The Great Outdoors (UK)

GOING HIGHER: How one woman is following in Lucy Walker’s footsteps

150 years after Lucy Walker became the first woman to climb the Matterhorn, British mountainee­r Olivia Jane Wood reflects on the lure of the high peaks

- Olivia Jane Wood, British mountainee­r

ON 22 JULY 1871, Brit Lucy Walker became the first woman to reach the summit of the Matterhorn. Undeterred by the attitudes of the day, which still saw a woman’s place as firmly in the home, she made it to the top of the 4478m peak in style.

One hundred and fifty years later, in

2021, the Swiss outdoor brand Mammut has spent the summer celebratin­g Lucy Walker’s incredible achievemen­t through the 100% Women Peak Challenge. This campaign, delivered in partnershi­p with Switzerlan­d Tourism, Swiss Alpine Club and Swiss Mountain Guide Associatio­n, has called on all-women teams to climb Switzerlan­d’s highest peaks. The aim has been to increase the visibility of inspiring female alpinists and to attract more women to mountainee­ring.

British mountainee­r and Mammut ambassador Olivia Jane Wood has played a central role in the campaign. Here she talks to The Great Outdoors about her love for the high peaks – and how Lucy Walker’s legacy has inspired her.

You grew up in Zermatt in Switzerlan­d. As a child, were you obsessed with the outdoors?

Yeah, I guess I was. I’d literally throw myself into anything, and maybe that was because I was surrounded by these big mountains growing up. As a kid, I’d just play in the mountains, or go down to the river, and I’d never feel scared.

Were there any female climbers you looked up to when you were growing up?

There were a lot of female climbers in magazines and on the television when

I was growing up, but I specifical­ly remember watching a documentar­y about five years ago with Gwen Moffat in it and she really inspired me.

Back when Lucy Walker climbed the Matterhorn 150 years ago, it was seen as controvers­ial. What are the attitudes to female climbers these days?

I feel it’s a lot more the norm now for female mountainee­rs and climbers to scale big mountains. I believe females have the same capabiliti­es as males in the mountains – and females bring a great vibe to mountainee­ring and climbing in this century.

When did you go from just knocking around the outdoors as a kid to taking mountainee­ring seriously?

I climbed a lot when I was a kid with my grandfathe­r. He’d take me up to the Lake District all the time. I never did any 4000m peaks as a kid in Zermatt, but I did plenty of hiking and rock climbing. But then, in university, I joined the mountainee­ring and climbing club, and that’s where it all really

started. My first big alpine route was about five years ago, and I completely fell in love with it, because it was so dangerous.

“A big alpine route is about ten times more risky than doing something like taking a walk up Scafell Pike.”

How does something like that differ from a day in the Lakes?

The risk is just… I don’t know… maybe ten times more than something like taking a walk up Scafell Pike? I don’t know if words can describe it. It makes me speechless every time I get out there. Those routes out in Chamonix or the Dolomites… they’re big.

It’s out of this world.

You have your sights set on the Matterhorn one day. How do you train for serious alpine routes?

I’ve got to make myself fit enough to give myself the best chance to summit.

It’s a lot easier to train with a goal. I’ll be prioritisi­ng mountain fitness and efficient movement skills. And then I’ll do strength training and loads of cardio-vascular training, to help with the altitude – plenty of big, long days on the hills.

How does the altitude affect things?

It affects each individual differentl­y. When I was in Nepal, a guy who was with us started showing signs of pulmonary oedema, where fluid starts to build up in the lungs, at around 4800m. That’s one of the biggest problems, and it can actually kill you if it’s not treated correctly. And then there’s headaches and being out of breath – so that makes everything a lot harder. So the fitter I am, the better.

Do you enjoy pushing yourself to the limit?

Yes. But I definitely know the risks now. Even though these experience­s build your confidence, you can’t be over-confident. I used to always think, “Okay, we’re at the top now, it’s so easy to get down.” But it’s not – going down is the most dangerous part.

These huge mountains are pretty serious. How do you cope with the risks?

You just don’t know what’s going to happen. But I think the human mind, or at least my mind, needs these adventures. I need to take these risks. It just makes sense to me. We live in a society of performanc­e, where it’s cool to push boundaries and limits – and that’s what I love about adventure. Climbing a mountain like the Matterhorn is another way to push my boundaries.

How do you deal mentally with something like that? It must get pretty daunting at points.

There’s only one way up, and one way down, so I just try to stay very focussed, and very calm. I don’t over-think too much. Being a little bit scared is healthy, but not to the point where you freeze up. I try to just enjoy it.

Do you have a favourite place in the UK you like to climb?

In winter it’d be in Scotland. I’ve not done loads of winter stuff up there, but that’s the place to build confidence in winter mountainee­ring. But then there’s the Lakes. I love the Langdale PIkes for climbing – there are some beautiful crags there to climb on a nice sunny evening. I love Wales too, but I’ve not been able to enjoy it as much.

Where’s the buzz of all this for you? Is it when you get back from a big adventure? Or is it when you’re out there?

There is that feeling at the end – I usually get a bit shell-shocked, and I need a bit of time to get my head around what I’ve just done – but for me, it’s doing it. It’s the adrenaline. That’s what I crave in my life.

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 ?? ?? [left] Olivia Jane looks over the Gorner Glacier from the Riffelhorn above] Climbing in Switzerlan­d [right] The Breithorn Traverse
[left] Olivia Jane looks over the Gorner Glacier from the Riffelhorn above] Climbing in Switzerlan­d [right] The Breithorn Traverse
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