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Reinhold Messner:A legend


  • 2 years ago · Quote · #1

    aristeidis9

    Reinhold Messner (born September 17, 1944) is an Italian mountaineer and explorer from South Tyrol, often cited as the greatest mountain climber of all time. He is renowned for making the first solo ascents of Mount Everest without supplemental oxygen and for being the first climber to ascend all fourteen "eight-thousanders" (peaks over 8,000 metres above sea level). He is the author of at least 63 books (in German, 1970–2006), many of which have been translated into other languages.

    Born in Brixen, Italy, Messner is a native speaker of German and also fluent in Italian.He grew up in Villnöß and spent his early years climbing in the Alps and fell in love with the Dolomites. His father, Josef Messner, was a teacher. He was also very strict and sometimes severe with Reinhold. Josef led Reinhold to his first summit at the age of five. Reinhold had eight brothers and one sister: he later climbed with his brother Günther and made Arctic crossings with his brother Hubert.

    When Reinhold was 13, he began climbing with his brother Günther, age 11. By the time Reinhold and Günther were in their early twenties, they were among Europe's best climbers.

    Since the sixties, and inspired by Hermann Buhl, he was one of the first and most enthusiastic supporters of alpine style mountaineering in the Himalayas, which consisted of climbing with very light equipment and a minimum of external help. Messner considered the usual expedition style ("siege tactics") disrespectful towards nature and mountains.

    His first major Himalayan climb in 1970, the unclimbed Rupal face of Nanga Parbat, turned out to be a tragic success. Both he and his brother Günther Messner reached the summit, but Günther died two days later on the descent of the Diamir face. Reinhold lost six toes, which had become badly frostbitten during the climb and required amputation.Reinhold has been severely criticized for persisting on this climb with an insufficiently experienced Günther. The 2010 movie Nanga Parbat by Joseph Vilsmaier is based on his account of the events

    While Messner and Peter Habeler were noted for fast ascents in the Alps of the Eiger North Wall, standard route (10 hours) and Les Droites (8 hours), his 1975 Gasherbrum I first ascent of a new route took 3 days. This was unheard of at the time.

    In the 1970s, Messner championed the cause for ascending Mount Everest without supplementary oxygen, saying that he would do it "by fair means" or not at all.In 1978, he reached the summit of Everest with Habeler.This was the first time anyone had been that high without bottled oxygen and Messner and Habeler proved what certain doctors, specialists, and mountaineers thought impossible. It changed mountaineering forever. He repeated the feat, without Habeler, from the Tibetan side in 1980, during the monsoon season. This was Everest's first solo summit.

    In 1978, he made a solo ascent of the Diamir face of Nanga Parbat. In 1986, Messner became the first to complete all fourteen eight-thousanders (peaks over 8,000 metres above sea level).Messner has crossed Antarctica on skis with Arved Fuchs. He has written over 60 booksabout his experiences, a quarter of which have been translated. He was featured in the 1984 film The Dark Glow of the Mountains by Werner Herzog.

    Messner today carries on a diversified business related to his mountaineering skills. From 1999 to 2004, he held political office as a Member of the European Parliament for the Italian Green Party (Federazione dei Verdi). He was also among the founders of Mountain Wilderness, an international NGO dedicated to the protection of mountains worldwide.

    In 2004 he completed a 2000-kilometer expedition through the Gobi desert. He now mainly devotes himself to the Messner Mountain Museum, of which he is the founder.

    The fourteen 8,000+ peaks

    source:wikipedia

  • 2 years ago · Quote · #2

    aristeidis9

    Suppose Italy must be proud for this guy..

  • 2 years ago · Quote · #3

    SavageLotus

    Yeah he's interesting - outdoor adventurer extraordinaire. There are many people who climb above the death zone now without supplimental oxygen. He showed us it could be done. I persoanllythink they are really taking their lives into their own hands, but anybody who is willing to climb Everest or K2 are kind of danger fiends anywaySmile


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