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SUMMARY This concludes our overview of the increasingly popular Miyar Valley with ascents on Ogre II, Trento Peak, Om Shanti, Points 6,036m and 5,617m - all more alpine than pure rocky peaks - and a partial new route on Tamadonog. There is also a correction concerning the information given about new routes on Toro and JAMES in last month's INFO. Just east of Miyar we cover a partial new route on Gangstang. We then turn to the Garhwal and attempts on Changabang and Kalanka (including the 2008 ascent of the North Face), exploration and three new peaks in the Kagbhusandi Valley, and finally an attempt on Kharchakund and a new route on Pt 6,465m, both in the Gangotri. PHOTODIAGRAMS These include: an annotated 360° panorama of the Miyar peaks; the North Face of Ogre II; Om Shanti; Trento Peak; Tamadonog; Gangstang from the north; Kalanka and Changabang from the north east as well as Kalanka from the south; Kharchakund from the north and east; and Pt 6,465m from the west. INDIA This report begins with the second part of our overview of the Miyar Valley and then continues with ascents in the Garhwal that largely took place during 2007. MIYAR VALLEY 2008 - PART TWO Part one of our overview of this increasingly popular alpine area in Lahaul covered the three northerly side valleys of the upper Miyar Valley; Jangpar, Dali and Chhudong. Part two covers the remaining, least explored and most southerly of the four valleys, where several ascents took place in 2008 Takdung Glacier The Takdung (formerly Nameless) Valley flows into the Miyar south of the standard Dali Got Base Camp and Castle Peak. It appears to be the least explored of the four tributary valleys close to the snout of the Miyar Glacier, and prior to 2008 the upper Takdung Glacier had most likely never been visited. Three members of the large Italian team led by Bruno Moretti Giampaolo Corona, Christian Gobbi and Merko Groff - decided to establish an advanced base on the glacier and attempt some of the higher virgin peaks. The North West Face of Ogre II (North Summit on left; South Summit to the right), showing the line of Ice on the Rocks (1,200m: TD+) to Col 5,630m and then part way up the North Ridge of Ogre II South Peak. BRUNO MORETTI COLLECTION www.mountain-equipment.co.uk APR 09 67 3 4 2 1 6 5 7 8 12 9 10 11 TG Above: A 360° panorama from the summit of Bruno Detassis Peak in the Miyar. (TG) Upper Takdung Glacier. (CG) Chhudong Glacier. (1) Om Shanti, (2) Nameless Tower, (3) Trento Peak, (4) Ogre III, (5) Ogre II North Summit, (6) Ogre II South Summit, (7) Ogre I, (8) Neverseen Tower, (9) Grandfather Enzo Peak, (10) Peak 5,700m, (11) Paola's Peak, (12) Mont Blanc, (13) Geruda Peak, (14) Double Peak, (15) Matterhorn, (16) Rachu Tangmu, (17) Menthosa, (18) Veneto, (19) Masala Peak, (20) Thunder Peak, (21) Three Peaks Mountain South East Summit, (22) Three Peaks Mountain Middle Summit, and (23) Three Peaks Mountain North West Summit. BRUNO MORETTI COLLECTION 26 21 23 22 24 25 29 27 Ogre II Giampaolo Corona during the first ascent of Ice on the Rocks (1,200m: TD+), North West Couloir of Col 5,630m on Ogre II. BRUNO MORETTI COLLECTION 68 APR 09 The middle section of the true left (south eastern) bank of the Takdung holds four great snow and ice peaks of 5,900m-6,000m. They were photographed from the Miyar Valley in 2002 by the Slovakian expedition and given names according to their similarity with famous peaks: Ogre III, Ogre II, Ogre I and Mont Blanc. Ogre II, in particular, is a fine double-summited mountain with an imposing North West Face. On the 16th September, Corona, Gobbi and Groff made the first ascent of the North West Couloir of the 5,630m col (N 33° 02’ 29.06”; E 76° 54’ 18.90” GPS) between North and South 28 Summits. The route was 1,200m in length and in the lower part had difficult gullies of 70° and two ice falls of 85°. The upper section, above a dangerous snowfield, featured a section of hard mixed terrain at UIAA V+ and 85°. The three Italians made a one-day ascent from their advanced base on the glacier, reaching the col at 5.30pm and naming their route Ice on the Rocks (TD+). From here they tried to reach the South Peak but retreated part way up the connecting ridge due to the lateness of the hour and risk of windslab avalanche. They returned to camp at 11pm after a gruelling 18-hour day. Afterwards, a 30 21 2 20 16 17 14 23 22 15 19 13 18 CG Below: A 360° panorama from the summit of Bruno Detassis Peak in the Miyar. (CG) Upper Chhudong Glacier. (21) Three Peaks Mountain South East Summit, (22) Three Peaks Mountain Middle Summit, (23) Three Peaks Mountain North West Summit. (24) Tawa I, (25) Tawa II, (26) Devil's Horns above Jangpar Glacier, (27) Tawa III, (28) Citta de Frascati Peak, (29) Tawa IV, (30) Tawa V, (31) Tawa VI, (32) Peaks in the Zanskar Range, (33) Tawa VII, (34) Unnamed, and (35) summit of Bruno Detassis Peak. BRUNO MORETTI COLLECTION 34 31 33 32 35 CG prolonged spell of very bad weather, which during one night put down 40cm of snow at base camp and wrecked the tents at a high camp in the Chhudong, prevented any further climbing. Trento Peak On the 9th September 2008, Corona, Gobbi and Groff made the first ascent of the elegant Trento Peak (6,046m GPS), which rises above the true left (east) bank of the glacier, opposite Lotus Peak and the Neverseen Tower. The co-ordinates of the peak were measured as N 33° 04’ 15.29”, E 76° 54’ 42.95”. After a difficult and complex glacial approach, the three climbed a prominent 800m snow couloir (55° at the bottom and generally a tiring ascent in deep snow) on the South East Face to reach the knife-edge West (or North West) Ridge at c5,800m. From here they moved onto the North Face and climbed this over steep mixed ground (80°) and ice-covered UIAA V rock slabs to reach the summit at 3.30pm. Just below the top Gobbi was windslab avalanched, fortunately without injury. The 1,000m route was graded TD+ and completed in a round trip of 16 hours from advanced base. Om Shanti Two days later, Corona and Groff reached the summit of the previously unnamed Om Shanti Peak (5,770m GPS: Mountain of Peace in Hindi: N 33° 04’ 42.45”, E 76° 54’ 21.66”), which lies to the west of Trento Peak but is separated from it by a fine unclimbed rocky summit of perhaps 5,900m. The two climbed a broad 50° south-facing snow couloir towards the gap east of the peak, and then continued up discontinuous icy gullies separated by granite slabs on the South East Face (mixed climbing to 80° and UIAA V+). The overall grade of this 750m route was TD+. APR 09 69 A B Looking approximately east south east from the summit of Bruno Detassis Peak over the upper Takdung Glacier. (A) An unnamed and unclimbed summit of c5,900m. Om Shanti (5,770m GPS) lies just off picture to the left. (B) Trento Peak (6,946m GPS) showing the line of the ascent - South East Face to North West Ridge to North Face most of which is hidden. BRUNO MORETTI COLLECTION Giampaolo Corona in the upper gullies on the South East Face of Om Shanti (5,770m GPS) during the first ascent. BRUNO MORETTI COLLECTION Om Shanti Peak (5,770m) showing the first ascent route via the South Couloir to South East Face (Corona/Groff, 2008: 750m: TD+). BRUNO MORETTI COLLECTION 70 APR 09 To read this article in full you can download it via the ‘Climb magazine Archives’, at www.climbmagazine.com Tamadonog Tamadonog is the local name for the large rocky peak forming the end of the southern rim of the Takdung Valley, overlooking the Miyar. Falling north from the main summit is a prominent spur, a feature that prompted the 2002 Slovak expedition to refer to this peak as the 'Walker Spur'. To the west is a subsidiary summit or shoulder, with a series of steep pillars on the north face overlooking the lower Takdung. These were dubbed 'The Brouillard Pillars' by the Slovaks. In 2004 the Spanish Alberto Urtasun and Patricia Viscarrets started up a corner system on the left flank of the lower North West Ridge, gained the crest of the ridge (which is more the left edge of the large broken West Face than a distinct crest) and followed it to the top. Their route, Shakti, covered 1,300m of climbing at V+ and A1, and it is presumed the pair continued to the highest point of the mountain. The following year saw a large expedition representing the Spanish Federation Young Climbers' Team tackle many new lines in the Miyar, including the 'Brouillard Pillars', where they established two new routes. Oscar Cacho and Victor Sans climbed a pillar towards the left side of the North North West Face, naming it Tocati di Bola (400m: 6b and A2) and then Cacho, Sans, Jonathan Larranaga and Ferran Rodriguez climbed Ocell a Vent to the right (400m: 6b and A2). Both teams terminated their ascents at the tops of the pillars and rappelled. In 2006 the Polish duo of Michal Krol and Przemek Wojcik discovered the local name for the peak and added a third route to the North North West Face, starting a little left of Tocati di Bola and finishing up similar ground to the crest of the ridge. From here they followed the remaining c500m of crest to the main summit, but saw no trace of any previous ascent. Their route, Doomed to Miyar, gave around 1,000m of climbing and was all free at UIAA VIII-. The two descended a long stony couloir on the West Face. In September 2008, after their ascent of a new route on Toro (reported last month), Camilio López and Anna Pfaff climbed a variation start to Shakti. The pair left base camp at 4am and by 6.30am was starting up the very toe of the ridge at the left edge of the West Face. They moved together for the first c500m, finding some pitches at 5.7 or 5.8. Above, they encountered a vertical step, and belayed two crux pitches of 5.9. Thereafter they unroped and climbed 400m to the foresummit (5.6/5.7), from where loose scree with the occasional 5th Class block led 1 3 2 4 5 Tamadonog from the Miyar Valley. This rocky summit lies immediately south of the entrance to the Takdung Valley. The highest summit was originally referred to as 'The Walker Spur'. The North North West Face showing the approximate lines of: (1) Doomed to Miyar (Krol/Wojcik, 2006: 1,000m of climbing: UIAA VIII-); (2) Tocati di Bola (Cacho/Sans, 2005: 400m: 6b and A2); (3) Ocell a Vent (Cacho/Sans/Larranaga/Rodriguez, 2005: 400m: 6b and A2). North West Ridge: (4) Shakti (Urtasun/Viscarrets: 2004: 1,300m of climbing: V+ and A1); (5) Long Life Ridge (Lopez/Pfaff, 2008: 1,400m of climbing: 5.9). ANDREJ GRMOVSEK to the top. The two reached the highest point of the mountain at 5pm, having climbed approximately 1,400m. López and Pfaff also saw no evidence of previous passage and built a large cairn on the summit. Descent was made via one of the gullies on the West Face, which was full of loose blocks, turned out to be much longer than anticipated, and provided the crux of the day. They arrived back at base camp at 1am, naming their line, several hundred metres of which is new, Long Life Ridge. The height of Tamadonog is questionable. There are various reports of 5,240m but it seems likely this was assigned to the old 'Brouillard Pillars' or foresummit and not the main summit. Who arrived at this figure and how is also not clear. The two Americans recorded an altimeter reading of 5,800m on top, but photographic evidence from other peaks would suggest it is considerably lower. Points 6,036m and 5,617m In 2007 two peaks in the Miyar region were climbed but little information is known about the ascents. On the 30th July a eightmember Indian expedition led by Sameer Serigupta reports ascending Pt 6,036m above the Miyar Glacier from a base camp at the usual site of Dali Got. Later, on the 8th September a seven-member Japanese expedition from Osaka University reports climbing Forward Peak (5,617m), a summit close to the Tarsalmu Pass leading east towards Darcha. This is reached by leaving the approach up the Miyar Valley a little north of Khanjar. The climbers reached the summit via the North Face. Correction Toro/JAMES In last month's INFO we reported ascents of Toro and JAMES by Americans Brandon (Brandon Lampley) and Beth (Elizabeth Fredell). On Toro, these two repeated the first few pitches of the 2008 López/Pfaff Direttissima as far as the diagonal trough, rating the crux section 5.8+. They then moved slightly right and climbed directly up the slabs above and through a prominent roof that is clearly visible from the valley. In the main, this new ground was fun 5.5 but there was a fine, thin-hands crack through the roof at 5.9. On JAMES they more or less followed the same line on the slabs below the North East Ridge climbed earlier in the season by Australians Natasha Sebire and Gemma APR 09 71 Lahul. (A) Gangstang (6,162m) and (B) Thirot Shivling (5,324m). The North Face is on the left, North West Ridge in centre with Thirot Shivling at its base, and the South-West Ridge is the right skyline. The 2007 ascent is marked. MARTIN MORAN A B Woldendorp. The obvious way, up a couloir/depression, was snow-covered, so the two Americans climbed c200m of broken slabs to the right at around 5.6, except for a section of 5.8 about 60m below the summit. The summit block has to be down-climbed from the top. About 15m below the block the American pair discovered a rather old rappel anchor. They started a series of rappels back down the route from this point. On the first ascent in 2002 Vlado Linek and Igor Koller scrambled just below the crest of the North East Ridge from the col at its base. The climbing, both up and down, was straightforward and no rappels were needed. EAST OF THE MIYAR Gangstang The Scottish-based guide Martin Moran is one of the more adventurous commercial 72 APR 09 operators and has long experience of exploratory climbing in the Indian Himalaya. In 2007 he visited the valley of Thirot a little to the east of the Miyar and was successful in making a partial new route on Gangstang (6,162m). The expedition established base camp at the head of the Thirot Nala, 10km from the road head at Nainghar village. After attempts to reconnoiter the unclimbed Nainghar Choti (6,094m) were hampered by poor weather, the team began to investigate the impressive north and west flanks of Gangstang. On the 28th September Alan Clapperton, David Geddes, Frank Johnstone, Aran Mahajan, Moran and Luder Singh climbed a prominent rocky bastion at the end of the North West Ridge of Gangstang, naming it Thirot Shivling (5,324m). The ascent went at PD- and UIAA II. From here they spied a conspicuous curving snow couloir on the West Face of Gangstang leading to the crest of the South West Ridge at around 5,600m. The following day Peter Ashworth, Gustavo Fierro-Carrion, John Leedale, Mahajan, Moran and Singh, assisted by the British guide James Edwards and Govind Singh, climbed the 600m couloir at Scottish grade III/IV and established a camp on the ridge at 5,600m. The following day they continued up the crest to intersect with the previous route up the South West Ridge 5,850m and from there reached the summit. The overall grade was D-. Gangstang, which was reportedly first climbed by Italians in 1945 and again in September 1973 by a team from Calcutta, is most commonly climbed via the South West Ridge. This is now considered the Normal The unclimbed 6,094m Nainghar Choti. Here, the North Summit and North Ridge are seen from the West Face of Gangstang. There remains doubt as to whether the North Summit is the highest point: a level knifeedged ridge runs south for 500m to the South Top, which is shown as having the higher elevation on old maps. However, it appeared equal to or lower than the North Top when viewed from Gangstang. MARTIN MORAN Route, though the mountain has received probably less than a dozen ascents (the last before the British expedition took place just one month earlier, when the South West Ridge was climbed by an Indian team). Successful parties have approached the ridge from the Gangstang Glacier to the East. In 2001 a Japanese party broke new ground by approaching the peak via the glacier below the North Face and from here made the first ascent of the East Ridge. The Thirot Valley is a fine discovery, offering plenty of potential for further first ascents. Amongst these would be the beautiful North West Ridge and impressive 900m North Face of Gangstang and the sinuous North Ridge of Nainghar Choti, plus many rock climbs on lower granitic spires. EASTERN GARHWAL Changabang In 2007, a strong Australian-New Zealand team made a two-pronged attempt on Changabang (6,864m). From a 5,000m camp at the head of the Bagini Glacier, Kester Brown and Craig Jefferies started up the line of the 1996 British attempt on the North Face, which lies to the right of the eventual British ascent route of 1997 but left of the main rock wall taken by the 1998 Lightning Route (Buhler/Dusharin/Mariev/Shabalin/Volkov). In 1996 Julie-Ann Clyma, Brendan Murphy, Roger Payne and Andy Perkins became the first team to attempt the North Side of Changabang, and the first to attempt this iconic Himalayan peak by any route since 1982. The four climbed in capsule style to a central icefield at well over 6,000m and then tried to traverse left towards an icy corner system in the headwall. Unfortunately, a severe illness to Perkins forced them down. The following year, on the successful ascent to the summit by Andy Cave and Murphy, the corner system was reached direct via a line on the left side of the face. Brown and Jefferies reached the icefield in three days, overcoming pitches of snow plastered 90° ice. They took a rest day, and then traversed left to join the 1997 line (climbing a few hundred metres of new ground), then up to the small icefield below the headwall. They bivouacked on an ice arête at c6,200m, where they were hit by heavy snowfall. As the storm continued, they eventually retreated down the left side of the face in 16 rappels. Meanwhile Brian Alder, Adam Darragh and Marty Beare fixed 300m of rope to the c5,800m col at the foot of the North West Pillar, then another 200m up the wall above APR 09 73 8 7 2 1 3 4 6 5 Kalanka (6,931m, left) and Changabang (6,864m) from the north east. (1) The 2007 British attempt on the North East Face to East Ridge (Bullock/Cool). (2) The 2008 successful Japanese ascent of the North East Face and Central Spur Bushido (Amano/Ichimura/Sato: bivouac sites are marked). (3) The 2003 American attempt on the Central Spur (Nott/Varco: high point of 6,550m). (4) The 1977 Czechoslovakian Route (Jon/Rakoncaj). (5) North Face- British Route (Cave/Murphy to summit, Fowler/Sustad to East Ridge, 1997). (6) 1996 British attempt and New Zealand connection (Clyma/Murphy/Payne/Perkins, 1996: Brown/Jefferies, 2007, high point 6,200m). (7) The Lightning Route (Buhler/Dusharin/Mariev/Shabalin/Volkov, 1998). The big compact wall to the right was attempted to 6,100m in 2005 by a Korean expedition. (8) North West Pillar (Boardman/Tasker, 1976). NICK BULLOCK (60° and mixed) in an attempt to make the long awaited second ascent of the 1976 Boardman-Tasker Route (Alder had tried this route in 2002). A week-long snow storm precluded any further activity. Kalanka A direct route up the North Face of Kalanka (6,931m), Changabang's higher easterly neighbour, has become one of the most sought after lines in the Garhwal, and in 2007 three teams arrived on the Bagini Glacier with Kalanka as their goal. The only team to make any real impact on the mountain was the British pair, Nick Bullock and Kenton Cool. Their interest lay not with the prominent Central Spur, an elegant line attempted three times since 2001, but with the broad snow/ice face to the left leading to a shoulder on the East Ridge. Setting off on the 12th September, they climbed through an unprotectable rock band on the lower section of the face and were then slowed by a mixture of deep unconsolidated snow, hard ice, deep flutings and powder. They also underestimated the height of the face, thinking it would take a day and a half to climb. In fact it wasn't until the 15th, and after several poor bivouacs, that they were wallowing up deep 74 APR 09 unconsolidated snow on the crest of the East Ridge at c6,300m. Difficult and dangerous pitches on the north flank led below gendarmes to the start of the steep and technical section of the ridge leading up to the summit. Here, they were faced with a pitch that both considered too gnarly to climb. Strung out and with only one day's food remaining and a possible two-three days climbing needed to reach the top, they realized that down was the only safe option. It took that day and the next to regain the glacier. The other two expeditions, a threemember Dutch team and a three-member Czech party, with eyes more towards the Central Spur, arrived later than the British team, and were not really ready to make serious attempts before a huge storm moved in and dumped two metres of snow at advanced base. In September 2008, Kazuaki Amano, Fumitaka Ichimura and Yusuke Sato, part of a group of emerging young Japanese alpinists who refer to themselves as the Giri-Giri boys and are currently making impressive ascents throughout the Greater Ranges in excellent style, started up the face taken by the Bullock-Cool attempt. After bivouacking at 6,000m on the first night, they made a long horizontal traverse to the right, below the steep upper rock walls, to reach the crest of the Central Spur, where they bivouacked at c6,150m. Next day they climbed through the steep (crux) section of the spur above at M5+ and bivouacked at 6,550m. The following day they only made it to 6,600m before being pinned down for three days in a storm. On the 22nd September the weather cleared and the three still had enough strength to go for the summit, which they reached in a 13-hour round trip from their top bivouac. Due to the fresh snow, the going was hard, and on the descent they elected to go straight down the Central Spur to the glacier, finally reaching base camp after a 10-day alpine style push, achieved on just five days food. Their 1,800m route was named Bushido and won for them the Third Piolet d'Or Asia. A full account of the ascent will appear in a future INFO. After a British attempt on the South Face in autumn 1974 from within the Nanda Devi Sanctuary, an approach no longer an option due to a general ban on entering the Sanctuary from the early 1980s onwards, 2 3 1 Another view of Kalanka from the north east showing (1) The 2007 British attempt on the North East Face to East Ridge (Bullock/Cool). (2) The 2008 successful Japanese ascent of the North East Face and Central Spur - Bushido (Amano/Ichimura/Sato: bivouac sites are marked). (3) The 1977 Czechoslovakian Route - North Face to West Ridge (Jon/Rakoncaj). NICK BULLOCK High on the North East Face, Kenton Cool approaches the shoulder on the East Ridge of Kalanka. NICK BULLOCK Kalanka was first climbed on the 2nd June 1975 by Japanese Noriaki Ikeda, Kazumasa Ioue, Tsuneo Kouma and Ikuo Tanabe with the Indian, T Singh. This party followed the same route as the Changabang first ascensionists the year previous; across Shipton Col, then up the South Face to gain the col between Changabang and Kalanka. From here they followed the West Ridge of the latter to its summit. The second ascent, in 1977, remains one of the most underrated achievements in the Himalaya for the era, despite being completed in siege style. A strong team from what was then 1 3 2 Kalanka (6,931m) seen from within the Nanda Devi Sanctuary to the south. (1) South Face to West Ridge (Ikeda/Ioue/Kouma/Singh/Tanabe, 1975). (2) The 1978 Barton/Fyffe descent. (3) South Face (Barton/Fyffe, 1978). In 1982 Besl, Farbiger, Hesse and Lukas climbed directly up the South Face, most likely starting up the Barton/Fyffe descent route. Team-mates Prazenthaler and Schrag climbed the broad couloir right of the Barton/Fyffe to the East Ridge and finished up this to the summit. NICK BULLOCK Czechoslovakia had a permit and liaison officer for Kalanka, planning to attempt the much harder and more serious North Face. Due to Inner Line restrictions prevailing at the time, they were forced to use a much longer approach from the south than that followed since the 1990s via Dunagiri to the north west. The expedition walked up the Rishi Ganga, set up Base Camp on the Ramani Glacier and then made a lengthy crossing of the Bagini Pass (where ropes were fixed) to reach the Bagini Glacier and foot of the face. They first attempted a direct line up face but were beaten by the weather. Subsequently, they turned to a leftward-slanting mixed line well to the right, which rose up to reach the West Ridge about 150m above the Kalanka-Changabang Col. Ropes were fixed, a grade V rock pillar was climbed, and from the top camp Ladislav Jon and Josef Rakoncaj reached the summit via the upper section of the Japanese Route. The expedition experienced almost constant poor weather but fortunately no wind, which allowed them to push out the route. In 1978 Bob Barton and Alan Fyffe climbed a new route up a rib on the right side of the South Face, slanting left when above half-height to reach the summit. In 1981 Bernard Domenech (France) Nick Kekus (UK) and Guiseppi Martellotti (Italy) more or less repeated the Japanese Route but in worsening weather turned back at a point approximately 50m from the summit. In 1982 four Germans, Gerry Besl, Peter Farbiger, Manfred Hesse and Bernhard Lukas, climbed directly up the South Face to the summit, while their team-mates, Erwin Prazenthaler and Karl Schrag climbed the slope right of the Barton-Fyffe Route to gain a small col on the East Ridge, up which they finished to the top. Due to the subsequent closure of the Nanda Devi Sanctuary, this was the last ascent of Kalanka until 2008. Much later, during his ascent of Changabang’s North Face with the Russians in 1998, the American Carlos Buhler had ample time to study the Central Spur on the North Face of Kalanka and returned for an attempt in September 2001 with fellow countryman, Jack Roberts. The Americans had permission from Delhi but once in the region experienced huge bureaucratic problems with the Uttaranchal State Government. Substantially delayed, they were only able to make a reconnaissance of the face, placing an advanced camp at 5,660m before having to return home. Buhler returned in spring 2004 with British climbers, Sandy Allan and John Lyall but difficult conditions stopped them below 6,000m. However one year previous, the Central Spur had received an extremely spirited attempt from Americans, Sue Nott and John Varco, the pair climbing in capsule style and using a portaledge camp to fix ropes through the vertical to overhanging central rock barrier above 6,100m (pitches of M6). They eventually established a camp above the difficulties at c6,550m, with only 350-400m of relatively easy snow and ice slopes separating them from the summit. At this point they had been four days without food and were being pounded daily by heavy afternoon spindrift. Totally spent and with little hope of clear weather, they descended. APR 09 75 Mick Cottam leading the first pitch on the East Face of the summit block of Danesh Parvat (5,490m) in India's Kagbhusandi Valley. The block gave two full pitches of steep granite climbing with sections of UIAA V/V+ DAVE WYNNE-JONES retreated, only to see during their descent a narrow snow ramp rising below the overhanging North Face of the summit. They climbed back up and across two pitches of doubtful snow to the East Face, where two more pitches in vertical granite cracks (moves of UIAA V/V+) led to the top. The grade was estimated to be D. The following day Astill and Higton reached the summit of Pt 5,080m (map reading; the GPS was lower), which lies east of the Kankul Pass and has been named Kankul Peak. The pair climbed a rocky couloir on the East Flank (AD) running parallel to, and a little below, the snow laden North Ridge. WESTERN GARHWAL - GANGOTRI Kharchakund and Point 6,465m Mick Cottam on the summit of Danesh Parvat after the successful first ascent via the West Ridge, North Face and East Face (D with moves of V/V+ on the summit block) DAVE WYNNE-JONES ?CENTRAL GARHWAL Kagbhusandi Valley To mark the 150th anniversary of the inaugeration of the Alpine Club, well-known Himalayan explorer Harish Kapadia (who is an honorary AC member) organized a joint Indo-British expedition to the Kagbhusandi Valley in the Central Garhwal. This valley lies south of the Bhuidhar (aka Valley of Flowers), and should not be confused with the location of Kagbhusand (5,830m), a peak much further north toward Kamet (7756m) that was climbed by Eric Shipton in 1931. Kapadia had visited the Kagbhusandi in May 2006, when he planned to trek to the head and then cross the Kankul Khal (pass) towards the Dhauli Ganga river and Joshimath. Unfortunately, he was turned back by unexpectedly deep snow. He hoped to rectify this in 2007 by going later (late May, finishing in mid June). With him were Atul Rawal and four members of the AC: Chris Astill, Mick Cottam, Mark Higton and Dave Wynne-Jones. The last four may be the first non-Indians to climb in this valley. Starting up the popular trek toward the Valley of Flowers, the team took three days to reach a base camp at Chhaiyan Kharak (3,815m). To the north towered Hathi Parbat (6,727m) and the lower Otika Danda (5,780m), the only peaks so far climbed in the Kagbhusandi. Hathi Parbat was climbed in 1963 by a team from the Indo-Tibet Border Police and two years later one of the 76 APR 09 summiteers, HCS Rawat, became the first Indian to stand on the summit of Everest. On the first day of the approach to base camp, the 2007 Indo-British team had a timely reminder of Alpine and Himalayan Club links when, by chance, they met Nanda Sinh Chauhan. Now 94 years old, he was with Frank Smythe in both 1931 and 1937, when the pair made their historic visit to the Valley of Flowers. Despite the later timing, the expedition found difficult snow conditions and, once again, Kapadia was unable to cross the pass, as the snow was too deep for laden porters. However, the British contingent, which had a permit to climb up to 6,000m, made three first ascents. Peak AC 150 (5,030m GPS) lay immediately west of the 4,665m (GPS) Kankul Khal. All four climbers approached via the North East Flank. In the upper section Astill and Cottam climbed a couloir east of the North Spur, while Higton and Wynne-Jones took the crest of the Ridge direct in four pitches of Scottish 3. Four more pitches of mixed ground and a narrow snow arête led to the summit. The overall grade was AD. Cottam and Wynne-Jones then climbed the already named but previously virgin Danesh Parvat (5,490m). The pair attempted the West Ridge and followed the increasingly steep and narrowing crest to the sheer summit block. After two hours probing snow-covered cracks and a chimney full of unstable blocks, they After bad weather and objective dangers curtailed new route plans on Kharchakund (6,612m), Pat Deavoll (New Zealand) and Bruce Normand (UK) climbed a probable new route on Point 6.465m above the true right (eastern) bank of the Gangotri Glacier. Together with Paul and Shelley Hershey (NZ), the two arrived at Sundarban Base Camp (4,535m) in September, after which Deavoll and Normand first acclimatized on the Normal Route up Kedar Dome. From a high camp at 5,500m, the pair climbed part way up the rounded North East Ridge on two consecutive days, the highest point reached being 6,200m. The Hersheys made an inspection of the unclimbed South West Ridge of Kharchakund (connecting with 6,331m Sumeru Parvat), finding the approach threatened by serac fall. They decided instead to attempt the smaller Yeonbuk (5,935m) to the south. Yeonbuk was first climbed from the north in 1984 by Poles, a route repeated by Indians in 1986. Meanwhile, Deavoll and Normand climbed hard ice onto the virgin East Ridge of Kharchakund, reaching a small notch on the crest at 5,500m, where they bivouacked below the first of a series of rock steps. They were then hit by the start of a six-day storm and retreated. Kharchakund has seen few ascents and is a difficult proposition by any route. After several previous attempts by Indian teams, in 1980 a Japanese expedition climbed the West Rib until stopped by a rock step, then traversed up across the face to the left to hit the North Ridge at a small col, where they established Camp 4 at c6,250m. From here, Toshiharu Hashimoto and Yoshitaka Tanimura were the first pair to climb to the summit. This route has been repeated on several occasions, first in 1983 (Austrians noted 1 2 3 Kharchakund (6,612m) from the north with (1) the unclimbed East Ridge, (2) the approximate line of the 1983 Austrian Route up the North East Face to North Ridge (1,600m: TD), and (3) The North Ridge Integral (British, 1987: 1,600m: ED1). BRUCE NORMAND Kharchakund (6,612m) seen from the route up Pt 6,465m to the east. The left skyline is the unclimbed South West Ridge, which connects with 6,331m Sumeru Parvat (off picture). The unclimbed East Ridge, attempted to 5,500m in 2007 falls towards the camera. BRUCE NORMAND below). Deavoll and Normand inspected this line as a possible descent and noted that glacial recession since 1980 had transformed the initial 100m of the route into bare rock. However, the remaining line appeared to be relatively safe. Two members of an Austrian expedition made the second ascent of the peak in 1983 via a bold, alpine-style ascent of the North East Face. Sepp Inhoger and Balthasar Pichler climbed the 1,600m route (TD: 65°) with one bivouac and descended the West Rib. A little later, other members of this expedition ascended the West Rib The West Rib was also used for descent by the 1987 British team that established the third new route on the mountain, the North Ridge. Robin Beadle, Bobby Gilbert, Rob Tresidder and Pete Scott made a five and a half day ascent in alpine style, taking a further one and a half days to descend the West Rib (where they found many fixed ropes). The four overcame difficulties up to UIAA VI and A1, and Scottish V, the overall grade of the route possibly equating to Alpine ED1. About 120m of 7mm rope was left in B A C ABC Looking east across the Gangotri Glacier at (A) part of Point 6,172m, (B) Pt 6,465m (Maiandi) showing the new route climbed in 2007 by Pat Deavoll and Bruce Normand, and (C) Jankuth (6,805m). The partially visible West Face on Jankuth was attempted in 2004 by Malcolm Bass, Marty Beare, Andy Brown, Deavoll and Paul Figg, the high point being c6,400m on the South Ridge. BRUCE NORMAND places on the ridge to facilitate retreat, should it have been necessary. Let's now return to 2007. When fine weather eventually returned, albeit briefly, to the area, the East Ridge of Kharchakund was too snow-plastered to make it a feasible proposition, so Deavoll and Normand opted to try the nice-looking Point 6,454m a little further up the Gangotri Glacier. Deavoll had noted this mountain in 2004 on a previous trip to attempt nearby Jankuth and assumed it was unclimbed. The first obstacle was a 600m icefall rising directly from the east bank of the Gangotri immediately south of the unnamed Pt 6,172m, and leading to a small, snowy cwm below and left of the South Ridge of the mountain. They camped the night of the 3rd October in this cwm and the following day climbed the remaining 800m up the ridge to the 6,454m summit. This involved four-five pitches of ice climbing up to 50° and a 17-hour round trip from camp. Near the top, the climbers traversed the South West Flank to the left and finished up the West Ridge in deep snow. The next morning increasingly poor weather accompanied the climbers down through the icefall. Unfortunately, for the other pair, the avalanche danger on Yeonbuk had proved prohibitive, and they retreated. Deavoll later proposed a name of Maiandi for Pt 6,465m as it lies immediately above the Maiandi Bamak (glacier) to the east. However, while the ascent was in all probability new, the mountain had been climbed at least once before. Pt 6,465m was first climbed on the 21st September 1987 by an expedition from the London Hospital, which entered the Swachand Bamak and established Camp 2 at 5,870m on the North Face. From here John Sanders and Richard Stradling climbed to the summit. There were no major difficulties but some interesting mixed climbing between 6,000 and 6,200m. INFO: Nick Bullock/Tsunemichi Ikeda/Harish Kapadia/Michal Krol/Brandon Lampley/Camilo López/Martin Moran/Bruno Moretti/Bruce Normand/Denis Savelyev/Reiko Terasawa/Dave Wynne-Jones and the reference sources of the American Alpine Journal, Himalayan Journal and Alpine Club Himalayan Index. Bruce Normand high on the South Ridge of Pt 6,465m (Maiandi) during the probable first ascent of the mountain from this side BRUCE NORMAND COLLECTION 78 APR 09
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