Rodchester Posted October 24, 2002 Posted October 24, 2002 AMERICAN CLIMBING TEAM MAKES FIRST ASCENT OF TIBET’S SEPU KANGRI (22,82 FEET) DURING SNOW STORM LHASA, TIBET - A seven-member team of mountaineers from the United States were successful in making the first ascent of the highly coveted Mount Sepu Kangri in the Nyangchen Tanglha Himalaya Mountains. Expedition Leader and renowned ski mountaineer, Mark Newcomb (Victor, ID) and Carlos Buhler (Bozeman, MT), a veteran of twenty-five Himalayan expeditions, reached the 22,821 foot summit at 10:00 AM, October 2nd during a fierce snow storm. "Sepu's weather has been wild and unpredictable throughout our entire expedition. When we left our high camp for the summit, the skies were clear, but by 8:00 AM, we were hit with a 'full-conditions' storm," explains Newcomb. Buhler adds, "When we reached the summit plateau, our situation was growing more serious by the minute. We were caught in heavy cloud and wind driven snow. We knew that our descent was going to be tedious andrisky". Despite the difficult conditions and poor visibility, Newcomb and Buhler arrived back at their 20,830 foot Camp 3 by 2:00 PM. The monsoon weather, which lasted longer than expected this season, brought high winds, and serious avalanche conditions to the area earlier in the climb. Despite the demanding conditions, all team members reached Camp 2 (19,200 feet) or higher on Sepu, using state-of-the-art, ski-mountaineering equipment to ascend between Camps 1 (17,700 feet) and 3. The team members were; Carina Osteberg (Victor, ID); Kate Clayton (Telluride, CO); Frank Pickell (Boulder, CO); Jordan Campbell (Moab, UT); and renowned adventure photographer, Ace Kvale (Telluride, CO). Kvale, a veteran of numerous ski-mountaineering expeditions to the world’s great ranges, explained, "We chose skis as the method to rapidly ascend the critical glacier terrain between Camps 1 and Camp 3, and to get us off the mountain quickly. In the end, our strategy worked.” Well known British mountaineers, Chris Bonington and Charles Clarke, first explored the Sepu Kangri massif in 1996. They led two subsequent attempts on the mountain; the first in 1997 and the second in 1998. In the second expedition, 2 members of their team reached the Southwest Shoulder of the mountain but were forced to turn back in a storm about 500 vertical feet from the summit. In their book, “Tibet's Secret Mountain, The Triumph of Sepu Kangri”, Bonington and Clarke document their 16 year relationship with the elusive and difficult peak. In retrospect, Bonington describes Sepu Kangri as perhaps, for him, a "Last Great Climb". The Sepu Kangri Team, sponsored by Marmot, Gore-Tex, Powder Magazine, and Texture Media, will post information and details about their ascent at www.climbsepu.com after the team returns to the United States later this month. [ 10-23-2002, 10:11 PM: Message edited by: Rodchester ] Quote
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