Marlow
Sport climber
OSLO
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Topic Author's Original Post - Jul 26, 2016 - 02:43am PT
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Erhard Loretan, breathing the smell of the sky
[Click to View YouTube Video]
A life full of triumphs and tragedy...
Some of the triumphs:
Loretan's love for the mountains and alpinism seemed to written in his DNA. Born in 1959 in Bulle, he started climbing aged 11. Four years later he reached the summit of Doldenhorn (3645m) via the east face. In 1981 he qualified as a Mountain Guide and this became his profession. After an intense activity in the Alps and the Andes - where amongst others he established three new routes on three different mountains - Loretan proceeded to climb all fourteen 8000m peaks. He achieved this in 13 years, starting with Nanga Parbat (8125m) in 1982 and finishing with Kangchenjunga (8586m) in 1995. In doing so he became the third person in the world to conclude the Grand Slam, after Reinhold Messner and Jerzy Kukuczka, and the second without supplementary oxygen. But it would be fair to say that without analysing how he reached this goal, one knows nothing about Loretan's alpinism and what sort of alpinist he was. His alpinism, in fact, distinguished itself for its purity, for its speed, for its lightweight style. A style which has become the hallmark of today's strongest, and for this reason Loretan can be considered a leader and forerunner. All one needs to do is remember his incredible 43 ascent and descent of the North Face of Everest: Loretan climbed the Hornbein couloir together with French ace Jean Troillet and the year, its worth underlining, was way back in 1986.
Three years prior to this record-breaking Everest ascent, Loretan had achieved an absolutely stellar hat trick - even by today's standards - with the ascent of three 8000ers: Gasherbrum II (8035m), Gasherbrum I (8068m) and Broad Peak (8091m) in just 17 days! A year later, in 1984, he climbed Manaslu (8163m) in spring, then Annapurna together with Norbert Joost. This first ascent of the East Ridge was an immense achievement, an absolute performance! Then, as if this didn't suffice, in December 1985 he carried out the first winter ascent of the East Face of Dhaulagiri (8167m). This alone was so intense that, even today, it would have made headline news. But there was more to come, such as the first ascent of the SW Face of Cho Oyu (8201m) in 1990 and, a few days later, another first ascent up the South Face of Shisha Pangma (8046m), the "smallest" 8000er. These Himalayan climbs were carried out while Loretan continued actively in the Alps, such as his 13 North Faces in 13 days in the Bernese Oberland in 1989 and, in winter 1986, the "imperial crown" in the Vallese Alps (38 peaks in 19 days).
Planetmountain.com
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