just wow.. thats one that will stick with you forever. thanx
just wow.. thats one that will stick with you forever. thanx
Sweet write up and probably once in a decade conditions.
Haha, no worries. I was the only one of the two who wore a harness, and it was more just for the ease of clipping stuff to it and just incase stuff went really wrong and we'd need a heli evac or I'd get on ice and need an ice screw anchor. No rope was taken. I don't think I've ever seen a crevasse on the west face actually.
nice snow.... sometimes you have steep stuff and nice pow.
Sweet! And well earned...
Well played, sir. Well played.
Nice line, great photos, good write up.
Enjoyed it from the comfort & safety of my cubical.
TGR needs more of this.
You are The Man! That is pretty impressive.
I love that part of the world.
Really impressive.
Nicely done. WOW!!!
rad stoke and sweet turns.
Awesome and double plus bonus for me having just watched The Eiger Sanction last night. I saw some great establishing shots of the West face and it made me wonder about skiing it. Waiting three years shows how patience is a key mountaineering skill.
But I do wonder if you are confusing acclimatization with conditioning. After all, ~4000 meters is still pretty high and enough to cause problems, especially coming from 400 meters.
http://www.altitudemedicine.org/inde...ll-at-altitudeQuote:
Myth #3 - Physical fitness protects against altitude sickness.
Physical fitness offers no protection from altitude illness. In fact, many young fit athletes drive themselves too hard at altitude prior to acclimatizing thinking they can push through the discomfort. They ignore signs of altitude illness thinking it can't affect them because they are fit and healthy. Everyone, regardless of fitness, is susceptible to AMS.
That's the real deal Stoke!
Pretty sick!
Just when you think TGR is a total waste of time, something like this shows up. Thanks for sharing this great TR.
w000t!! Epic effort, way to get after a stunning line!!!!
I wear a harness so my guide or the PGHM can winch me (or my carcass) out of a crevasse. The ice axe on my pack is for preservation of personal space in the lift line.
Thanks for posting!
Damn, nice work. I've wanted to make turns on that mountain since I was about 12. Someday I'll ski it and when I do I hope to have even half as good of conditions as you did. I'm jealous.
Chapeau!
Daaaamn...Well done!
the scale of big mountains blows me away every time... when you see a single line down a big face it's hard to wrap your head around the fact that lines are so long.. without know it could just as easily be a 500m face
awesome job, I want to get on that
yay!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Missed this.
Fantastic.
Envious.