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Reinhold Messner

"The best mountaineer there ever was, the best mountaineer there ever will be..."

Messner's accomplishments are mind-boggling, and rank as some of the greatest in the history of any athletic endeavor. In 1978 he and Austrian Peter Habeler became the first climbers to conquer Mount Everest without supplemental oxygen, something that was considered flatly suicidal at the time. He was the first person to solo Everest, which he did in 1980, again without bottled oxygen. By bagging 27,824-foot Makalu and 27,923-foot Lhotse in a single Himalayan season in 1986, he became the first to climb all 14 of the world's 8,000-meter peaks. Along the way, Messner reinvented climbing with his mid-seventies introduction of fast and light alpine-style techniques to high-elevation routes. No extra oxygen, no fixed ropes, no established camps, no support teams—just a clean break from the siege tactics that dominated the game until then.

 

 

SELECTED CLIMBS AND EXPEDITIONS





 

-
1964

Over 500 climbs in the eastern Alps, mainly in the Dolmites

1965

Ortler North Face (Direttissima, FA)

1966

Yerupaja
Yerupaja Chico (FA)
Walker Spur, Grandes Jorasses
Rocchetta Alta di Bosconero North Face

1967

Civetta Northwest Face ("Weg der Freunde", FA)
Agnér North Edge (FWA)
Furchetta North Face (FWA)
Agnér Northeast Face (FWA)

1968

Agnér North Face (FWA)
Eiger North Pillar (FA)
Marmolata South Face (FA)

1969

Droites North Face (solo)
Marmolata di Rocca South Face (solo)
Civetta ("Philipp Flamm", solo)

1970

Nanga Parbat (8125m, Rupal face, FA, 3rd EA)

1971

Expeditions to Nepal, Pakistan, Persia East Africa and New Guinea

1972

Manaslu (8156m, South Face, 3rd EA)
Noshaq (7492m, in Hindu Kush)

1973

Pelmo Northwest Face (FA)
Marmolata West Pillar (FA)
Furchetta West Face (FA)

1974

Eiger north face (in 10 hours)
Aconcagua (6959m, South face, FA)

1975

Lhotse (8,516m, South Face, failed)
Gasherbrum I Northwest Face (FA in alpine style, 2nd EA)

1976

McKinley (6193m)
"Wall of the Midnight Sun" (FA)

1977

Dhaulagiri (8167m, failed)

1978

Mount Everest (8850m, FA without supplemental oxygen, 15th EA)
Nanga Parbat (8125m, Damir face, first solo ascent of an 8000m peak)
Kilimanjaro (5963m, Breach Wall, FA)

1979

K2 (8611m, first ascent in alpine style, 4th EA)
Ama Dablam (rescue operation)

1980

Mount Everest north side (8850m, first and only true solo ascent)

1981

Shisha Pangma (8012m, 5th EA)
Chamlang North Face (7,317m, FA)

1982

Kangchenjunga north face (8598m, FA, 10th EA)
Gasherbrum II (8035m, 8th EA)
Broad Peak (8048m, 6th EA)
Cho Oyo (8,222m, attempt in winter)

1983

Cho Oyo (8,222m, alpine style, 4th EA)

1984

Gasherbrum I and II (first traverse between two 8,000 meter mountains)

1985

Annapurna Northwest Face (8,091m, FA, 12th EA)
Dhaulagiri Northeast Edge (8,167m, alpine style, 20th EA)

1986

Makalu (8,485m, failed in winter)
Makalu (8,485m, 17th EA)
Lhotse (8,511m, 8th EA)
Mount Vinson (4,897m, Antarctica)

1987

Journeys to Bhutan and the Pamirs

1988

Yeti-Tibet-expedition

1989

Lhotse (8,511m, South Face attempt)

1990

Antarctica (First traverse on foot, via the South Pole 2,800km in 92 days)

1991

Traversed Bhutan (east to west)
Hike in South Tyrol (800km)

1992

Chimborazo
Crossed the Takla Makan desert (south to north)

1993

Journey to the Dolpo, Mustang and Manang areas in Nepal
Traverse of Greenland (from southeast to northwest, 2,200km)

1994

Himalayan environmental trek to Gangotri in India
Shivling (6,543m)
Ruwenzori (5,119m, Uganda)

1995

Attempt to traverse the Arctic (Siberia to Canada)
Belucha (4,506m, Altai, Siberia)

1996

Journey through East Tibet

1997

Journey to Kham (eastern Tibet)
Karakorum-expedition
Documentary on the Ol Doinyo Lengai in Africa

1998

Journey to the Altai Mountains (Mongolia)
Journey to Puna de Atacama (Andes)

1999

Documentary on San Francisco Peaks, USA

2000

South Georgia (traverse following in Shackletons footsteps)
Nanga Partbat (8,125m, attempt to climb a new route)

2002

Cotopaxi (Andes)

2004

Crossed the Gobi desert.



* FA = First Ascent
* FWA = First Winter Ascent
* EA = Ever Ascent

The Murder of the Impossible

Reinhold Messner

 

 

What have I personally got against "direttissimas"? Nothing at all; in fact I think that the "falling drop of water" route is one of the most logical things that exists. Of course it always existed - so long as the mountain permits it. But sometimes the line of weakness wanders to the left or the right of this line; and the we see climbers - those on the first ascent , I mean - going straight on up as if it weren't so, striking in bolts of course. Why do they go that way? "For the sake of freedom," they say; but they don't realize that they are slaves of the plumbline.

 



 

They have a horror of deviations. "In the face of difficulties, logic commands one not to avoid them, but to overcome them," declares Paul Claudel. And that's what the 'direttissma' protagonists say, too, knowing from the start that the equipment they have will get them over any obstacle. They are therefore talking about problems which no longer exist. Could the mountain stop them with unexpected difficulties? They smile: those times are long past! The impossible in mountaineering has been eliminated, murdered by the direttissima.

 



 

Yet direttissimas would not in themselves be so bad were it not for the fact that the spirit of that guides them has infiltrated the entire field of climbing. Take a climber o a rock face, iron rungs beneath his feet and all around him only yellow, overhanging rock. Already tired, he bores another hole above the last peg. He won't give up. Stubbornly, bolt by bolt, he goes on. His way, and none other, must be forced up the face.

 



 

Expansion bolts are taken for granted nowadays; they are kept to hand just in case some difficulty cannot be overcome by ordinary methods. Today's climber doesn't want to cut himself off from the possibility of retreat: he carries his courage in his rucksack, in the form of bolts and equipment. Rock faces are no longer overcome by climbing skill, but are humbled, pitch by pitch, by methodical manual labor; what  isn't done today will be done tomorrow. Free-climbing routes are dangerous, so the are protected by pegs. Ambitions are no longer build on skill, but on equipment and the length of time available. The decisive factor isn't courage, but technique; an ascent may take days and days, and the pegs and bolts counted in the hundreds. Retreat has become dishonorable, because everyone knows

now that a combination of bolts and singlemindedness will get you up anything, even the most repulsive-looking direttissima.


 

 

 

Times change, and with them concepts and values. Faith in equipment has replaced faith in oneself; a team is admired for the number of bivouacs it makes, while the courage of those who still climb "free" is derided as a manifestation of lack of conscientiousness.

 



 

Who has polluted the pure spring of mountaineering?




 

The innovators perhaps wanted only to get closer to the limits of possibility. Today, however, every single limit has vanished, been erased. In principle, it didn't seem to be a serious matter, but ten years have sufficed to eliminate the word 'impossible' from the mountaineering vocabulary.

 



 

Progress? Today, ten years from the start of it all, there are a lot of people who don't care where they put bolts, whether on new routes or on classic ones. People are drilling more and more and climbing less and less.



 

 

"Impossible": it doesn't exist anymore. The dragon is dead, poisoned, and the hero Siegfried is unemployed. Not anyone can work on a rock face, using tools to bend it to his own idea of possibility.

 



 

Some people foresaw this a while ago, but they went on drilling, both on direttissimas and on other climbs, until the lost the taste for climbing: why dare, why gamble, when you can proceed in perfect safety? And so they become the prophets of the direttissima: "Don't waste your time on classic routes - learn to drill, learn to use your equipment. Be cunning: If you want to be successful, use every means you can get round the mountain. The era of direttissima has barely begun: every peak awaits its plumbline route. There's no rush, for a mountain can't run away - nor can it defend itself."




 

"Done the direttissima yet? And the super diretissima?" These are the criteria by which mountaineering prowess is measured nowadays. And so the young men go off, crawl up the ladder of bolts, and then ask the next ones: "done the direttissima yet?"

 



 

Anyone who doesn't play ball is laughed at for daring take a stand against current opinion. The plumbline generation has already consolidated itself and has thoughtlessly killed the ideal of the impossible. Anyone who doesn't oppose this makes himself an accomplice of the murderers. When future mountaineers open their eyes and realize what has happened, it will be too late: the impossible (and with it, risk) will be buried, rotted away, and forgotten forever.

 



 

All is not yet lost, however, although 'they' are returning the attack; and even if it's not always the same people, it'll be other people similar to them. Long before they attack, they'll make a great noise, and once again any warning will be useless. They'll be ambitious and they'll have long holidays - and some new 'last great problem' will be resolved. They'll leave more photographs at the hut, as historical documents, showing a dead straight line of dots running from the base to summit - and on the face itself, will once again inform us that "Man has achieved the impossible."

 



 

If people have already been driven to the idea of establishing a set of rules of conduct, it means that the position is serious; but we young people don't want a mountaineering code. On the contrary, "up there we want to find long, hard days, days when we don't know in the morning what the evening will bring". But for how much longer will we be able to have this?

 



 

I'm worried about that dead dragon: we should do something before the impossible is finally interred. We have hurled ourselves, in a fury of pegs and bolts, on increasingly savage rock faces: the next generation will have to know how to free itself from all these unnecessary trappings. We have learned from the plumbline routes; our successors will once again have to reach the summits by other routes. It's time we repaid our debts and searched again for the limits of possibility - for we must have such limits if we are going to use the virtue of courage to approach them. And we must reach them. Where else will be able to find refuge in our flight from the oppression of everyday humdrum routine? In the Himalaya? In the Andes? Yes certainly if we can get there; but for most of us there'll only be these old Alps.

 



 

So let's save the dragon; and in the future let's follow the road that past climbers marked out. I'm convinced it's still the right one.

 



 

Put on your boots and get going. If you've got a companion, take a rope with you and a couple of pitons for your belays, but nothing else. I'm already on my way, ready for anything - even for retreat, if I meet the impossible. I'm not going to be killing any dragons, but if anyone wants to come with me, we'll go to the top together on the routes we can do without branding ourselves murderers.


 

- Mountain #15, 1971

                               

                       

 


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