REINHOLD MESSNER AND
MOUNT EVEREST
by Per Jerberyd ©
1997 - 2002 |
For many mountaineers,
Reinhold Messners solo climb of Mount Everest in 1980
is unbeatable. This was truly an expedition to the ultimate!
But Reinhold's Mount Everest odyssey started two years
earlier when he and Peter Habeler stated they would
attempt the worlds highest mountain without using supplemental
oxygen...
MOUNT EVEREST
WITHOUT OXYGENE 1978
After climbing Hidden Peak
in Alpine style, Reinhold wanted to take a step further.
Reinhold's own words about his Everest ventures: "To
go a step further than your predecessors in mountaineering
is a kind of quantum leap. How often I have pushed against
the limit - that imaginary limit that for the moment
is considered to mark the edge of the possible".
This quantum leap was to try climbing Mount Everest
by "fair means", without using supplemental
oxygen. When "cheating" by using
supplemental oxygen, the mountains actual height is
lowered up to 2,000 meters, climbing Everest would then
have a height of about 7,000 meters. Not really easy,
but a quantum difference from 8,850 meters!
Again, Peter Habeler was invited by Reinhold to follow
on his expedition. They had performed well together
on Hidden Peak and Peter was sharing Reinhold's idea
of "fair means". Once again pundits at home
said that Reinhold Messner was crazy and the mission
impossible. They would probably die, perhaps reach the
summit, but definitely die on the way down - and if
surviving, the thin air would leave them with serious
brain damage. This criticism even came from other well-known
high altitude climbers. Of course all talk about it
being impossible had its effect on both Peter and Reinhold.
Still, they where ready for a serious try.
Spring 1978. Peter and Reinhold where by now in place
below Mount Everest. They where there as an independent
part of an Austrian expedition led by Wolfgang Nairz.
The originally plan to climb the South Pillar was abandoned
due to extreme steepness and very bad ice conditions.
Instead the normal route was chosen. At the end of April,
Reinhold was already at the South Col with two Sherpas,
Ang Dorje and Mingma. They had just established fixed
ropes on the final stage of the Lhoste wall. Peter Habeler
had felt bad the previous days and where in Base Camp.
Reinhold now played with the thought to go for the summit
alone. Then, a fierce blizzard started to blow over
their South Col camp. Up there, at 8,000 meters, they
where trapped for two days and nights.
Reinhold radioed to base camp who where very worried
about their situation: "Don't worry. I'm not frightened;
we'll come through it somehow. Surviving is my great
art!" And they of course survived after that Reinhold
having nursed the two Sherpas who had been completely
apathetic; they could do nothing and was sure to die.
In early May, both Peter and Reinhold was ready for
the final push from the South Col. Peter was unsure
about dong the climb at all, and even thought about
using supplemental oxygen. Finally he had said to Reinhold,
Lets do it, I'll follow you anywhere! The idea was to
go straight up from South Col to the summit and back.
The summit was reached in record time of eight hours.
Reinhold regularly stopped and filmed on the way up.
On the summit: "We had focused for our attention
for so long on getting here, we where for a while incapable
of doing anything more."
The descent was done separately; Peter Habeler hurried
on, sliding on his way down on his pants. He wanted
to get down as fast as possible to avoid brain damage
due to the low air pressure. Reinhold stayed longer
at the summit to film, take pictures and talk into his
tape recorder. He wanted to bring exactly his memories
and thoughts intact just from the time at the summit
back down. By the time Reinhold reached the South Col,
his eyes where in a terribly pain. All filming has been
done without protective glasses. He had now developed
snow-blindness and was in agony, only with tears in
his eyes could he bear it. The tears took away some
of the pain. The next day the wind was stormy, going
down was a drama for Reinhold. Peter was ahead and waited
in Camp III. From there, Peter went down ahead a second
time, he had sprained his ankle while sliding down and
was now also in need of help. Two wounded but proud
men stumbled into Camp II. They had now proved that
Mount Everest was possible to climb without supplemental
oxygen, no matter what other people had said about their
venture.
This was their last climb of partnership. During the
expedition they had cooped well together, but afterwards
in the media hysteria, Reinhold challenged Peters version
of the events during the climb, it made him more unpopular
than ever before. In year 2000, Peter Habeler returned
to Everest to try a second oxygenless ascent. He was
going strong as ever before until he got liquids in
his lungs. He sadly had to abandon the expedition.
EVEREST SOLO 1980
First Everest without supplemental oxygen, now solo
- during the monsoon season! Reinhold Messner was again
ready to try another unknown step in Himalayan mountaineering
history. This time the climb was done from Tibet in
the North, the same way that had been tried by George
Mallory a long time ago. In July 1980 Reinhold made
a first try. The intention was to first get to the North
Col and acclimatise. The attempt was successful, but
it also showed how dangerous this route is in deep monsoon
snow. Deep snow is a part of the
monsoon and Reinhold realized that he would need a few
days of good weather to succeed. His only partner on
this trip was Nena Holguin and a few porters.
In August he was ready for the summit attempt. The first
day, Reinhold gained a lot of height, but not enough
to finish the climb in two days as planned. Further
on, it was impossible to follow the original Mallory
route. Instead he had to traverse right and took a new
bold line he previously had observed from Base Camp.
Right under the North Col, Reinhold had taken a bad
8-meter fall into a crevasse, but was lucky not to get
injured and managed to climb out: "with a bit of
luck and skill I was able to get myself out. I immediately
put it out of my mind." The last way to the summit
was a battle against his own body screaming for going
down, crawling on his knees and hands he finally made
it to the top! "I have never in my whole life been
so tired as on the summit of Mount Everest that day.
I just sat there, oblivious to everything."
During the descent, a lot of loose snow made Reinhold
fall and slide down more than climbing: "It was
not at all that dangerous, because I fell like a cat.
Luckily I have good-co-ordination and am able to dodge
stone and crevasses quite neatly." At the foot
of the mountain he collapsed. Again he had succeeded
and survived. This was the first and probably only solo
climb of Mount Everest ever and forever. Today the mountain
is overcrowded and it's not likely that you will be
alone on your route. Reinhold Messner was actually totally
alone on the whole mountain during the whole climb.

"Reinhold Messner's
unique success in his mountaineering career is epitomised
in what is probably his finest achievement of all -
his solo ascent of Everest."

More about Reinhold Messner
» Reinhold
Messner - mainpage
» Reinhold
Messner - short biography
» Reinhold
Messner - Nanga Parbat 1970 and 1978
» Reinhold
Messner - the Manaslu tragedy
» Reinhold
Messner & Peter Habeler - Hidden Peak in alpine
style
» Reinhold
Messner & Hans Kammerlander - traversing the Gasherbrums
Other mountaineering stories
» Tenzing
and his moment on the summit of the world
» K2
climbing history. From the first try to the Italian
success in 1954
» Hermann
Buhl and the first ascent of Nanga Parbat
» The
first ascent of Mont Blanc anno 1786
» A
tale from Lofoten, experienced and written by Per
Jerberyd
Books about Mount Everest
»
The
Climb: Tragic Ambitions on Everest
» Ghosts
of Everest
» Everest
: A Mountaineering History
» Climbing
Everest: A Meditation on Mountaineering
» Climbing
High : A Woman's Account of Surviving the Everest
Tragedy
» Everest
: Alone at the Summit
» Everest
: Expedition to the Ultimate
» Everest
: Mountain Without Mercy
» Everest
: The Struggle to Reach the Top of the world
» Everest
: The Ultimate Hump
» Everest
: The West Ridge
» Hall
& Ball : Kiwi Mountaineers from Mount Cook to
Everest
» High
: Stories of Survival from Everest...
» Into
Thin Air Pocket
» Into
Thin Air
» Life
and Death on Mt. Everest
» The
Madman of Mount Everest
» Mount
Everest National Park
» The
Mystery of Mallory & Irvine
» The
Other Side of Everest
» The
Second Death of George Mallory
» The
Ascent of Everest
» Ballooning
over Everest
» Conquerors
of Everest
» National
Geographic Maps : Mount Everest 23 1/2 X 38
Videos about Mount Everest
» Everest
unmasked
» Above
All Else - The Everest Dream (VHS)
» Above
All Else - The Everset Dream (DVD)
» Mt.
Everest: The Fatal Climb (VHS)
» Everest
- Climb for Hope (VHS)
» Mount
Everest-Summit of Dreams (VHS)
» IMAX
- Everest (DVD)
» IMAX
- Everest (VHS)
» Nova
- Everest: The Death Zone (DVD)
» Nova
- Lost on Everest (VHS)
» Nova
- Everest: The Mystery of Mallory and Irvine (VHS)
» Everest
Gift Boxed Set (DVD)
» Into
the Thin Air of Everest, Box Set (VHS)
» National
Geographic's Surviving Everest (DVD)
» National
Geographic's Surviving Everest (VHS)
» Everest:
The Death Zone (VHS)
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