Wild #187

Page 32

Columns: OUTSIDE WITH TIM [TIM MACARTNEY-SNAPE]

KEEPING STANDARDS HIGH We should continue to laud those adventurers who strive to overcome the greatest challenges.

I

n the post-monsoon season of 2021, three Ukranian climbers (Mikhail Fomin, Nikita Balabanov and Viacheslav Polezhaiko) embarked on an attempt of one of the most sought-after big lines in the Himalaya: the complex 3000m southeast ridge of Annapurna III. Leaving their remote base camp, they headed up the mountain with twelve days’ food and fuel, carried in packs weighing up to 24kg. After a tenacious struggle over eighteen days, they amazingly succeeded in getting up and down intact and with no injuries. It was undoubtedly one of the greatest alpine-style climbs ever done, one that I hold in the highest regard. Yet despite being short-listed for the annual Piolet d’Or—mountaineering’s equivalent of an Olympic gold medal—the award was not given to them. In essence, the reason was because the trio had used a helicopter to get into and out from the mountain. I understood their reasons for skipping the problematic walk in, but lamented the compromise with them at the time, and I agree with the Piolet D’Or decision. Though the approach to that southern side of Annapurna III is one of the most difficult in the Himalaya, it isn’t impossible. When we climbed the nearby south ridge of Annapurna II in 1983 (see Wild Issue #12), the approach was probably just as hazardous and problematic. But had helicopters been an option back then, I wouldn’t have taken it. To me, the attraction of the climb lay in its challenges to be overcome, and in the curiosity, uncertainty, and excitement of confronting a physical unknown, and the difficulty of

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the approach was as much a part of that as the vertical upper part of the ascent. Interestingly, looking back on that experience, the approach and climb below the snowline was just as memorable, if not more so, as the eventful ascent above it. Struggling through the monsoon-drenched temperate rainforest infested with leeches and stinging nettles, and weaving an intricate route through the vertical botanical garden that clung to the hillsides, it felt like we were in a lost

LOWERING ANY STANDARD AXIOMATICALLY LEADS TO MEDIOCRITY. MEDIOCRITY

IS THE ANATHEMA OF ADVENTURE.”

world—a feeling that’s increasingly rare today, and one that would be instantly shattered by the presence of a helicopter. Of course, we could not and would not have done it without the stoic help of the villagers from lower down. Getting to know them gave us a rich, added level of connection to that amazing part of the world that I would hate to have missed out on. Recently, Norwegian Kristin Harila was awarded the 2022 European Adventurer of the Year Award for her fully guided climbs of all but two of the 8000m peaks in record time, which made use of helicopter access, fixed ropes and supplementary oxygen—a style Reinhold Messner famously said was alpine tourism, not alpinism. There’s no

doubt it was an incredible physical and logistical achievement, and something to be personally proud of, but was it worthy of being thus hailed, especially since a previous recipient, Austrian Gerlinde Kaltenbrunner, climbed all fourteen 8000-ers without oxygen on unguided expeditions? It seems that compromising purism in style might be creeping into acceptance, and I worry that the long-term consequences of this tendency in adventures can only be negative. Taking out any major obstacle in the complex succession of problems that comprise an expedition worth undertaking increases the chance of success, but it also diminishes the challenge. In the times we live in, most adventures are somewhat contrived and are just a game, but games have rules or conventions to keep them interesting and challenging. Take out the challenges, and they become boring to the point where those participating end up, in effect, short-changing themselves. Of course, if their activities are not negatively impacting others or the environment, everyone is entitled to the freedom of setting their own rules in adventure. But when it comes to setting a standard, as award programs inherently do, I think it’s very important to uphold the highest standards, especially now that professionalism and sponsorship are so prevalent and tied up with achievement. Lowering any standard axiomatically leads to mediocrity. Mediocrity is the anathema of adventure; if there isn’t a challenging element to an undertaking, then it isn’t adventure. After all, aren’t the greatest dreams the ones that strive for the seemingly impossible?


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SUPPORT OUR SUPPORTERS

1min
pages 142-146

SUPPORT OUR SUPPORTERS

5min
pages 140-141

ZONEKNIT

1min
page 139

DOUBLE EMBER 1

2min
pages 138-139

HORNET ELITE OSMO

6min
pages 136-138

THE WALK IN SECTIONS

4min
pages 134-135

LOWER COLO GORGE LOOP

2min
pages 132-133

LOWER COLO GORGE LOOP

3min
pages 130-131

SIERRA NEVADA

14min
pages 122-129

WA’S CORAL COAST

4min
pages 120-122

YOU DON’T KNOW WHAT YOU DON’T KNOW

13min
pages 112-119

Whom Shall I Send?

11min
pages 106-111

KEEPING COMPANY WITH THE VIKING

13min
pages 98-105

CHASING THE MOUNTAIN LIGHT

3min
pages 90-93, 95-97

THE TASMANIAN WILDERNESS WORLD HERITAGE AREA TURNS 40

12min
pages 82-88

ANATOMY OF A SEARCH

15min
pages 74-80

GIITU*, SAREK

12min
pages 64-72

The Inauguration

13min
pages 56-62

OUTBACK MIKE

13min
pages 50-55

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page 48

A HOME WOODY

3min
pages 46-47

WELCOME TO THE PYROCENE

16min
pages 40-44

GREEN PAGES

2min
page 38

GARDENS OF STONE

1min
pages 36-37

A LIFE FULLY LIVED

3min
pages 34-35

KEEPING STANDARDS HIGH

3min
page 32

RECOGNISING THE GOOD BITS

3min
page 30

WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE

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pages 20, 23, 25, 27, 29

THE BEAUTY OF SHADOWS

3min
pages 18-19

THE COVER SHOT

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page 15

CONTENTS

5min
pages 10-15
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