Throughout 1949 and 1950 H.W. ‘Bill’ Tilman mounted pioneering
expeditions to Nepal and its Himalayan mountains, taking advantage of
some of the first access to the country for Western travellers in the
20th century. Tilman and his party—including a certain Tenzing
Norgay—trekked into the Kathmandu Valley and on to the Langtang
region, where the highs and lows began. They first explored the Ganesh
Himal, before moving on to the Jugal Himal and the following season
embarking on an ambitious trip to Annapurna and Everest. Manaslu was
their first objective, but left to ‘better men’, and Annapurna IV
very nearly climbed instead but for bad weather which dogged the whole
expedition. Needless to say, Tilman was leading some very lightweight
expeditions into some seriously heavyweight mountains. After the
Annapurna adventure Tilman headed to Everest with—among others—Dr
Charles Houston. Approaching from the delights of Namche Bazaar, the
party made progress up the flanks of Pumori to gaze as best they could
into the Western Cwm, and at the South Col and South-East Ridge
approach to the summit of Everest. His observations were both
optimistic and pessimistic: ‘One cannot write off the south side as
impossible until the approach from the head of the West Cwm to this
remarkably airy col has been seen.’ But then of the West Cwm: ‘A
trench overhung by these two tremendous walls might easily become a
grave for any party which pitched its camp there.’ Nepal Himalaya
presents Tilman’s favourite sketches, encounters with endless yetis,
trouble with the porters, his obsessive relationship with alcohol and
issues with the food. And so Tilman departs Nepal for the last time
proper with these retiring words: ‘If a man feels he is failing to
achieve this stern standard he should perhaps withdraw from a field of
such high endeavour as the Himalaya.’
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781909461390
Publisert
2017
Utgiver
Vendor
Vertebrate Digital
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter