Nanga Parbat / Diamir

Nanga Parbat / Diamir

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You can find a list of mountaineers who attempted to climb the mountain in the Notes section of the page:

https://www.facebook.com/notes/3515687691829065/

Nanga Parbat (8125 m) is the 9th highest mountain on Earth, with its Main Summit being one of the 14 eight-thousanders. Its massif lies in the Gilgit-Baltistan province (former Northern Areas of Pakistan), and forms the border between the districts of Astore to the East, and Chilas (now Diamer or Diamir) to the West. Nanga Parbat is situated at the furthermost Western end of the Himalayas in much

10/08/2020

42nd! 🗻

On this day, exactly 40 years ago, Reinhold Messner made his second ascent of Nanga Parbat in an unprecedented style - solo, unaided from the base to the main summit, without the usage of supplementary oxygen, on a new route, on the exposed right-hand side of the Diamir (NW) Face, which has never been repeated! On 6th August he left the Base Camp, where only the doctor and the obligatory liaison officer were accompanying him, and reached the summit in the afternoon three days later - on 9th August 1978. The day before the final attack an earthquake caused the campsite he had left not long ago to be swept away, after an enormous serac crumbled down, not only destroying his camp, but also a large section of the route beneath, thus deeming his way back - following his own steps - virtually impossible. He descended via a far more dangerous and exposed line, after suffering a day of extremely bad weather on the wall, arriving in Base Camp on 11th August. Since then the route bears his name - Messner Route, or alternatively - Diamir Face Direct Route. The line sits to the right of the Mummery Rib, which the great Albert F. Mummery chose for his early attempt in the distant 1895, negotiating series of manacing overhanging seracs, threatening to crush down in any moment.

Messner's effort was part of greater series of solo attempts on that same wall, in which he performed three separate unsuccessful expeditions for reaching the summit. These were all organized in the 70s - the years following the disaster with his younger brother Günther Messner on 27th June 1970, when they were both forced to descend the same Diamir Face, after climbing the Rupal Face Direct Route the day before (for the first time ever), and thus completing the first traverse of the mountain. Günther - exhausted - fell behind and was caught by an avalanche, disappearing into the darkness, therefore Reinhold's consequent attempts were mainly driven by desire to find his brother's remains. They were discovered much later - on 17th July 2005, at an altitude of 4600 m.

This was the first climbed eight-thousander for both. Reinhold Messner later went on to become the first climber to reach all fourteen highest mountains on the planet, sixteen years later - in 1986. Just three months before this solo success on Nanga Parbat in 1978, on 8th May he successfully climbed Everest without the usage of supplementary oxygen - for the first time ever. His partner in that feat of heroism was Peter Habeler, both as members of an Austrian expedition, following the classic Western Cwm Route. A feat he repeated two years later - on 20th August 1980 - this time solo, unaided, even opening a new route on the North Face via the Great (Norton) Couloir, in three days, in the middle of the monsoon season! It was described in his book "The Crystal Horizon: Everest – the first solo ascent" (1989).

09/04/2020

Speechless!

Descent of Main Summit by Stefi Troguet. 🗻

And a powerful message to us all!

Instagram Photos 05/02/2019

Aerial view of Rakhiot Peak (7070, left), East Peak or Silver Fang (7597, center), and Northeast Peak (7535, right) with Silver Plateau behind them, all seen from the North.

Instagram Photos 05/02/2019

Magnificent aerial view of the Main Summit from the North.

10/08/2018

On this day, exactly 40 years ago, Reinhold Messner made his second ascent of Nanga Parbat in an unprecedented style - solo, unaided from the base to the main summit, without the usage of supplementary oxygen, on a new route, on the exposed right-hand side of the Diamir (NW) Face, which has never been repeated! On 6th August he left the Base Camp, where only the doctor and the obligatory liaison officer were accompanying him, and reached the summit in the afternoon three days later - on 9th August 1978. The day before the final attack an earthquake caused the campsite he had left not long ago to be swept away, after an enormous serac crumbled down, not only destroying his camp, but also a large section of the route beneath, thus deeming his way back - following his own steps - virtually impossible. He descended via a far more dangerous and exposed line, after suffering a day of extremely bad weather on the wall, arriving in Base Camp on 11th August. Since then the route bears his name - Messner Route, or alternatively - Diamir Face Direct Route. The line sits to the right of the Mummery Rib, which the great Albert F. Mummery chose for his early attempt in the distant 1895, negotiating series of manacing overhanging seracs, threatening to crush down in any moment.

Messner's effort was part of greater series of solo attempts on that same wall, in which he performed three separate unsuccessful expeditions for reaching the summit. These were all organized in the 70s - the years following the disaster with his younger brother Günther Messner on 27th June 1970, when they were both forced to descend the same Diamir Face, after climbing the Rupal Face Direct Route the day before (for the first time ever), and thus completing the first traverse of the mountain. Günther - exhausted - fell behind and was caught by an avalanche, disappearing into the darkness, therefore Reinhold's consequent attempts were mainly driven by desire to find his brother's remains. They were discovered much later - on 17th July 2005, at an altitude of 4600 m.

This was the first climbed eight-thousander for both. Reinhold Messner later went on to become the first climber to reach all fourteen highest mountains on the planet, sixteen years later - in 1986. Just three months before this solo success on Nanga Parbat in 1978, on 8th May he successfully climbed Everest without the usage of supplementary oxygen - for the first time ever. His partner in that feat of heroism was Peter Habeler, both as members of an Austrian expedition, following the classic Western Cwm Route. A feat he repeated two years later - on 20th August 1980 - this time solo, unaided, even opening a new route on the North Face via the Great (Norton) Couloir, in three days, in the middle of the monsoon season! It was described in his book "The Crystal Horizon: Everest – the first solo ascent" (1989).

1953 Expedition 03/07/2018

Today we mark the 65th anniversary of this gigantic achievement - the premiere ascent of Nanga Parbat via the Rakhiot flank by Hermann Buhl, solo and without the usage of supplementary oxygen! It was the third eight-thousander to be climbed - three years after Annapurna and just 35 days after Everest. This tremendous feat has subsequently inspired generations of high altitude climbers all over the world to reach for the fourteen highest peaks on the planet!

Rakhiot Face, German-Austrian W***y-Merkl Memorial Expedition, K.M.Herrligkoffer, First Ascent

Photos from Simone Moro's post 13/04/2016

Simone Moro about the already famous pitons at the summit, through the years (2001-2016).

The North Face: Nanga Parbat Winter Expedition 2013 [TEASER] 01/12/2013

That would be Simone Moro's third attempt on Nanga Parbat. First he tried a new route on Diamir face in 2003, when Jean-Cristophe Lafaille succeeded in completing the task (Kinshofer, variant 5), as part of the Kazakh International expedition. Then he ventured on a winter attempt in 2012 together with Denis Urubko, again trying to open a new route - the Messner-Eisendle-Thomaseth one from 2000, when maximum altitude of 7500 m was reached back then. Extreme weather conditions and high avalanche risk last year stopped them at 6600 m as well.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qm38JHWaejc

The North Face: Nanga Parbat Winter Expedition 2013 [TEASER] Exploration remains as appealing as ever, it is still about joy and fear, excitement and desolation, about reaching the top of a mountain or about the need t...

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Himalayas
Astor
CHILAS