Fritz Stammberger, Was He A Coo Coo Austin Powers?

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survival

Big Wall climber
Terrapin Station
Topic Author's Original Post - Feb 23, 2017 - 08:12am PT
Someone here probably knew him.

The Rock And Ice/ Ascent article by Jeff Long is really good!
(Searching For Superman)

Driven and motivated beyond belief. First person to solo and summit 8,000 meters without supplemental oxygen, and then do the highest ski descent. Cho Oyu (1964) CONTROVERSY Alert Left sick teammates at high camp to do it. (And there was controversy about whether he actually summitted) Although I don't think Jeff Long doubts that he did.


Cho Oyu

*Almost succeeded on South Face of Makalu, in 1974, with Jeff Long and others.
*Almost had a mutiny because of his intensity and how hard he pushed.


Makalu

*He married Super-Model Janice Pennington. She was a hot shot on The Price Is Right.

*In 1975 he disappeared on Tirich Mir, on a solo expedition.


Tirch Mir

*Janice Pennington swears that he told her not to believe it if she ever heard that he was a Russian Spy. She mounted searches for him after his disappearance, and there were "disturbing clues."

*Jeff long was contacted about helping with her book. He refused.

*Jeff Long obviously thinks very highly of Fritz and didn't want to participate in what he thought was a Coo Coo book.


*But Jeff long personally saw some of Fritz's belongings in Nepal, VERY FAR from Tirich Mir.


*She's got some kind of weird Demon Eyeball thing going on....
[Click to View YouTube Video]





[Click to View YouTube Video]



If you haven't seen this article, you should buy it. 2016 Edition/234.



So what do you think Supertopo?

survival

Big Wall climber
Terrapin Station
Topic Author's Reply - Feb 23, 2017 - 09:00am PT
Blog/Lou Dawson

As a young man in 1970, I was with a group winter camping on Ski Hayden Peak near Aspen. We’d pitched our tent in view of a steep (45 degree), avalanche-prone headwall. We’d never considered skiing this face, it was just a place where we watched avalanches. Suddenly someone voiced a startled cry and pointed to the wall. It wasn’t a slide this time, but a skier coming down! He’d make a powerful traverse, knock off a good-sized avalanche, then turn around and make a few turns where the slide had scoured. Then he’d do it again.

We watched this display of courage and athleticism in amazement, the way Native Americans must have watched the arrival of Columbus. It was skiing completely out of our experience—transcending reality. That encounter stands as my enlightenment as a ski mountaineer — that day I became as much a glisse alpinist as a climber. The skier we watched was Fritz Stammberger.

Stammberger was an imposing man with a weight lifter’s physique, thick German accent, and the poise of a rugged individualist. He’d immigrated to the U.S. from Germany in the early 1960s, and settled in Aspen as a printer and ski instructor.

Fritz was a committed alpinist and a bold skier. In 1964 he became the man with the highest ski descent to that date when he skied from 24,000 feet on Cho Oyu in Tibet (after making the first oxygenless ascent of that 8,000-meter peak, the seventh highest mountain in the world). Unfortunately his accomplishment was marred by controversy: he skied down Cho Oyu to get help for two companions who died on the mountain, and pundits later claimed the deaths were caused by Stammberger’s neglect. History appears to exonerate Stammberger, but his mountaineering career was dogged by that initial debacle.
Mighty Hiker

climber
Outside the Asylum
Feb 23, 2017 - 09:36am PT
Several of the first ascents of 8000 m peaks - Annapurna, Nanga Parbat, Cho Oyu, Broad Peak, and perhaps others - were in the 1950s, and without supplementary oxygen.
survival

Big Wall climber
Terrapin Station
Topic Author's Reply - Feb 23, 2017 - 09:43am PT
Driven and motivated beyond belief. First person to solo and summit 8,000 meters without supplemental oxygen, and then do the highest ski descent.


First to CLIMB AND SKI an 8,000 meter peak without supplemental oxygen.

Sorry Anders, I wrote it out incorrectly, even though I knew what I was SUPPOSED to say. But that's not what I was actually looking for opinions on. Whatever, herding cats, carry on. Oxygen was introduced into the Himalaya in the 1920's. I'm not going to look up every ascent without oxygen in the 50's. Feel free to be more specific. I only referred to what was in Jeff Long's article. Also note in the blog post above your post that Dawson says Fritz was the first to climb Cho Oyu without oxygen, which contradicts what you said about Cho Oyu.




More from Lou Dawson blog post:
During his years in Aspen, Stammberger spent countless days skiing mountains such as Ski Hayden Peak and Grizzly Peak (a 13,988-foot Colorado peak with a beautiful couloir dropping from the summit). His training was legendary. On all but the coldest days he would ski without gloves, and he’d walk around town with dripping snowballs clenched in his hands. Almost any winter morning, you could see Stammberger’s tall figure striding impossibly fast up the ski area on his alpine touring skis—his favorite training.

Like a Nietzschean Ubermensch, he’d wait until winter, then make first winter ascents of mountain walls as visionary and difficult as any climbs of similar size done elsewhere in the world. In 1969 he made the first winter climb of dagger-like Pyramid Peak, one of Colorado’s last fourteeners without a winter ascent. In late winter of 1972, he skied with Gordon Whitmer to the north wall of 14,130 foot Capitol Peak, where the pair made a bold directissima.

While Stammberger’s creativity was fabulous, mixed with his aesthetic and playful spirit was a healthy dose of one-upmanship. Once, he and I were having a conversation about local climbing. I had a reputation as somewhat of an accomplished rock climber, but at that time had not done much alpinism. Fritz’s assessment: “Lou, you are too much the spider,” spoken of course with his heavy German accent. In Aspen politics he soon established himself as a radical, chaining himself to a tree to prevent a building from going up, and marching in a parade with a sign reading “Public Castration for all Bycicle Thiefs [sic].”
Mighty Hiker

climber
Outside the Asylum
Feb 23, 2017 - 10:04am PT
Stammberger may have been the first to climb and partly ski down an 8,000 m peak, without supplementary oxygen at that. But there's no way he was first to climb an 8000 m peak without it.
BruceHildenbrand

Social climber
Mountain View/Boulder
Feb 23, 2017 - 10:09am PT
He was also the publisher of Climbing Magazine.
survival

Big Wall climber
Terrapin Station
Topic Author's Reply - Feb 23, 2017 - 10:14am PT
Anders, I didn't say he was. I said climb and ski.

Please feel free to correctly list them. I'd be happy to read it.

And yes Bruce, he was a publisher. Thanks.
survival

Big Wall climber
Terrapin Station
Topic Author's Reply - Feb 23, 2017 - 11:51am PT
Continued from blog:

Fritz was was obsessed with trekking and climbing in the Himalayas. It appeared he realized the only way to raise money for such trips was to make a name for himself. So while his mountaineering continued as a personal endeavor, he also took an obvious turn towards self promotion. (I don’t write that in negative sense, it’s what you had to do in those days to get any sort of sponsorship.)

European extreme skiers who were creating their own legends, and Fritz no doubt noticed. Moreover, he was good friends with Aspen newspaperman Bil Dunaway, who had helped jump start modern European extreme skiing himself when, in 1953, he made the first descent of the North Face of Mount Blanc in France (along with French alpinist Lionell Terray). Dunaway had a good sense of mountaineering politics, and Stammberger’s association with Dunaway no doubt inspired what followed. Fritz could ski and climb as good as anyone, so he did.

Outside of Aspen is a double-topped fourteener called the Maroon Bells. Known as the “Deadly Bells” to local mountain rescue teams, the mountain has claimed scores of lives, and still makes casual climbers quake with fear. It’s steep, striated with relentless cliff bands, and built with rock so loose the climbing often resembles scrambling up a gravel pile. With the tight snowpack of spring, however, the Bells mutate. They’re safer and easier to climb for those knowing snowcraft, and they become skiable.
crankster

Trad climber
No. Tahoe
Feb 23, 2017 - 01:40pm PT
Pretty sure Bill Dunaway was the publisher of Climbing Mag at that time and Fritz ran Aspen Printing, the printer.

survival

Big Wall climber
Terrapin Station
Topic Author's Reply - Feb 23, 2017 - 02:43pm PT
In 1971 few people knew the secret of Maroon Bells snow, but Stammberger did. On June 24 he cramponed up the north face of North Maroon Peak (the north Bell), donned his planks, and skied back down. Even by today’s standards the descent wasn’t easy: Stammberger fell over a 15-foot cliff, and skied a narrow section exceeding 50 degrees. Moreover, he used no ropes and had no support team. Stammberger’s feat amazed the locals and was trumpeted in the Aspen newspaper. Yet as with the coverage of Bill Briggs’s Grand Teton ski that same spring, the Maroon Bells ski descent was too far from North American ski reality to receive much mainstream press.

After his Maroon Bells descent Stammberger endured a frustrating series of failures in the Himalayas, eventually meeting his end while solo climbing in 1975 on Tirich Mir in Pakistan. A year before he disappeared, Fritz married Janice Pennington, a former Playboy Centerfold and television starlet. Pennington became obsessed with finding Fritz. Convinced by visions and psychics that he was still alive, she enlisted the help of everyone from private investigators to Elvis Presley.
survival

Big Wall climber
Terrapin Station
Topic Author's Reply - Feb 23, 2017 - 05:45pm PT
I thought for sure if I brought a little content, with a badass skier/Himilaya guy, the beautiful wife, a mystery disappearance, the wife that believes the spy CIA/KGB thing..

Just goes to show you. People bitch up a storm about content, but then don't add.

Maybe if I add what a dickhole Trumplethinskin is, that might help. HA!
survival

Big Wall climber
Terrapin Station
Topic Author's Reply - Feb 23, 2017 - 05:57pm PT
Hmmm, I thought I cut more of an Ezra figure...


Mighty Hiker

climber
Outside the Asylum
Feb 23, 2017 - 05:58pm PT
Sorry, Bruce - I tried.

Didn't Stammberger disappear and Trump appear at almost the same time?
Jon Beck

Trad climber
Oceanside
Feb 23, 2017 - 06:05pm PT
Janice took a bad fall herself

In June 1988, a camera hit Pennington and she fell off the stage. She was unconscious and was taken to a hospital; taping of the episode resumed after 45 minutes. Pennington's resulting surgery left her with scars and one shoulder shorter than the other, so she could no longer wear swimsuits on the show

Chessler carries her book

https://www.chesslerbooks.com/item/267-husband-lover-spy-fritz-stammberger-pennington-1994-1st-ed-hc-dj.asp

Less than flattering reviews

REVIEW:

Fritz Stammberger found the perfect wife in Janice Pennington: pretty, not overly smart, unquestioning, and willing to marry a foreigner about whom she knew very little after a courtship of mere weeks...The perfect wife for a spy. Even before Pennington suspected her husband of a secret life there was plenty suspect about Stammberger. The guy liked to go off and climb big mountains solo, san oxygen, and when he couldn't get a climbing permit he'd enter sensitive, dangerous areas of the world illegally, hiking in through rough, unpatrolled country to bag peaks.


This alone would (statistics prove) have guaranteed him a life span shorter than the one he actually lived as a captured spy. Pennington's story is poorly written (she's s spokesmodel, what do you expect?) and she doesn't get it that whatever her husband was up to, whether he was a spy or not it was illegal and he WAS NOT a US citizen--being married to one does not count when it comes to risky rescue and investigations.

She barely consults her husband's country for help, preferring to spend years (during which Stammberger was apparently still alive) chasing after US intelligence officers who--obviously--couldn't and weren't required to hand over any information about a German national's activities in dicey area of the world.

What is surprising is that Pennington gets any resolution at all--really. She reminds me of Gennifer Flowers--tenacious, if a little dim. A weird story that would be much more palatable if Pennington had gotten a ghost author to help her with her 8th grade prose.
survival

Big Wall climber
Terrapin Station
Topic Author's Reply - Feb 23, 2017 - 06:05pm PT
Didn't Stammberger disappear and Trump appear at almost the same time?


Ok, that made me laugh Anders! Nice tie-in!

In fact, doesn't Trump look like an old Stammberger??


EDIT:: Thank you Jon! That's exactly what I was hoping for. Clearly Jeff Long didn't think much of helping with her book. But she has apparently convinced some people.
survival

Big Wall climber
Terrapin Station
Topic Author's Reply - Feb 23, 2017 - 06:31pm PT
My first guess was that Donini or Ament could have met him? There's some other serious geezer action around here. Who knows.
thebravecowboy

climber
The Good Places
Feb 23, 2017 - 06:32pm PT
whatever FS was, he definitely had a fire lit under his ass
Largo

Sport climber
The Big Wide Open Face
Feb 23, 2017 - 06:36pm PT
Trash books are fun if they are transcendentally bad and tacky. Now I've got to order this and read it. I thought Jeff Long's story in Ascent was superb, and it won the Banff Award for best periodical story of the year. Some credit should also go to editor Jeff Jackson, who apparently started with a 40,000 or so word doc and whittled it down to six or seven grand - from what I understand. I have always thought Jeff was a rare talent, and his photography is also first rate and evocative.
Ghost

climber
A long way from where I started
Feb 23, 2017 - 06:36pm PT
Klimmer told me that whole "disappeared on Tirich Mir" thing was a smokescreen to hide involvement with the Illuminati. Or the Nephilim. I forget which, but he definitely said Stammberger had been taken up to the mothership, and was now aboard the massive ark on the moon.
mouse from merced

Trad climber
The finger of fate, my friends, is fickle.
Feb 23, 2017 - 06:37pm PT
Wish Trump had vanished instead...

Really good stuff, Survival.

The content is not, apparently, contentious enough for this crowd, however.

Sounds like Fritz and BRONSON might get along well on a rope, arguing over whose lead it is, etc., on their historic FA of the Real-Fake Route on Cho Mogoslo, for example.

But, alas...
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