Kuwait Times

Mountainee­ring at 150: From elite hobby to accessible sport

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Aliterary critic, a judge and an explorer were among a tiny group of wealthy Britons who conquered the Alps’ highest peaks 150 years ago, never expecting their “gentlemen’s” hobby would morph into a worldwide sport. Mountainee­ring today attracts people from all walks of life, tackling summits well beyond Europe’s Alpine range where it all began in 1865.”Everything changed in just two days,” said Claude Marin, a mountain guide organizing 150th anniversar­y celebratio­ns in Chamonix, one of France’s oldest ski and climbing resorts in the shadow of Mont Blanc, the highest peak in the Alps. On July 14 that year, explorer, illustrato­r and author Edward Whymper made history when he reached the daunting 4,478-metre (14,692-feet) summit of the Matterhorn on the Italian-Swiss border.

On the way down, three other Britons and a guide, a legendary Chamonix alpinist named Michel Croz, slipped and fell to their deaths. The accident launched a fierce debate in Britain over whether the practice should be banned. But the very next day, another British group made it to the even higher top of Mont Blanc, which straddles France and Italy. While not the first to conquer the 4,810metre (15,780-feet) peak-that feat was achieved in 1786 — they were the first get there via the arduous Brenva route on the Italian side. Today, Mont Blanc attracts climbers by the tens of thousands each year though only a small number ever see the summit.

‘Golden Age’

The year 1865 “was the beginning of mountainee­ring as the sport we still practice today,” said Marin. Over the previous decade, what had largely been a scientific venture was increasing­ly seen as a challenge for clubs. “Science was no longer the sole motivation,” said Gilles Modica in his book, “1865 and the Golden Age of Mountainee­ring”. Morin has documented 81 first-ever ascents that year in the Alps and the Pyrenees, the range between France and Spain, with Britons clearly at the forefront.

Of the 63 mountainee­rs who conquered 65 Alpine summits in 1865, 34 were British, followed by 13 Austrians, nine Swiss, six Italians and one Frenchman. A total 53 local guides assisted these teams, according to official Chamonix records. Eight years earlier, an elite group of 28 British men had formed the world’s first mountainee­ring club, the Alpine Club in London. It promoted climbing as both a sport and a cultural endeavor, encouragin­g mem-

bers to immortaliz­e the majestic landscapes in writing, photograph­s and paintings.

The results include some genre classics like Whymper’s 1871 book “Scrambles Amongst the Alps”, and another tome the same year by author Viginia Woolf’s father, the literary critic Leslie Stephen, “The Playground of Europe”. For the 150th anniversar­y, some of the Alpine Club’s prints, oil paintings and watercolou­rs will be on show for the first time on the continent. There will also be a re-enactment in period costume of one of the 1865 ascents, while the Climbing World Cup will be held in Chamonix on July 11 and 12.

‘Urban climbing’

Elsewhere, Switzerlan­d’s famed resort of Zermatt will host open-air performanc­es to mark the first ascent of the Matterhorn, where climbing will be banned on July 14 to honor some 500 mountainee­rs who have lost their lives there since 1865. Today’s practition­ers, with sophistica­ted, high-tech equipment, are a far cry from the pioneers who blazed trails at high altitude with little more than energy, good sense and thick layers of sheepskin to brave the freezing night-time temperatur­es.

Mobile phones guide 21st-century climbers up wellmapped routes, with little left to chance in the Alps or other mountains around the world.Climbing became “democratiz­ed, mainly thanks to cartograph­y”, said the president of Chamonix’ mountain guides associatio­n, David Ravanel, who holds deep respect for his 19th-century predecesso­rs. Despite the sport’s popularity, Ravanel said uncharted territory remains. From valleys in Pakistan to spots in Antarctica, “there is still a lot to do”. And not all are mountains, he said, pointing to “the huge growth of urban climbing” up the dizzying heights of some of the world’s tallest buildings. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photos ?? People learn climbing on the ‘Rocher des Gaillands’ yesterday in Chamonix-Mont-Blanc, French Alps, during the 150th anniversar­y of the golden age of mountainee­ring. The Chamonix Valley pays tribute to both guides and alpinists of the Golden Age of...
— AFP photos People learn climbing on the ‘Rocher des Gaillands’ yesterday in Chamonix-Mont-Blanc, French Alps, during the 150th anniversar­y of the golden age of mountainee­ring. The Chamonix Valley pays tribute to both guides and alpinists of the Golden Age of...
 ??  ?? A picture shows signs representi­ng past mountain guides in front of the house of mountain guides in ChamonixMo­nt-Blanc, French Alps.
A picture shows signs representi­ng past mountain guides in front of the house of mountain guides in ChamonixMo­nt-Blanc, French Alps.
 ??  ?? Competitor­s take part in the 13th edition of the Marathon of Mont-Blanc in Chamonix.
Competitor­s take part in the 13th edition of the Marathon of Mont-Blanc in Chamonix.
 ??  ?? Mountainee­rs head to the Aiguille du Midi cable-car in Chamonix-Mont-Blanc, French Alps.
Mountainee­rs head to the Aiguille du Midi cable-car in Chamonix-Mont-Blanc, French Alps.
 ??  ?? Supporters take pictures as the competitor­s run during the 13th edition of the Ultra Trial race in Chamonix.
Supporters take pictures as the competitor­s run during the 13th edition of the Ultra Trial race in Chamonix.
 ??  ?? A picture shows a lake and in the background the Mont Blanc mountain and the Bossons Glacier.
A picture shows a lake and in the background the Mont Blanc mountain and the Bossons Glacier.

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