The Jerusalem Post

Poles aim for history with winter scaling of second-highest peak

- • By SAAD SAYEED

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) – A group of Polish mountainee­rs set off for northern Pakistan on Sunday in an attempt to be the first to scale K2, the world’s second-highest peak, in wintertime.

K2, in the Karakorum mountains along the border between China and Pakistan, is notorious for high winds, steep and icy slopes – and high fatality rates for climbers. In winter months, scant snowfall means the summit approach can turn into bare ice.

More than 70 people have died climbing the peak, many of them at the Bottleneck, where a wrong step can send a climber hurtling off the South Face, where bodies are unlikely to be recovered.

Team member Adam Bielecki, 34, told Reuters the chance to make history is a “strong motivation” for the Polish group.

Polish climbers have written a “beautiful chapter” of exploring peaks of more than 8,000 meters, and scaling K2 in winter would “the last chapter of this book”.

The Polish team comprises 13 mountainee­rs led by Krzysztof Wielicki, 67, who in 2003 headed a winter expedition of K2, which was unable to clear the 8,000-m. threshold.

K2, slightly shorter than Mount Everest, is 8,611 m. high.

Wielicki told Reuters his team would begin their ascent on January 8 or 9 and, if successful, expect to return to base camp by mid-March.

Pakistan is a hot destinatio­n for climbers. It rivals Nepal for the number of peaks over 7,000 m., and it has five of the world’s 14 summits higher than 8,000 m.

Bielecki said the group expects to be away from home for around three months.

“If you ask me what’s the hardest part of the expedition or what I fear the most, it’s actually the separation from my family,” he said.

 ?? (Kacper Pempel/Reuters) ?? POLISH MOUNTAINEE­RS Piotr Tomala and Rafal Fronia push their luggage carts at a Warsaw airport before their departure for the expedition to scale K2 last week.
(Kacper Pempel/Reuters) POLISH MOUNTAINEE­RS Piotr Tomala and Rafal Fronia push their luggage carts at a Warsaw airport before their departure for the expedition to scale K2 last week.

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