| Tibets
Secret Mountain - Sepu Kangri
Chris
Bonington captures the highlights of a climbing career that
started at the age of sixteen with his first trip to a wintry
Snowdonia, through his development as a rock climber in the
early 'fifties, on to the Alps with forays on the North Wall
of the Eiger and the first ascent of the Central Pillar of
Freney and finally an expedition career that spans the world's
greatest ranges:
First
ascents in the 'sixties, of Annapurna II and the huge South
Face of Nuptse, third peak of Everest, at a time when Nepal
was untouched by tourism and the mountains were barely explored.
Breaking onto new ground on the South Face of Annapurna and
the South West Face of Everest, the great challenges of the
early 'seventies with large, carefully planned expeditions.
Getting
back to fundamental climbing adventure with first ascents
of the Ogre, when Doug Scott broke both his legs on the first
abseil from the summit, of Kongur in Sinkiang, third highest
unclimbed mountain in the world at that time, tackled alpine-style
by a four man team, and Shivling West as a two man alpine-style
push.
Tragedy
on the North-East Ridge of Everest. Pushing to the limit with
a team of four, when Peter Boardman and Joe Tasker were lost
high on the Pinnacles.
Everest
at last in 1985 at the age of fifty with a Norwegian team.
A
host of recent adventures to unclimbed peaks in the few comparitively
unexplored mountain ranges of the world - Menlungtse in Tibet,
by sail to the ice girt East Coast of Greenland, unclimbed
peaks in the Indian and Nepalese Himalaya.
In
delivering an action-packed story he also gives a perspective
to a long and exciting climbing career, looking at all its
aspects, inquiring into the why and the how of mountaineering
- the risks, the joys, the beauty, the hardships and the cruel
toll of death, focusing on some of the great climbers of our
time - Hamish MacInnes, Don Whillans, Joe Brown, John Harlin,
Tom Patey, Dougal Haston, Doug Scott, Peter Boardman, Joe
Tasker, Al Rouse and many other outstanding mountaineers at
home and abroad.
He
also looks at the present and future of mountain adventure
around the world, the challenges and ethics that are evolving
in the sport, from the growth of competition climbing to the
increasingly extreme routes being made on the world's highest
peaks.
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