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Leaving a son with Nanga Parbat

Devil Soul

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Leaving a son with Nanga Parbat
JAMAL SHAHID — UPDATED ABOUT 5 HOURS AGO
561f1aa8b733c.jpg
The 29-year-old climber was attempting to summit the ninth highest peak in the world, also known as the ‘Killer Mountain’, from its Rupal Face. —AP/File
ISLAMABAD: “A life is not measured by quantity, but by its quality,” says Hubert Wischnewski as he reminisces about his son Joel, who died while trying to climb the feared Nanga Parbat over two years ago.

Mr Wischnewski spent the last week travelling to Pakistan from France with his wife and two daughters to pay their respects to Joel. After landing in Gilgit, the family hiked 13,000 feet to the Herrligkoffer’s Alpinists Cemetery, near Nanga Parbat Base Camp, where Joel Wischnewski now rests.

“This is the first time we have been able to visit his grave,” said Myriam, the late climber’s sister.

The journey had been a special one for the family, Myriam explained. She said that it meant a lot to them that her brother’s body had been found and given a proper burial.

“We are indebted to locals from the Rupal Village for bringing him down and burying him along with their prayers,” Myriam told Dawn.



561ecfd699140.jpg
Hubert Wischnewski, the father of Joel, poses with his family. – Photo by Khurram Amin


Joel Wischnewski had arrived in Pakistan in December 2012, like many other ambitious climbers who fancied a winter attempt at summitting a major peak. He spent the next two months acclimatising, setting up camps 1 and 2 and climbing as high as 4,350 metres - almost the height of Mont Blanc in the Swiss Alps.

The 29-year-old climber was attempting to summit the ninth highest peak in the world, also known as the ‘Killer Mountain’, from its Rupal Face. Very few mountaineers have ever dared to ascend this way and none have ever succeeded.

“Moving up from camp 2 at 4,300 metres. I’ve got three days. Bye, take care and thanks for following,” were the final words published on Joel’s website on Feb 6, 2013 and are today chiseled into his tombstone. Concerns about his safety arose when he did not reconnect after three days. As the radio silence grew longer, a search and rescue operation was launched on Feb 16.

Due to adverse winter conditions, search efforts remained intermittent and rescuers could not go above camp 2. An aerial search couldn’t be realised either and no trace of the young French climber could be found despite repeated attempts.

But when conditions changed in summer, Joel’s boots were spotted and in September, locals from nearby villages saw the body and notified the French embassy, who in turn reached out to the Wischnewski family.

“This is where Brig M. Akram Khan of Adventure Foundation Pakistan came into the picture. He organised one last expedition to bring my brother down. A team of helpful villagers went up and brought Joel’s body back on October 10, 2013,” Myriam said.

Judging from the way his body was found, Myriam said it was possible her brother was hit by an avalanche. “He had his ice axe in his hand and was probably moving between two camps.”

“It is a moment of contentment for us when he has eventually buried gracefully at the foot of the mountain he loved so much,” Myriam said, adding, “For my brother, going to the mountain was like going home”.

Though this journey was a sad one for the Wischnewski family, they brought joy to the lives of others. As a gesture of their gratitude towards local villagers, the Wischnewskis brought with them solar energy panels that now illuminate nearly 40 houses in Rupal Village.

Published in Dawn, October 15th, 2015
 
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The irony

So the killer mountain takes another life

BTW , Nanga Parbat loosely translates as Naked mountain
 
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@Slav Defence ithink u must see this thread. and read up on rakaposhi too...which is a very famous mountain that attracts a lot of climbers.

its time now pakistanis learn abt the mountain tourism attracted by gb peaks and ridges.

The irony

So the killer mountain takes another life

BTW , Nanga Parbat loosely translates as Naked mountain
its prounounced naanga
 
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The irony

So the killer mountain takes another life

BTW , Nanga Parbat loosely translates as Naked mountain

I believe it is called "naked" because of the steep angles prevent snow gathering on it thus bare rock.
 
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I believe it is called "naked" because of the steep angles prevent snow gathering on it thus bare rock.

Something like that. The Rupal Face (the South Face of the mountain) is 4600 meters near vertical. That's 4.6 kilometres straight up towards the sky making it both the highest and the tallest vertical wall in the world. It can't hold snow but it is almost all covered in ice, scarcely bare rock. Below is the Rupal Face,

dNSagCceSN0y7-LlgKX4TVfgjN1KmLQPjeftpA1cU6xIfgbU0_WJOaQ_0cn37T-8vy3GbLlX-glYAtVMl1ze



nanga-parbat.jpg


The red circle and dot are Tomaz Humar who was stuck in that same spot for 6 days because he couldn't move a foot in any direction. He had to be rescued by a heli.
 
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now that everest is closed to novices. K2 will quickly put a halt to a brief influx of climbers who would want to go there.
k2 is the hardest of them all
 
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Feel sorry for their loss, hope Joel's body being found and given proper burial brings some kind of closure to their ordeal.


Leaving a son with Nanga Parbat
JAMAL SHAHID — UPDATED ABOUT 5 HOURS AGO
561f1aa8b733c.jpg
The 29-year-old climber was attempting to summit the ninth highest peak in the world, also known as the ‘Killer Mountain’, from its Rupal Face. —AP/File
ISLAMABAD: “A life is not measured by quantity, but by its quality,” says Hubert Wischnewski as he reminisces about his son Joel, who died while trying to climb the feared Nanga Parbat over two years ago.

Mr Wischnewski spent the last week travelling to Pakistan from France with his wife and two daughters to pay their respects to Joel. After landing in Gilgit, the family hiked 13,000 feet to the Herrligkoffer’s Alpinists Cemetery, near Nanga Parbat Base Camp, where Joel Wischnewski now rests.

“This is the first time we have been able to visit his grave,” said Myriam, the late climber’s sister.

The journey had been a special one for the family, Myriam explained. She said that it meant a lot to them that her brother’s body had been found and given a proper burial.

“We are indebted to locals from the Rupal Village for bringing him down and burying him along with their prayers,” Myriam told Dawn.



561ecfd699140.jpg
Hubert Wischnewski, the father of Joel, poses with his family. – Photo by Khurram Amin


Joel Wischnewski had arrived in Pakistan in December 2012, like many other ambitious climbers who fancied a winter attempt at summitting a major peak. He spent the next two months acclimatising, setting up camps 1 and 2 and climbing as high as 4,350 metres - almost the height of Mont Blanc in the Swiss Alps.

The 29-year-old climber was attempting to summit the ninth highest peak in the world, also known as the ‘Killer Mountain’, from its Rupal Face. Very few mountaineers have ever dared to ascend this way and none have ever succeeded.

“Moving up from camp 2 at 4,300 metres. I’ve got three days. Bye, take care and thanks for following,” were the final words published on Joel’s website on Feb 6, 2013 and are today chiseled into his tombstone. Concerns about his safety arose when he did not reconnect after three days. As the radio silence grew longer, a search and rescue operation was launched on Feb 16.

Due to adverse winter conditions, search efforts remained intermittent and rescuers could not go above camp 2. An aerial search couldn’t be realised either and no trace of the young French climber could be found despite repeated attempts.

But when conditions changed in summer, Joel’s boots were spotted and in September, locals from nearby villages saw the body and notified the French embassy, who in turn reached out to the Wischnewski family.

“This is where Brig M. Akram Khan of Adventure Foundation Pakistan came into the picture. He organised one last expedition to bring my brother down. A team of helpful villagers went up and brought Joel’s body back on October 10, 2013,” Myriam said.

Judging from the way his body was found, Myriam said it was possible her brother was hit by an avalanche. “He had his ice axe in his hand and was probably moving between two camps.”

“It is a moment of contentment for us when he has eventually buried gracefully at the foot of the mountain he loved so much,” Myriam said, adding, “For my brother, going to the mountain was like going home”.

Though this journey was a sad one for the Wischnewski family, they brought joy to the lives of others. As a gesture of their gratitude towards local villagers, the Wischnewskis brought with them solar energy panels that now illuminate nearly 40 houses in Rupal Village.

Published in Dawn, October 15th, 2015
 
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now that everest is closed to novices. K2 will quickly put a halt to a brief influx of climbers who would want to go there.
k2 is the one of the hardest of them all

It's the most difficult, not my words but the words of some of the greatest mountaineers ever to have lived. And I doubt any novice would ever even dream of going to K2. Like they say, "K2 is where the best climbers in the world come to die".
 
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It's the most difficult, not my words but the words of some of the greatest mountaineers ever to have lived. And I doubt any novice would ever even dream of going to K2. Like they say, "K2 is where the best climbers in the world come to die".
i am aware of its notorious reputation. thats why i said what i said.
 
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@krash @Gabriel92 @WAJsal @Nihonjin1051

Yes, indeed your right. Northern Pakistan has the greatest concentration of 8,000 plus peaks in the world and the largest glaciers outside of the poles. However for my money the Trango Towers just cannot be bettered in the majestic beauty.





trango towers - Google Search

Trango Towers - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


And yes the story of Slovenian climber Humer and his incredible rescue by Pak army Aviation is stuff of Hollywood movie.


The Trango's are indeed majestic. While The Unnamed Trango is the most famous, understandably due to its unnatural shape (the one in the pictures above except the first which isn't one of the Trangos), the Great Trango is the Highest. But for me it was the Cathedral (or the 3rd Trango) which wouldn't let me look away.

Great Trango Tower:

20070719174054!GreatTrango.jpg




The Cathedral,

feature2.jpg


In the picture below you can see the Great Trango behind the Cathedral on the left while the Unnamed is hidden,


376546.JPG


But if it's the granite pillars you want then we also have the Uli Biaho tower (the one in the first picture that you posted), the Muztagh tower and Bublimating (also known as the Ladyfinger Peak) among many others,

Uli Biaho Tower (the smaller spire that you see on the front-right of the tall Uli Biaho Peak behind),

611843_zpsxc3psrqc.jpg


Really gives you some perspective compared to the pic below, doesn't it?

1Uli-Biaho.jpg


Muztagh Tower,

6aaab76a7693a3259182182289d1bfc913312e9b.jpeg


QEH8sDUkxoO0N2gjjPBH4DoloS_RUAbeVj_YdeJKBishGs-tVa8RBpw1SzAfGcnPgI36oemXO7Cb0Ew-_Q8Tlw


Bublimating,

484961.jpg
 
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