Tuesday, 12 April 2016

The ascents of Lhotse



Lhotse 8851m

The mighty upper section of the South Face of Lhotse photo Ian Wall
Lhotse, the immediate neighbour to Everest and joined to the latter via the South Col, is the fourth highest mountain in the world at 8516m. Lhotse has two lesser peaks within its own group, Lhotse East 8414m and Lhotse Shar 8383m.
Approaching Camp 3 on Lhotse photo Billi Brieling

With such a significant neighbor Lhotse did not receive serious attention as it was considered the south peak


of Everest, however in 1955 an expedition lead by Norman Dyhrenfurth mounted an early attempt. Initially the expedition was to climb from the southern side, but, upon closer inspection it was conceded that it was too dangerous and they turned their attention to the northwest face approaching from the Western Cwm. The weather was not in their favour that season and the expedition was beaten back by sub-zero temperatures and strong winds at 8100m, however the expedition did not leave empty handed, they climbed several smaller peaks in the area and made several short cultural films. They also completed the first detailed map of the region under expedition member and cartographer Erwin Schneider, this map, the ‘Schneider Map’ is still in use today.

The Swiss had been very active in the area having made an attempt on Everest in 1952 and it was they who then made the first ascent of Lhotse on May 8th 1956. The significant point of this summit climb is that Fritz Luchsinger, a member of the summit team along with Ernst Reiss, suffered from severe appendicitis during the march in and had to rest and recuperate in a room provided by the Lama of Tengboche Monastery. It was not until the 12th May 1970 that Sepp Mayerl and Rolf Walter made the first ascent of Lhotse Shar. In 2012 Sepp Mayerl who made the first ascent of Lhotse Shar in 1970 was tragically killed while ascending a climb in the Dolomites.
The summit of Everest behind the impressive south face of Lhotse photo Ian Wall
In 1965 a Japanese expedition reached 8100m before they were forced to retreat.  In 1973 the Japanese sent an expedition to the south face but they were also unsuccessful. A German expedition lead by Dr G Schmatz made the second ascent of the main summit in 1977. In 1979 the Polish climber Jerzy Kukuczka made the first ascent without supplementary oxygen. In 1981 Alex Kunaver, an old friend of the Nepal Mountaineering Association completed an ascent of the South Face along with Vanja Matijevec and Francek Knez, however they did not actually summit Lhotse.
The third ascent of Lhotse was accomplished on 30th April 1981 by Hristo Prodanov from Bulgaria who summated solo and without supplementary oxygen. On the 16th October Colin Molines from Switzerland made the second ascent of Lhotse Shar. The South Face of Lhotse Shar was climbed by a Czechoslovak expedition lead by Ivan Galfy over May 21st and 22nd May 1984. Reinhold Messner completed his fourteen 8000 metre peak project with an ascent of Lhotse in 1986 and in so doing became the first mountaineer to climb all of the 8000m mountains. In 1987 the first Brazilian, Otto W Gerstenberger Junior along with Haans Singera from Switzerland complete a successful summit bid. On the 31st December 1988 Krzysztof Wielicki, a Polish climber, completed the first winter ascent of Lhotse.


Looking up the Lhotse Couloir photo Billi Brieling

On October 24th 1989 Jerzy Kukuczka died attempting to climb the unclimbed South Face of Lhotse. According to Ryszard Pawlowski, Kukuczka's climbing partner on the day, Jerzy was leading a pitch at an altitude of about 8,200 meters on a 6 mm second-hand rope that he had picked up in a market in Kathmandu, the main single rope used by the team was too jammed to be used and the climbers decided to use this hauling rope instead, the rope was either cut or snapped as a result of the fall, plunging Kukuczka to his death.
On April 24th 1990 Tomo Česen from Slovina made the first solo ascent of the South Face of Lhotse. He also claimed a number of other notable mountaineering achievements, but some of his claimed ascents have often met with scepticism from others in the mountaineering community, including the USSR Himalayan expedition who claimed his Lhotse climb was impossible. However, on the 16th October 1990 the first ascent of South Face was made by the USSR Himalayan expedition members Sergey Bershov and Gennadiy Karataev. 
Beginning the descent of the Lhotse Couloir photo Billi Brieling
By 1994 records were being claimed and on the 13th May Carlos Carsolio claimed a record time of 23hours 50minutes for the ascent and descent of Lhotse Base Camp to Base Camp. Chantal Mauduit became the first woman to reach the summit in 1994. Finally in 2001 Lhotse Middle Peak was climbed by a Russian expedition. It is regarded as the last of the 8000m peaks to be climbed and the most difficult. The summit teams were on May 23rd the first group comprised of Alexey Bolotov, Sergey Timofeev, Evgeny Vinogradsky, Petr Kuznetsov, on the 24th May, Nikolay Zilin, Gleb Sokolov (the first person to have climbed all the Lhotse peaks), Yuri Koshelenko and on the 27th May Vladimir Yanochkin, Viktor Volodin.

The south face of the 'Everest Horseshoe', Everest and Lhotse at sunset photo Ian Wall
In 2007 Pemba Doma Sherpa, Nepali mountaineer and two-time summiteer of Everest, fell to her death
from Lhotse at 8000m. Pemba was regarded as a national heroine and was accorded full honours at her funeral. Pemba had reached the summit and was descending the ‘Lhotse Couloir’, Sange Sherpa her climbing partner was descending in front and Pemba dropped back, Sange thought she wanted a rest stop so continued slightly lower. He heard her cry then she fell on top of him and they both fell down the couloir.

Pemba Dolma on the summit of Lhotse image Blair Falahey

Sange hit two discarded oxygen bottles frozen into the ice near to where Blair Falahey and his sherpa Palden Namgay where descending after their successful summit bid.  Falahey and Namgay managed to grab Sange and prevented him falling any further but sadly Pemba continued to her death.


The American guide Michael Horst summated both Everest and Lhotse without descending below the South Col camp and with less than 21hours between both summits on the 14th – 15th May 2011. Also on May 20th 2011 Arjun Vajpal became the youngest mountaineer to summit aged 17years 11mounths and 16days.
Since its first ascent Lhotse has had 604 ascents of which 167 were made by Nepalese mountaineers.

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