Mark Horrell's Blog, page 49

January 15, 2014

Cerro San Lorenzo and the Patagonian summer

Trekking in the San Lorenzo Valley with Cerro San Lorenzo up ahead

Sometimes it's useful to have low expectations so that when the impossible doesn't happen, you're not disappointed. This is especially true in Patagonia, where the weather is temperamental. I didn't have high hopes of reaching the summit of 3706m Cerro San Lorenzo, but I was determined to give it a go. Continue reading →
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Published on January 15, 2014 08:05

January 8, 2014

Everest’s magic miracle highway

Yaks on the Magic Highway with Everest up ahead

When the 1922 expedition team set out, they already knew their approach to Everest lay up a side valley known as the East Rongbuk, but they knew little of the terrain they would find there. When they arrived they discovered a tumbling mass of jagged ice towers the size of buildings, but there was also a miraculous way through. Continue reading →
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Published on January 08, 2014 08:01

December 25, 2013

The first man ever to have got on top

Finbarr Saunders and his Double Entendres: Finbarr goes mountaineering

Here's some Christmas cheer for those of you who have been enjoying a plump turkey and a really good stuffing today. I tore the following page from the comic Viz when I was much younger than I am now, and it has been sitting quietly in a picture frame on my hallway wall for many years. I feel it's time it received wider audience. Continue reading →
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Published on December 25, 2013 08:05

December 18, 2013

Why would anyone spend Christmas in Patagonia?

The Northwest Face of Cerro San Lorenzo (Photo: Nikman / Summitpost)

There's not really a good time of year to visit Chilean Patagonia. Quite a lot of wind circulates the globe at that latitude and slams into its mountains with full force, producing severe and prolonged storms and freezing temperatures. So why will I be returning there this Christmas for the first time in ten years? Continue reading →
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Published on December 18, 2013 08:01

December 11, 2013

The Eighth Summit: the highest mountain in Central America

Volcan Tajumulco (4220m), the highest mountain in Central America, seen from near the trailhead

I thought my ascent of the highest mountain in Central America, an extinct 4220m volcano in Guatemala called Volcán Tajumulco, was going to be little more than a tick in the box, but that was far from being the case. Its summit was a real surprise, with a view as fine as any mountain I've climbed. Continue reading →
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Published on December 11, 2013 08:05

December 4, 2013

Frank Smythe is more interesting than George Mallory

Frank Smythe reveals his penchant for wild flowers

The headline 'Mallory's body discovered on Everest in 1936' appeared widely on social media sites last week. Had new revelations emerged about whether Mallory reached the summit of Everest? No, the real subject of the story wasn't George Mallory at all, but arguably a much more interesting character. Continue reading →
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Published on December 04, 2013 08:05

November 27, 2013

How not to do a mountaineering presentation

Sandy Allan talks about the first ascent of Nanga Parbat by the Mazeno Ridge

Climbing has as much in common with public speaking as it does with hosting a dinner party. I've seen some great lectures by mountaineering legends over the years, but last week I attended a lecture that was about as slick as a mountaineer's chin after two weeks in an ice cave. Continue reading →
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Published on November 27, 2013 08:04

November 20, 2013

Everest’s most extraordinary false summit claim

Rupee the stray pooch rescue from a garbage dump in India (Photo: Caters News Agency)

Last week the world's mainstream media were awash with stories about the world's first dog to climb Mount Everest. It was a heart-warming tale about a cute little doggie who had been rescued from a garbage dump in India and went on to become a pioneering canine mountaineer. But how on earth could it be true? Continue reading →
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Published on November 20, 2013 08:08

November 13, 2013

George Mallory was murdered … by Jeffrey Archer

George Mallory with his wife Ruth

In 1924 the mountaineering legend George Mallory vanished into mist on Everest's Northeast Ridge, never to be seen again. In 2009 and the bestselling novelist Jeffery Archer wrote a novel about it called Paths of Glory, but was it historically accurate? Let's have a look. Continue reading →
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Published on November 13, 2013 08:06

November 6, 2013

Carpe diem – Cheesewring, Cornwall

Granite tor on top of Cheesewring, Bodmin Moor, Cornwall

There are many things death can teach you, but one of the most rewarding is to seize the day because life can change in an instant. If there's something you always wanted to do then start making plans to do it, because otherwise it may pass you by. Continue reading →
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Published on November 06, 2013 08:03