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Messages 1 - 16 of total 16 in this topic |
WBraun
climber
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Nov 17, 2009 - 03:32pm PT
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Very interest read rocker. Thanks
Tomaz definitely was not your ordinary climber, thus the vulnerabilities to personal jealousies and scrutinies to his motives and styles.
The same parallels can be seen in the responses toward Dean Potter for example.
These guys have a huge inextinguishable fire in their hearts and eyes far beyond the ordinary norm.
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nature
climber
Tucson, AZ
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Nov 17, 2009 - 04:37pm PT
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bump. Worth the read.
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Handjam Belay
Gym climber
expat from the truth
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Nov 17, 2009 - 04:48pm PT
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I thought that was a good read.
Go in peace.
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enjoimx
Big Wall climber
SLO Cal
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Nov 17, 2009 - 05:31pm PT
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Wow didnt know he died.
I remember reading about his solo of the Reticent Wall and thought it was cool how an accomplished mountaineer could so easily transition into technical aid climbing.
What a badass though, the Rupal Face attempt was awesome....i followed that live on the internet when it happened.
Cheers
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rockermike
Trad climber
Berkeley
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Topic Author's Reply - Nov 17, 2009 - 05:42pm PT
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I generally look down on "self-promoting" types, but found it quite interesting, and perspective changing, to learn that Tomaz' self promotion was to allow him to get out from under the thumb of the hierarchical Slovenian climbing federation. Good for him. Here's a thumbs up to internet blogs from 20,000 feet.
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the kid
Trad climber
fayetteville, wv
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Nov 17, 2009 - 07:05pm PT
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we lost another amazing athlete doing what they dream..
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'Pass the Pitons' Pete
Big Wall climber
like Ontario, Canada, eh?
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Nov 17, 2009 - 07:47pm PT
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Thanks, Mike. Missed you this fall, eh?
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Ezra
Social climber
WA, NC, Idaho Falls
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Nov 17, 2009 - 11:46pm PT
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Rest in Peace Tomaz,
Best wishes to his family, sorry for their loss!
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Keeper of Australia Mt
Trad climber
Whitehorse, Yukon , Canada
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Nov 18, 2009 - 05:31am PT
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Nice insightful piece and a good read. Obviously the climbing community is much poorer without him.
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Norwegian
Trad climber
Placerville, California
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Nov 18, 2009 - 07:29am PT
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i hope that his children learn from their father's peril to dive into life headfirst and smile at the unobscured views.
gosh it saddens me though. im not saddened by tomaz donating his self to the mountain winds that surely tore through that cirque when his last blink failed to rebound.
it saddens me to think of his children running to dadda's bed as their hope transcends their memory and they find a tomaz-shaped void where dad should be.
good thick lessons come of hardship though. and they are now submersed in hardship. im sure that tomaz instilled this into his laddies.
be true to your zeal.
but be there with your kids every chance you get.
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Marlow
Sport climber
OSLO
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Jun 15, 2015 - 09:43am PT
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Tomaz Humar broke into Himalayan climbing in 1994 with an ascent of Ganesh V (6,986m) in Nepal under the leadership of Stane Belak, known as Šrauf, a bullish giant of Slovenian mountaineering. The ascent had that element of explosive drama that came to be associated with Humar. A first summit bid failed, Šrauf fell into a crevasse and a third climber damaged his ribs; but when Šrauf decided to call off the expedition Humar screamed for one more shot. Šrauf accompanied his headstrong protégé to the summit, but then had to coax and shepherd the severely dehydrated Humar down the mountain. Without Šrauf's fatherly care, Humar's career could have ended on Ganesh V. A year later, on a Mountaineering Association of Slovenia expedition, it was Sherpa Arjun who hauled the Slovene into a tent high on Annapurna I and revived him with liquids after Humar had reached the 8,091m summit alone in the dark – his first eight-thousander.
Humar was entering his storm years: May 1996 saw him and Vanja Furlan make the first ascent of the north-west face of Ama Dablam, at 6,812m the Matterhorn of the Nepal Khumbu; November the same year he made the first ascent of Bobaye (6,808m) in western Nepal, solo in alpine-style – the purest form, no Sherpas, no fixed camps and no fixed ropes; returning with friends to the Khumbu in 1997 he achieved a trilogy, a first ascent of the north-east face of Lobuche East (6,119m), an ascent of Pumori (7,165m) and the previously unattempted 2,500m south face of Nuptse W2 (7,742m); and in 1998 a 15-day solo assent of Reticent Wall on the vertical granite of El Capitan in California's Yosemite Valley – a very different type of climbing to the snow and ice of the Himalaya.
Most noteworthy of the above are the Ama Dablam climb, for which Humar and Furlan were awarded what is, for some, alpinism's highest accolade, the French Piolet d'Or (Furlan fell to his death in Slovenia's Julian Alps before the ceremony) and the south face of Nuptse W2. Without a rope, Humar and Janez Jeglic fought their way up ice as steep as 80 degrees in ferocious weather, reaching Nuptse's summit ridge in five days. There, Jeglic disappeared, blown from the ridge. Humar had to down-climb the 2,500m face alone, an extraordinary feat but one that became tainted by ugly murmurings back home, where Jeglic was a popular figure. Had the wrong man returned? Humar was idolised by Slovenians in general but within the climbing community there was growing resentment and cynicism.
Humar, though, had a knack of answering his detractors with the audacity of his climbs. In autumn 1999 he climbed the 4,000m south face of Dhaulagiri I (8,167m) solo in nine days. Rheinhold Messner, who had attempted the route in 1977 and had deemed it impossible, greeted Humar on his hero's return to Ljubljana and anointed him as the "greatest high-altitude climber in the world", a title Messner had once guarded. Humar's progress up what he would call the Mobitel route, after his main sponsor, could be followed all the way on the internet – neither the name nor the self-promotion endearing him to those who believe that alpinism is best practised out of the limelight. Humar was decorated by the Slovenian president with the country's highest honour, the Honorary Emblem of Freedom, and there were awards for the film Dhaulagiri Express, made by Humar's loyal companion, the Croat Stipe Bozic.
Stephen Goodwin
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graniteclimber
Trad climber
The Illuminati -- S.P.E.C.T.R.E. Division
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Jun 15, 2015 - 01:59pm PT
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donini
Trad climber
Ouray, Colorado
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Jun 15, 2015 - 09:38pm PT
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I ice climbed with Tomaz twice, once near Silverton and again in the Ghost Valley. Infectious humor and enthusiasim and a handshake that brought you to your knees.
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