Tom Woods:
Here's a weird one on this old thread. Check out Jaybro's satirical comic on Gaston and Buhl on the second page.
Maybe you older folks knew this, but just noticed that Buhl is selling Pervitin. Were they making fun of him for performance enhancing drugs? Or did they really use Pervitin for climbs?
http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2013/05/pilots-salt-the-third-reich-kept-its-soldiers-alert-with-meth/276429/
Anybody know if these old guys were using performance enhancing drugs, like a meth precursor?
Jgill:
I did not see a reference to Hermann Buhl in that article. Maybe I missed a link?
edit: OK, I saw the cartoon on page two. Was it speculation or known that Buhl took this stuff? I read his book years ago but can't recall him mentioning drugs, only eating potato skins!
Brian in SLC:
Buhl...to the tune of a Stone song...running to the shelter of the climbers' little helper...ha ha.
http://www.outsideonline.com/1914501/climbings-little-helper
AMPHETAMINES WERE THE FIRST drug of choice in the mountains. In 1953, Austria’s Hermann Buhl took pervitin, the superdrug that Nazi troops took before battle, during his solo first ascent of Pakistan’s Nanga Parbat. Ten years later, during his historic 1963 traverse of Everest, American climber Tom Hornbein gave two teammates, Lute Jerstad and Barry Bishop, dexedrine to aid their descent. “My impression is it didn’t do a damn bit of good,” says Hornbein, who didn’t take the speed himself.
Reilly:
The US Air Force and Navy routinely give 'uppers' to single seat fighter
pilots on long redeployment flights. Hey, it's medicinal, and cheap insurance.
Tom Woods:
Cool article about Dex, Brian.
They didn't mention their source on Buhl and the pervitin. Hopefully the source wasn't an old cartoon from supertopo.
Brian in SLC:
From Buhl's Lonely Challenge:
"I had with me a few tablets of Pudutin, a drug with stimulates the circulation and wards off frostbite, and a few pills of Pervitin for extra strength in case of extreme necessity. We had carried them ever since Base Camp."
"Completely exhausted, I fell down on the snow. Hunger racked me, thirst tortured me, but I knew I had to save the last drop as long as possible. Perhaps Pervitin was the answer? It couldn't be many hours before I got back again and the effects would last that long. Doubtfully, I swallowed two tablets and waited for them to take effect; nothing seemed to happen and I felt no benefit. Or was it that they had already done their work and that without out them I would never have been able to get up again? You never know with tablets!"
His own words.
Todd Eastman:
Oxygen or speed?
What's the difference?
Tom Woods:
Thanks Brian, I guess the old comic had the pervitin part right.
It does appear though that he used them in need, rather than chomping them for the way up?
Brian in SLC:
Nah...he was on the way up...
Tom Woods:
So....tweeker?
He seems to have some familiarity with these things, "you never know with tablets."
Todd Eastman:
Speed was handed to both sides during WWII...
... similar sh#t probably is still issued.
Jgill:
Thanks, Brian. I couldn't find my copy of Lonely Challenge which I read maybe 45 years ago.
At the U of Chicago in 1958 I climbed with a mathematician who had known Buhl. He talked about a bouldering traverse that had finger-holds "the width of match sticks" that only Buhl could do. He also encouraged me to learn a one-finger pull-up, which he said Buhl could do . . . which I did; and he might have, but I wasn't able to find any other evidence. (maybe it's buried in Lonely Challenge and I missed it!
Tom Woods:
This almost needs it's own thread. Rebuffat was a different type of inspiration than Buhl.
I didn't know what pervitin was when I used to read all this stuff. I'm not sure I know what it is now. One article I linked equated it to meth, but others compare it to dexadrine. I don't really know the difference, but I think it is good that these things come out into the light.
I learned long ago, from an older and wiser climber than me, that there really aren't any rules except that you don't lie about what you did. Buhl did not feel the need to lie about the pervitin, it appears. So in his mind, and perhaps his world at the time, it might not have been cheating to him.
What is cheating when it comes to substances in climbing?
I go back to the old words of wisdom- if you think you will have to lie about it, don't do it.