Expedition Trip Report :: Meru , Himalaya

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HighTraverse

Trad climber
Bay Area
Oct 9, 2011 - 07:38pm PT
Well done Conrad and crew! Can't wait for the TR.
crřtch

climber
Oct 9, 2011 - 09:54pm PT
Woot! Contgratulations.
Bldrjac

Ice climber
Boulder
Oct 9, 2011 - 11:44pm PT
Conrad,

Congrats to you and everyone else involved. A very, very proud ascent .

I'm sure Mugs is smiling down upon you!

Jack
Mungeclimber

Trad climber
sorry, just posting out loud.
Oct 9, 2011 - 11:52pm PT
Nice Conrad. Long time projects can be the most rewarding.


I would attribute the success to the fine bouldering comps in Montana they have, but maybe that's just me. :)
deuce4

climber
Hobart, Australia
Oct 9, 2011 - 11:56pm PT
Hearty congratulations, Conrad. I'm looking forward to hearing the story.

Inspiring perseverance!

cheers
WBraun

climber
Oct 9, 2011 - 11:58pm PT
Yeah jack

Muggs had the photo of Meru stashed on him.

We're sitting at on the Post Office steps and he pulls it out to show me like it's the mos beautiful woman he's ever seen and is in love.

Thanks for being YOU Conrad ......
Conrad

climber
Topic Author's Reply - Oct 10, 2011 - 06:27am PT
Thanks Jack, John and Werner. Yeah, it was Mugs' dream.
Conrad

climber
Topic Author's Reply - Oct 13, 2011 - 05:24pm PT
http://www.neverstopexploring.com/blog/2011/10/meru-expedition-2011-dispatch-5.html


Nice Images.

Thanks Jimmy.
Gene

climber
Oct 13, 2011 - 05:36pm PT
Well done, Lads!!!!
golsen

Social climber
kennewick, wa
Oct 13, 2011 - 05:48pm PT
Congratulations Conrad!

You have come so far since those sunny days in the Wasatch. I have enjoyed reading of your travels and adventures and wish you many more.

Gary Olsen
hb81

climber
Oct 13, 2011 - 06:54pm PT
Beefy anchors slowly waned through the day and night until eventually we were all anchoring in and rapping off single pieces.

Blue camalots? :))

krahmes

Social climber
Stumptown
Oct 14, 2011 - 11:40am PT
Low point: Falling through the portaledge when it snapped in half on the fourth day at 19,000+ ft.

Looking forward to hearing and seeing more, hopefully following the previous template with Ozturk’s art work as a backdrop merged with the film and photos. You guys are amazing.
FinnMaCoul

Trad climber
Green Mountains, Vermont
Oct 14, 2011 - 12:12pm PT
Proud send. Your pictures and words are amazing.
KyleO

Gym climber
Calgary, AB
Nov 4, 2011 - 01:53pm PT
From Alpinist:
http://www.alpinist.com/doc/web11f/newswire-meru-sharks-fin-anker-chin-ozturk

American climbers Conrad Anker, Jimmy Chin and Renan Ozturk climbed Meru Central (6310m) via the Shark's Fin in a twelve-day push. They summited on October 2 to become the first team to complete this highly sought-after objective. The Shark's Fin has repelled many experienced alpinists, with attempts on this line numbering in the dozens. This was Anker's third attempt to establish a route up the Fin, and the second attempt for both Chin and Ozturk. Over the years, the trio has accumulated thirty-plus days on this prow.

Several would-be ascents of the Shark's Fin resulted in new routes on Meru Central. After an initial attempt on the Fin in spring of 2001, Valeri Babanov returned that autumn to establish Shangri La (ED 5.9/5.10 A1/A2 M5 75 degrees) to the right of the Shark's Fin line in a solo first ascent of the mountain that earned him a Piolet d'Or.

A light-and-fast attempt on the Shark's Fin was attempted by Anker, Doug Chabot and Bruce Miller in 2003. This team was turned away two-thirds of the way up the prow by deep, unconsolidated snow and a lack of proper gear for the upper wall. The following year the Japanese team of Hiroyoshi Manome, Yasushi Okada, Makoto Kuroda and Yasuhiro Hanatani set a new highpoint on the Fin at 6100m, but descended after Hanatani broke both legs.

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It was initially reported that Czechs Marek Holecek and Jan Kreisinger completed the second ascent of Meru Central in November 2006, but it was quickly discovered that the same Japanese team that attempted the Shark's Fin in 2004 had already achieved the second ascent of the peak by a variation of Babanov's route. A few days after the Japanese summited, the Czechs ticked the third ascent after aborting an attempt on the Shark's Fin and climbing instead to the right of the direct line, in yet another variation on Babanov's route.

Anker made his second attempt on the prow with Chin and Ozturk in 2008. The team was delayed on the climb for several days during a storm that dropped six feet of snow and, according to Chin, shut down the entire Himalaya. When the storm relented, they progressed beyond the highpoint of Anker's 2003 attempt. However, the team had severely rationed their ten-day supply of food during the storm; on their nineteenth day on the climb the team stopped about 150 meters below the summit. In a video dispatch posted after the team's return, Chin said, "Maybe this wasn't meant to be climbed ... I'm not coming back."


Renan Ozturk at the final camp before the summit push on the Shark's Fin. Ozturk and his partners have spent more than thirty days on the climb over the years. [Photo] Jimmy Chin
The trio were happy to give beta on their 2008 route to other teams aspiring to be the first to climb Meru via the Shark's fin. The following year the Slovenians Silvo Karo, Marko Lukic and Andrej Grmovsek attempted the same route in alpine style, hoping that a light-and-fast attempt over six days would circumvent some of the difficulties that the American team encountered in 2008. The unsettled weather prevented the Slovenians from acclimatizing as planned on other routes first; they decided to make the attempt nonetheless. After completing the two-day approach, a 700m snow slope and the rock ramp that leads to the headwall, the team turned around, citing a lack of proper gear, poor acclimatization and their alpine-style approach as mistakes for an attempt on the Shark's Fin.

Of Silvo Karo's team's attempt, Chin said, "We were all hoping he would get it done. But I thought, if he doesn't get it, maybe I'll go back and try it. And when he didn't get it, Conrad and I started talking a little bit about it again. It's such an iconic, legendary route. Nobody's been able to do it. We got so close in 2008; and having that knowledge of the route, knowing all the little things we would've done differently, it's hard not to go back and throw ourselves at it again."

This September Anker, Chin and Ozturk pushed through the bottom part of the route in a speedy six days. After climbing, hauling and jugging to the base of the overhanging Indian Ocean Wall, the team climbed steep aid sections with difficulties up to A4. These sections gave way to the Crystal Pitch, an overhanging and extremely exposed prow that they aided. A final section of mixed and aid climbing brought the team to the summit of Meru on October 2.

Anker and Chin were both quick to cite the good weather as a major factor in their success. Though temperatures rarely rose above minus twenty during the day, the clear skies allowed the team to cover a distance in a single day that took them six days during their last attempt. According to Chin, a unique challenge of this route is the range of equipment it requires. The team brought equipment for technical and alpine ice and rock in addition to a big-wall kit, rather than attempting the route alpine-style like the many teams before them.

"Tons of teams have tried the route alpine style. But you just can't. You have to go aid climbing. It's modern A4 up there," Chin said. "Hauling a big-wall kit through the lower alpine route complicates things right off the deck, which is part of what makes this route so logistically challenging."


Jimmy Chin jugs the upper wall of Shark's Fin. "Tons of teams have tried the route in alpine style. But you just can't. You have to go aid climbing. It's modern A4 up there," Chin said. [Photo] Jimmy Chin collection
Cumulatively, the three climbers have spent more than thirty days on the Shark's Fin. Their multiple attempts through bad weather, severely rationed supplies and a broken portaledge make this final ascent "one of the most meaningful we have ever experienced," Ozturk said. Their shared experience on the route in 2008 was an crucial factor this year; Chin said that going back with the same team was important to all of them, especially after Ozturk's ski accident in March of this year, which left him with severe cranial and spinal injuries.

"For Renan to come back and do this route was a really big deal," Chin said. "We could've brought someone else on, but it was important for us to have him." Anker agreed; he said they could have reduced their time on the climb by three days if they had climbed in a two-man team, but the experience of returning with the same trio was an important aspect of the expedition.

For Anker, this third attempt on the Shark's Fin was also a remembrance. "For me it was a tribute to Mugs [Stump]. We had talked about the Shark's Fin, and I had that unfinished business going back to a partner." Anker also praised his wife, Jennifer, and their sons for their support of the trip. "I think for the boys, the risk associated with this trip was a little bit different than it was for Jenny. It was also during the post-monsoon season, and twelve years since Alex passed away. The experience was pretty stressful for her." Alex Lowe, Anker's climbing partner and Jenny Lowe-Anker's first husband, was killed in a post-monsoon-season avalanche on Shisha Pangma in October of 1999.

The three climbers are eager to see others try their route. When asked if he had advice for climbers attempting the second ascent, Chin laughed, "They should call me." He and Anker agree that now that the route is in place, the second ascent could happen soon—but perhaps only with the right conditions. "I can't stress enough the importance that the weather played during our trip," Anker said. "We got incredibly lucky."
deuce4

climber
Hobart, Australia
Nov 4, 2011 - 02:16pm PT
pretty awesome ascent.

kudos!
Conrad

climber
Topic Author's Reply - Nov 4, 2011 - 06:06pm PT


This picture is from 2008. Jimmy snapped the picture early in the morning as I was leading the Montana ice pitch. The bonus of revisiting the climb was being able to do the pitches once again. This year it sported a little more ice.

Scott - The wall to the right was climbed mid monsoon by a Korean team in 2008. The BW image up thread has their ledge marked with a lighten bolt. While certainly a test of perseverance and fortitude, it was done kinda heavy. They fixed the whole route and left all their ropes in place. Some of the stuff was still dangling in the wind three years later. Their first camp was a dismal mess. Oh well.


Conrad

climber
Topic Author's Reply - Nov 4, 2011 - 06:11pm PT
Conrad

climber
Topic Author's Reply - Nov 4, 2011 - 06:14pm PT
Studly

Trad climber
WA
Nov 4, 2011 - 06:21pm PT
INFRICKINGCREDIBLE!!!!
survival

Big Wall climber
A Token of My Extreme
Nov 4, 2011 - 08:10pm PT
Wow, so cool, er...cold, and high, and badass.

Congratulations gents!

edejom or whatever. North face didn't climb the damn thing for them.

If you were able to do such a route and had some support from the ATM, you surely would've taken it.
Messages 66 - 85 of total 92 in this topic << First  |  < Previous  |  Show All  |  Next >  |  Last >>
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