The Ghosts of K2 Quotes
The Ghosts of K2: The Epic Saga of the First Ascent
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Mick Conefrey1,094 ratings, 4.24 average rating, 126 reviews
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The Ghosts of K2 Quotes
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“He had died in silence as he had lived,’ wrote expedition photographer Mario Fantin, ‘almost tip-toeing out of life in order not to disturb the people in the tent next to him.’1”
― Ghosts of K2: The Race for the Summit of the World's Most Deadly Mountain
― Ghosts of K2: The Race for the Summit of the World's Most Deadly Mountain
“Each man needed about 2 lbs of flour a day to make chapattis. Over the course of ten days, that meant 500 men would consume around 10 tons. In”
― Ghosts of K2: The Race for the Summit of the World's Most Deadly Mountain
― Ghosts of K2: The Race for the Summit of the World's Most Deadly Mountain
“As ever, the challenge was not just to get high on the mountain, but to haul up hundreds of kilos of supplies and equipment and set up a ladder of camps to the summit.”
― Ghosts of K2: The Race for the Summit of the World's Most Deadly Mountain
― Ghosts of K2: The Race for the Summit of the World's Most Deadly Mountain
“Deep down everyone suspected that Art was unlikely to survive for more than a few days and that any rescue attempt would endanger them all, but what were the alternatives? Abandon him? Stay and watch him die?”
― Ghosts of K2: The Race for the Summit of the World's Most Deadly Mountain
― Ghosts of K2: The Race for the Summit of the World's Most Deadly Mountain
“Fritz was looking forward to the challenge but in the end he was given something much more testing: a huge storm. For eight days Camp 4 was savaged by high winds and freezing temperatures. Fritz had survived similar storms on Nanga Parbat in 1932, but the others had never experienced anything like this. When the expedition chronicler George Sheldon wrote an article about their attempt on K2 six months later, the strange mixture of terror and monotony was still vivid in his mind: We would lie in our sleeping bags swathed in several sets of underwear, wind-suits, boots, gloves and hats. At any moment we expected to be blown into nearby Tibet. We had nothing to read except the labels on the food cans. A meal became an event of tremendous importance… the eternal banging and cracking of the tent, in the seventy-mile-an-hour gale, made us virtually psychopathic”
― Ghosts of K2: The Race for the Summit of the World's Most Deadly Mountain
― Ghosts of K2: The Race for the Summit of the World's Most Deadly Mountain
“The concept of ‘acceptable risk’ was, of course, at the heart of the argument.”
― Ghosts of K2: The Race for the Summit of the World's Most Deadly Mountain
― Ghosts of K2: The Race for the Summit of the World's Most Deadly Mountain
“This was a key moment in the expedition. In years to come, the crack would become known as ‘House’s Chimney’, K2’s equivalent of the ‘Hillary Step’ on Everest. Future generations of climbers would marvel at the skill, and guts, of the man who first climbed it.”
― Ghosts of K2: The Race for the Summit of the World's Most Deadly Mountain
― Ghosts of K2: The Race for the Summit of the World's Most Deadly Mountain
“K2 had been climbed, not conquered.”
― The Ghosts of K2: The Epic Saga of the First Ascent
― The Ghosts of K2: The Epic Saga of the First Ascent
“in true mountaineering, the summit is not everything, it is only part.16”
― Ghosts of K2: The Race for the Summit of the World's Most Deadly Mountain
― Ghosts of K2: The Race for the Summit of the World's Most Deadly Mountain
“I felt that all my previous life had reached a climax in these hours of intense struggle against nature… in those minutes at 26,000 feet on K2, I reached depths of feeling which I can never reach again.”
― Ghosts of K2: The Race for the Summit of the World's Most Deadly Mountain
― Ghosts of K2: The Race for the Summit of the World's Most Deadly Mountain
“Down at the end, alone, detached from all the other mountains soared up K2, the indisputable sovereign of the region, gigantic and solitary, hidden from human sight by innumerable ranges, jealously defended by a vast throng of vassal peaks, protected from invasion by miles and miles of glaciers. Even to get within sight of it demands so much contrivance, so much marching, such a sum of labour.”
― Ghosts of K2: The Race for the Summit of the World's Most Deadly Mountain
― Ghosts of K2: The Race for the Summit of the World's Most Deadly Mountain
“Instead of the monotonous horizons of the far north, all the landscape around K2 has the richest variety of design, the greatest majesty of form and an infinite diversity of plane and perspective… The scale is far too vast for one to receive an impression of the whole at once. The eye can only take in single portions.”
― Ghosts of K2: The Race for the Summit of the World's Most Deadly Mountain
― Ghosts of K2: The Race for the Summit of the World's Most Deadly Mountain
“Europe’s ranges looked Lilliputian in comparison. Eckenstein’s men crossed vast glaciers, covered in huge rocks, riven by streams up to 100 ft wide. In Switzerland a typical glacier might culminate with a rocky terminal moraine a few hundred feet high, but here, according to Crowley, some of them soared up to 1500 ft.”
― Ghosts of K2: The Race for the Summit of the World's Most Deadly Mountain
― Ghosts of K2: The Race for the Summit of the World's Most Deadly Mountain
“It might sound strange, it might sound irrational, but in extraordinary situations people often behave in extraordinary ways. Elaborate conspiracy theories are just an attempt to bring order to the chaos of life. Reality is frequently much stranger.”
― The Ghosts of K2: The Epic Saga of the First Ascent
― The Ghosts of K2: The Epic Saga of the First Ascent
