|
|
Chogolisa: The doomed bride of Karakorum, part 1
Oct 13, 2004 10: 09 EST
Chogolisa sits right behind the Gasherbrums massif, at the head of the Baltoro Glacier (Pakistan Karakorum). She is also known as the Bride Peak. Or to be exact, the explorer Martin Conway gave the name in 1892 to the second summit point (NE summit, 7,654m). Chogolisa I, the SW point, is only slightly higher (7,665m), and both summits are united by a long, almost flat and very sharp ridge which makes Chogolisa easy to recognize in every picture.
The first attempts
The Italian Duke of the Abruzzi was close to the first summit already in 1909, but bad weather pushed him and his huge expedition back from the mountain. In fact, nobody seemed to get near Chogolisa for decades.
Chogolisa’s steep flanks demand rather technical climbing and an alpine, fast ascent. She “killed” the first man determined to step on her summit. He was no other than Austrian ace climber Hermann Buhl, who only four years earlier had made the first summit of Nanga Parbat after an epic, solitary climb. The same climber who, just weeks before, had made the world’s first ascent of Broad Peak.
A climb in a revolutionary way; they called it alpine style
Buhl attempted the peak with a very young Kurt Diemberger. The plan was to attempt the peak in a revolutionary way for a Karakorum Giant; they called it alpine style. No fixed camps, all in one go. It was hard but fast: they would be able to summit in three days, instead of taking at least three weeks.
They left camp I on June 25, and camped in a saddle at 6,706m on the SW ridge. The next morning - June 27 - they launched their summit push but, once on the ridge, the sunny morning rapidly changed into high winds and a white out. Retreat was the only option, so they turned around.
Tracks disappearing from the edge
Kurt was leading the way on their way back, until he became worried. Hermann was not behind. Kurt waited for quite a long time before turning around and heading back up to look for his mate. What he saw, on the corniced summit ridge, were Buhl’s tracks disappearing from the edge, out into the void. The cornice had crumbled down under his weight. Diemberger took a picture of it, which has become famous, and resumed the descent in deep shock. Buhl´s body was never recovered. He was 33 years old.
Chogolisa’s double summit wouldn’t remain untouched for long, but the mountain kept being isolated and scarcely visited. The rare teams who dared were mostly rejected by storms and high winds, and the spell of a legend, the image of a line of tracks disappearing over the edge.
Friday: Part 2
Sunday Part 3
Chogolisa (or Bride Peak) is a mountain at 35° 07' N 76° 35' E in Karakorum ( Pakistan). Chogolisa has several peaks, the highest on the SW face (Chogolisa I) rises to 7,665 metres (25,147 ft.).
The left picture shows Hermann Buhl while climbing on the SW ridge of Chogolisa, roped to Kurt Diemberger, on June 27th 1957. The right picture, shot later on the same day, shows Buhl’s tracks disappearing on the edge of the cornice. The images, by Kurt Diemberger, are courtesy of Helmut Schmidt and his Hermann Buhl website.
|
|
Feature Stories |
|
Latest News |
more news |
 |
ExWeb Interview: Damian Benegas - Return to a Dangerous Land
Full Story
|
 |
ExWeb Interview: Manuel Gonzalez - Turning to the Gasherbrums to h
Full Story
|
 |
Menno Boermans: Frozen images from Broad Peak
Full Story
|
 |
K2 2005: Base Camp Clinic!
Full Story
|
 |
K2: Americans for 2005 SSE Ridge Alpine style attempt
Full Story
|
 |
Karakorum climbing permit Sale to continue!
Full Story
|
 |
Silvio Mondinelli/Edurne Pasaban Nanga Parbat 2005
Full Story
|
|
|
| Ireland K2 expedition leaving town Sunday  Jun 3, 2005 | | Avalanche alert in Pakistan and media reports of 2005 causalties  Jun 2, 2005 | | Vikings for Pakistan sky descents!  Jun 1, 2005 | | Russians for K2 West Face first ascent  May 31, 2005 | | ExplorersWeb Week in Review  May 30, 2005 | | Pakistan's last images of Chinese/Tibet expedition  May 28, 2005 | | China/Tibet's great loss - Rena dies, Bianba Zaxi seriously injured  May 28, 2005 | | China/Tibet Gasherbrum expedition caught in big avalanche  May 28, 2005 | | Simone Moro's Batura II expedition: “Thank God Alpinism is anything but dead,” part 2 final  May 26, 2005 | | Simone Moro's Batura II expedition: "Thank God alpinism is anything but dead" part 1  May 25, 2005 |
| | Iridium: "Invalid battery - matches found, 0"  May 24, 2005 |
|
|
|
|
2004
BEST of EXPLORERSWEB
|
|
|
|