Choada_Boy Posted July 31, 2018 Posted July 31, 2018 Anyone else been following this? Holy shit!! https://www.planetmountain.com/en/news/alpinism/alexander-gukov-rescued-on-latok-1.html Quote
JasonG Posted July 31, 2018 Posted July 31, 2018 Now that is amazing. I thought he was a dead man. That must have been exciting to have his anchor blow apart while he was being pulled by the helo. Quote
ScaredSilly Posted July 31, 2018 Posted July 31, 2018 A one shot short haul. Good thing his anchor was marginal. Lucky boy. Quote
Choada_Boy Posted July 31, 2018 Author Posted July 31, 2018 I remember a similar thing a bunch of years ago, on Nanga Parpat’s Rupal Face. I watched this one play out for the last week or so, on mountain.ru. I also figured he was a goner, bur still held out hope, until late last night. I got chills down my spine when they posted: “Saved!” Russian climbers are hard dudes, though, so I am not too surprised. They almost summited, again, this was their second attempt. His partner fell with most of their gear. F#ck that! Quote
Rad Posted July 31, 2018 Posted July 31, 2018 Wow. I'd also read the accounts from this past weekend and guessed that he was toast. So great to hear a happy ending in the mountains. Sounds like he could have been torn apart like a medieval tortue rack victim if the anchor had been any stronger. Phew! Maybe the mountain spirits are telling him to take up golf... Quote
dberdinka Posted July 31, 2018 Posted July 31, 2018 3 hours ago, Choada_Boy said: I remember a similar thing a bunch of years ago, on Nanga Parpat’s Rupal Face. I watched this one play out for the last week or so, on mountain.ru. I also figured he was a goner, bur still held out hope, until late last night. I got chills down my spine when they posted: “Saved!” Russian climbers are hard dudes, though, so I am not too surprised. They almost summited, again, this was their second attempt. His partner fell with most of their gear. F#ck that! So is it true they were using dulfersitz because a rappel device was too heavy to carry? Seems a bit unreasonable to expect someone to risk their neck to save you when you cut your margins that thin. And then to leave yourself anchored to both chopper and wall. Yikes. Quote
BK9 Posted July 31, 2018 Posted July 31, 2018 I had also read that they were using the dulfersitz rappel. What a horrible situation to be in after watching your partner perish. Glad he was able to be rescued, you think he'll give it another go? Quote
JasonG Posted August 1, 2018 Posted August 1, 2018 52 minutes ago, dberdinka said: So is it true they were using dulfersitz because a rappel device was too heavy to carry? WHAT??!! Quote
layton Posted August 1, 2018 Posted August 1, 2018 (edited) Taken from AAI: There are a few mental tools that we use when we instruct people how to climb safer and better. One of these is the use of acronyms to remember the components of safe anchor systems. Fortunately, these are becoming part of the average climber's vocabulary. The three that are most commonly used are SERENE + ERNEST + HELICOPTER. Here's what they stand for: Solid (or strong)EqualizedRedundantEfficientNoExtension + EqualizedRedunantNoExtensionSolid (or strong)Timely + Helicopter-proof Edited August 1, 2018 by layton Quote
Choada_Boy Posted August 1, 2018 Author Posted August 1, 2018 (edited) I read that they left their rappel devices at the Bone Cairn. Edited August 1, 2018 by Choada_Boy Quote
G-spotter Posted August 1, 2018 Posted August 1, 2018 From Supertopo: " pell climber Moscow Aug 1, 2018 - 12:15am PT We call it dulfer in Russia no matter which exact rope descending technique is used. Correct translation is rappel/rappeling. Also NO COLLUSION " Quote
Stefan Posted August 3, 2018 Posted August 3, 2018 Wow. On so many levels. One. The attempt. Ballsy. Two. He lives for many days after his partner dies. Three. The rescue. Quote
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