

In the previous parts of the series, we wrote that Jurek summited all 8000ers in only eight years, compared to Messner’s 16, most throughnew routes and/or in winter. He opened nine new routes, five climbs in alpine style and four in winter. But Jerzy had more than the challenge of the climb on his plate: He was a poor miner, living behind the iron curtain of communist Poland.

An underdog’s bite

Through all his life, he would climb using ragged, old, inadequategear. Just to get out of Poland was a fight. And he was slow to acclimatize. But he overcame all this with an incredible endurance and an extraordinary capacity to withstand suffering. The sheer force of will would ‘lift’ Jerzy up on the mountains in a remarkable climbing career.

Outstanding performance by sheer power of will

Lhotse in the late seventies would be the first 8000er for JerzyKukuczka, and the start of a lightning career. At the moment he reachedthe summit and saw the void down its unclimbed south face, Lhotse became a special mountain to Jurek – a place to return. But the next 8years he spent climbing the 14, 8000ers in the most impossible styles and conditions, crowning the period in 1986 with Kanchenjunga winter, anew route on K2 and a first ascent of the Manaslu NE face November 10.

Today: The end.

With that, 1986 saw another remarkable triple header: A winterclimb and two impressive new routes – one in winter conditions. In lessthan eight years, Kukuczka was simply running out of 8000ers to climb.But two remained:

Lucky enough, deep winter arrived at last – and a perfect time forAnnapurna! After his early November climb on Manaslu, Jurek and old friend Hajzer summited Annapurna North Face on February 3, 1987.

Hajzer returned to the mountains with Kukuczka already in September that same year. That’s when they made a first ascent of the East Ridgeon Shisha Pangma (Summit on September 18, 1987).

Olympic Gold – now what?

Jerzy had made it. With this summit he had completed the most famous ‘list’ of all in high altitude mountaineering. So, now what?

Jurek was free to return home, give up climbing, make money at last- and bask in fame, glory, and tributes. A few months later he andMessner would receive the Olympic Gold Medal (Note: Not the silver!).

South Face of Lhotse

But Jurek had stuff to do on the 8000ers. Already the next year, in1988, he climbed Annapurna East. But he never stopped thinking of Lhotse. And that unclimbed South Face.

Kukuczka got his wish. He completed the route and summited Lhotse –once again. But, in a bitter twist of fate, the same mountain where hehad started – would cost him his life… Or was it not fate at all perhaps? Maybe it was the 7mm rope he was tied in to. From 8350 meters, Jurek fell into the void.

Jerzy Kukuczka left behind a widow and two children. And one of the most amazing careers in mountaineering story. His memories and feelings remain still though, in two books: “My vertical World” and “JerzyKukuczca, de la mine aux sommets” (J.K: from the mine to the summits),the last one with a prologue by Walter Bonatti.

My Vertical World : Climbing the 8000-Metre Peaks by Jerzy Kukuczka

* Previous story :

Jerzy Kukuczka – the ultimate legend part 3.

Jerzy Kukuczka – the ultimate legend part 2.

Jerzy Kukuczka – the ultimate legend part 1.

goryonline.com

** zapraszam na relacje z wypraw polskich himalaistów.

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Jerzy Kukuczka – the ultimate legend part 3.

Saturday, October 10th, 2009

Jerzy”Jurek” Kukuczka has entered mountaineering history as ‘the second man to conquer all 14, 8000ers” after Reinhold Messner. Jerzy Kukuczka - the ultimate legend, part 3The description hints sort of a ‘second best’ rating – but nothing could be more off. In fact, many consider Kukuczka the greatest mountaineer of all. In this series, we examine why.

In the previous parts of the series, we wrote that Jurek summited all 8000ers in only eight years, compared to Messner’s 16, most through new routes and/or in winter. He opened nine new routes, five climbs in alpine style and four in winter.

But Jerzy had more than the challenge of the climb on his plate: He was a poor miner, living behind the iron courtain of communist Poland.Through all his life, he would climb using ragged, old, inadequategear. Just to get out of Poland was a fight. And he was slow to acclimatize. But he overcame all this with an incredible endurance and an extraordinary capacity to withstand suffering. The sheer force ofwill would ‘lift’ Jerzy up on the mountains.

A remarkable climbing career on lower peaks finally opened the communist door of Poland to Jurek’s greatest dream: The 8000ers in Himalaya.

Today: Lhotse – the turning point

Lhotse would be the first 8000er for Jerzy Kukuczka, and the start of a lightning career. At the moment he reached the summit and saw the void down its unclimbed south face, Lhotse became a special mountain to Jurek – a place to return. Who could have imagined, that it would also become a place to remain, forever.

Everest South Pillar

Jerzy Kukuczka, Andrzej Czok, Andrzej Heinrich and Janusz Skorek climbed Lhotse’s normal (NE) route, in the ‘normal’ post-monsoon season– October 4, 1979. It was OK for a first 8000+ experience, but the next had to be something more.

It was: To begin with, it was taller. The tallest of them all, in fact. And the route, well, it didn’t exist until Jurek and Czok invented it. On May 19, 1980, Everest got a new line up the South Pillar. This would be the only time that Kukuczka used supplementary O2.

Makalu double, Broad Peak twice, Gasherbrum’s in alpine style

Already the next year, in 1981, Kukuczka reached a double goal on Makalu: A variation on Makalu La – the huge saddle between the main peak and Makalu II – and the NW Ridge, solo.

Next came Broad Peak: In 1982, Kukuczka returned to Himalaya with mate Kurtyka to climb the normal route but, feeling unsatisfied, two years after (1984) the two climbers returned – to open a new route, including the traverse of the Three Broad Peak’s summits. Twelve months earlier, (in 1983) the two had climbed new routes on both Gasherbrum Iand II – in alpine style.

The cold climbs begin, Dhaula/Chou Oyu winter double, more new lines

1985 started out spectacular for Jurek: He climbed Dhaulagiri (with Czok again) on January 21! And before the winter ended, he and Czok joined three other climbers – Berbeka, Pawlikowski and Heinrich – to the SE Pillar on Cho Oyu, for a first ascent!

They summited February 15, and it was the first time a new route had been opened on an 8000er in winter.

That same summer of 1985, Jurek teamed up with Heinrich, Lobodzinski and a young Mexican named Carlos Carsolio (a future‘youngest’ climber to complete the 14 8000ers) – for another ‘first’: The SE Pillar of Nanga Parbat.

Are you following? That’s a triple header – including two winter climbs and two new lines in one year!

Another winter

For his next 8000er, Jurek would patiently wait for the winter to close in. Only then would he climb Kanchenjunga, summiting the normal route on January 11, 1986. His climbing partner was no other than Wielicki, another Polish ‘winter beast’.

K2 – the Kukuczka way

To maintain the level, the next peak could be no other than K2: And what Kukuczka and Piotrowski did there was a real lesson on extreme climbing. The route they opened on the South face is still a waiting a first repetition. The Kukuczka route, rarely attempted, combines sustained difficulty with ‘suicidal’ exposed passages. They summited July 7, but at a terrible prize: Piotrowski fell to his death ondescent, by the Abruzzi Spur.

Jerzy climbed Manaslu that same year: Another first – again in winter conditions. On November 10, Kukuczka and Hajzer made a first ascent of the Manaslu NE face.

Next: The end.

* Previous story :

Jerzy Kukuczka – the ultimate legend part 2.

Jerzy Kukuczka – the ultimate legend part 1.

goryonline.com

** zapraszam na relacje z wypraw polskich himalaistów.

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Krzysztof Wielicki one of the famous Polish climber. /Version english and polish/

Monday, October 5th, 2009

Posted by himalman

Krzysztof Wielicki the famous Polish climber.

1wielickiKrzysztof Wielicki (born January 5, 1950 in Szklarka Przygodzicka, Poland) – Polish alpine and high-altitude climber. One of the most outstanding himalaists of the world.

He is the fifth man to climb all fourteen eight-thousanders. On three of them: Mount Everest, Kangchenjunga and Lhotse, he climbed as the first man ever to do it in winter. Member of The Explorers Club.

Krzysztof Wielicki – 8000 meter peaks Notes:

Mount Everest (February 17, 1980) – normal route from Nepal in winter with Leszek Cichy. First ever winter ascent of a Summit of a 8000 meter peak.

Broad Peak (1984) – normal route, the first ever ascent on a summit of 8000 meter peak in one day (16 hours up, 6 hours down), solo.

Manaslu (1984) – new route on South-South-East Face (with Alexander Lwow)

Kangchenjunga (1986) – normal route, first winter ascent (with Jerzy Kukuczka).

Makalu (1986) – normal route, alpine style (with Marcel Ruedi).

Lhotse (1988 ) – normal route, first winter ascent, solo.

Dhaulagiri (1990) – new route on the East Face, solo (16 hours up to the top)

Annapurna (1991) – by British route on South Face (with Bogdan Stefko)

Manaslu (1992) – normal route (with Marco Bianchi and Christian Kuntner)

Cho Oyu (1993) – by Polish route (with Marco Bianchi)

Shisha Pangma (1993) – new route on the South Face, solo

Gasherbrum II (1995) – normal route, solo

Gasherbrum I (1995) – Japan route, alpine style, (with Carlos Carsolio, Ed Viesturs, Jacek Berbeka)

K2 (1996) – North Pillar (with Marco Bianchi and Christian Kuntner)

Nanga Parbat (1996) – Kinshofer route, solo.

* see : – Polish winter expedition to K2, 2002/3 /Version polish and english/

Polish Winter Expedition 1980

czlonkwyprawykrzysztof_wielicki__andrzej_zawada__leszek_cichy1

Członkowie wyprawy : Leszek Cichy, Krzysztof Wielicki, Andrzej Zawada.

* Previous story : – Famous Climbers

** Source : – http://himalman.wordpress.com/

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