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The following article was written for the Wits Mountain Club Journal. Wits
University in Johannesburg was where I did my undergraduate degree and their
Mountain Club was where I began climbing. This article mixes a description of
the summit day on Everest, 25 May 1996, with some of my pre-Everest climbing.
It was the morning of the 25th May, 1996.
I stepped onto the top of the south summit of Everest. The south summit, higher
than any other mountain in the world, higher than K2, it’s not a bad
achievement, I told myself. But could I go further?
I looked onto the ridge that ran towards the true summit. In a few shocked
seconds I absorbed several salient facts. It was a classic mountain ridge,
knife-edged, corniced, twisting gently up over a series of rises. I instantly
recognised the rock step on the ridge as the Hillary Step and realised that it
wasn’t as fearsome as I had imagined. I noticed the doll-like figures of Pemba
Sherpa and Ian Woodall approaching the step, and saw they weren’t as far ahead
of me as I had feared. I took in the knife-edged nature of the ridge and the
immense drops on either side of it and dismissed them as doable. And I realised
that although the summit was still not in sight it could not be too distant.
From deep within me incredible excitement began to well up.
I can do that, I thought, I can climb that ridge. I have the energy and the
ability. For the first time in the entire expedition standing on the summit of
Everest manifested itself for me as a concrete possibility, rather than just a
wishful daydream. All the weeks of uncertainty, of bad weather, of ill health,
were swept away in the awesome realisation that the goal lay so tantalisingly
close.
It was ten years and half a world away from orientation week at Wits in 1987. I
knew then I hated all physical activity, or what I knew of it in the form of
school sport. Nevertheless, I enjoyed the outdoors. I had spent the week
wandering around the university, looking at all the clubs on offer. I had
watched with disbelief the figures in old khaki shorts and shocking pink lycra
scaling the library wall, and listened to the pitch from the Mountain Club
chairman. I was not convinced, and was more interested in joining the
Exploration Society. But on the very last day, with the abandon born of spending
my father’s money, I decided to join the Mountain Club as well.
Crossing the ridge was slow, cautious work. The trail ran just to the left of
the knife-edge of the ridge, staying below the cornices which hung over the
Tibetan side, while staying above the unstable dinner plates of rock a few feet
down on the Nepalese side. The only flat ground was the footprints left by
previous climbers. I moved up the ridge almost as if I had put on mental
blinkers, seeing only the two footsteps ahead of me. With each step I sunk the
shaft of my iceaxe into the snow on the uphill side, using the head of the axe
to provide a handhold. It was, I thought, a little like walking along an
undulating plank. Not particularly difficult, as long as you ignored the fact
that there was an 8000 foot drop on the one side, and a 10 000 foot drop on the
other.
As a teenager even cable cars and glass-faced lifts frightened me. One classic
epic in my second year of climbing started on Boggle, 19, in Cedarburg.
Following the overhanging jam crack that comprised the third pitch blew my mind.
Terrified of swinging out into space if I fell off, I burrowed into the crack,
refused to move in any direction, and burst into tears. The leader, with
infinite patience, slowly coaxed me up, move by move. I rewarded that patience
by finally clawing my way over the top of the cliff and absolutely refusing to
do the 50 metre free abseil back into the kloof. To return to our campsite at
the top of Boulderkloof he and I were forced to walk all the way up to the
crossing at Upper Tonquani, and back down to Boulder, much of it in the dark,
without headtorches.
My steady progress along the ridge was broken by the sudden rock wall of the
Hillary Step. I stopped short, trying to refocus mentally from snow to rock. The
first section was relatively easy, involving some cautions scrambling up and
round big blocks. Then a cautious traverse across loose scree brought me to the
foot of an awkward, angled chimney. The floor was loose rock and snow, the
chimney just wide enough to wriggle up with a pack on. I worked my way up it,
suddenly conscious of the burden of the bulky clothing, the big oxygen set, the
enormous boots and crampons. Jammed awkwardly near the top I contemplated the
tangle of ancient fixed rope that hung down the back of the chimney. The
creeper-like mass consisted of bits of all sizes and colours, much bleached bone
white from years of extreme weather. Manoeuvring past it without getting it
tangled around my rucsac, crampons or iceaxe was a much of a challenge as
negotiating the wall itself. Finally I grabbed a huge bundle of it in one hand
and pulled, wriggled and flopped my way onto the summit of the block.
The first rock climb I ever did was Donderhoek Corner in Upper Tonquani, all of
grade 12. A classic chimney thrutch, it was an unprepossessing beginning. The
second was Hawk’s Eye, a daring 13. Although I coped well with the wall, it took
quite some talking to get me to climb over the nose of the hawk’s eye. I quite
enjoyed the climbing, was less impressed by the amount of flaming Sambuka being
thrown down everyone’s throats, and was far from convinced that this was an
experience to be repeated. However, I was impressed by a young and handsome
blonde called Mike Cartwright. And given that the only place he could be found
on the weekends was in the kloofs, I decided to give this climbing lark another
go.
I realised with amusement that although the exposure, and the danger,
was far greater here than on the slopes lower on the mountain, I felt no fear,
only exhilaration. I could see straight down the south-west face of Everest into
the Western Cwm, down to the tiny campsite over 2000 metres below me, our Camp
Two. We had come a long way since then, and a longer way still from home. Months
of planning had been followed by two weeks of walking just to get to the
mountain. And we were now into our ninth week on the mountain, and our third
attempt to reach the summit. The first two attempts had been halted by storms.
Already ten people had died attempting Everest this season. All the other
expeditions had left for home, many without summitting. The monsoon storms were
only days away. This was the very last chance to reach the summit.
My first great pronouncement on my climbing career was made half-way up a chossy
13 at Wilgepoort when I declared to my fellow follower, Linda Waldman, that
while I liked climbing, I had no interest in leading. She agreed. Within a few
months we were both leading, and within a few years, I joined Michelle Smith as
one of the only two women in South Africa to have led a 23.
My next great pronouncement came after Mike hauled me up Last Moon at Blouberg.
The first six pitches I had enjoyed, but then I was ready to go home.
Unfortunately we were only half way up. I declared myself a cragrat, interested
only in walk-ins under half an hour, and climbs of two pitches or less. Over the
next few years I climbed big walls all over the country, from Blouberg, to the
Drakensberg, to the Western Cape, and then moved onto 600 metre rockwalls in the
Alps.
My third great pronouncement was that, although big walls were great, you
wouldn’t catch me dead mountaineering. Too high, too cold, too dangerous....
I had been moving alone along the ridge for a long time. Pemba and Ian were out
of sight ahead of me, the other three climbers somewhere behind. Although I
mostly restricted my concentration to the few steps in front of me, blocking out
the vast empty spaces that surrounded the ridge, occasionally I allowed myself
the luxury of looking out across the myriad of snowy peaks below me. With no
other people in sight, and no signs of human existence visible below it was like
being the last person alive on earth.
Hundreds of mountains stretched off in every direction. On one side, I could see
down into the Kangshung glacier. The barren plains of Tibet were bordered by the
sweeping arc of the Himalayas. The giant pyramid of Makalu, fifth highest
mountain in the world, dominated, while the brooding hulk of Kangchenjunga,
third highest, sat on the distant horizon. Behind me stood Lhotse, fourth
highest, whose huge south-west face we had toiled up so many times on the way to
our fourth camp. Behind that was the valley we had walked up so many weeks ago,
and the myriad of smaller peaks that made up the Nepalese Himalayas. On the
other side the Himalayas stretched away again towards Pakistan, with the green
plains of India visible beyond them. The squat form of Cho Oyu, sixth highest,
and the only other 8 000er climbed by South Africans, commanded the view.
My first encounter with snowy peaks had been in the July vac when I went to the
Ruwenzori in Central Africa. As we approached the mountain, concealed in cloud,
the glaciers and rock peaks appeared suddenly out of the swirling mist, like a
divine revelation. I was hooked. Stephen Kelsey and I spent two weeks climbing
every summit in the range, not seeing another person in all that time.
The following July vac, for the second year running, I convinced the History
Department to allow me to write delayed exams. I headed for Bolivia, for my
first encounter with a real mountain range, the Andes, and with real altitude,
up to 6000 metres. I haired up the mountain, trying to keep up with the boys,
and promptly went down with altitude sickness. I watched, I learnt, I got cold,
tired and frightened and I loved every minute of it.
I swotted for the history exam on the plane back from South America. When I
bitched to one of my History professors that I never seemed to quite crack
firsts, he told me dryly that if I could bring to my History the passion I
expended on my climbing, I would have no problems.
Once above the Hillary Step the ridge widened slightly. It was still corniced
and very steep on the Tibetan side but slightly gentler on the left, before the
steep drop of the south-west face. It undulated gently, resulting in a long
series of false summits. Each crest looked as if it might be the final one, but
as I dragged my weary body onto the top I would find another one slightly
higher, slightly further on. The ridge seemed to run on interminably in front of
me. I felt as if I might be on a snowy treadmill, a ridge that ran for ever with
no conclusion, and I condemned to walk it for eternity.
I had anticipated the false summits, remembering reading about them in Stacey
Allison’s account of the first American female ascent of Everest. I tried to
suppress all expectations, to simply deal with the ridge step by step, rather
than face of inevitable disappointment that expectation of the summit would
bring.
The first mountaineering book I had ever read had been at the end of my first
year of rock climbing. Mike, myself, and most of the Witsies had decamped to a
flearidden flat in Fishhoek, to sample the delights of Western Cape climbing. We
grovelled up Jacob’s Ladder and Cableway Crag on Table Mountain and accounted
ourselves heroes. We scared ourselves silly climbing Energy Crisis at Wolfberg
and realised we had a lot to learn still. And, to pass a rainy day, I raided the
Fishhoek library and found a book about an all-women expedition to Annapurna.
I was fascinated by the concept of the challenge, and by the realisation that it
was not just a man’s world. Although not yet believing I could do such a thing
myself, the first seed of my captivation with mountaineering had been planted.
Some time later I sat in fascination once more in Senate House Basement,
listening to British mountaineer Stephen Venables tell the story of his ascent
of Everest, the first British ascent without oxygen. This caught my attention
far more than any English lecture in the same venue ever had.
When I left Wits at the end of 1991 I had a degree in History, History of Art
and Classical Civilization. I’d had great fun getting it but had no idea what to
do with it. I dithered between honours in History and a year climbing in Europe.
Not a hard choice to make, I spent the British winter selling climbing equipment
in London and the next summer camped in the French Alps. I travelled alone,
finding partners as I went, climbing bolted rock in the south of France, huge
granite faces above Chamonix, frozen waterfalls in Switzerland, rock, ice, snow,
mixed. And everywhere people spoke with awe of the distant Himalaya, of the
great mountains of the world.
I moved slowly up yet another small rise and onto the top of it. And stopped
short, aware of two figures and a sudden blaze of colour. Ian and Pemba were
seated in the snow with something behind them that to my puzzled gaze looked
rather like a ruined tent. After hours in a virtually monochrome world of blue
sky, white snow and black rock the medley of red, yellow and green was
disconcerting.
Then Pemba turned and saw me. As a huge grin spread across his face, he stood up
and began to wave both arms and his iceaxe in the air.
That’s it, I thought. That is the summit of Everest.
For the second time that day I was filled with an incredible sense of
excitement. At last I knew that not only was I capable of climbing Everest, but
that I had actually done it. Only 10 more metres. I never imagined that it would
get to this.
The last slog up the final slope seemed interminable. I was very tired, stopping
to rest every four or five steps. I walked slowly towards the blaze of colour,
which resolved itself into a pile of prayer flags covering a metal tripod.
Ian spoke into the radio: “And then there were three.”
A ragged cheer came over the radio from base camp.
I had reached many summits over the years - up the south-east arête to the
summit of Sentinel in the Drakensberg, jumping on top of the summit cairn to
feel my hair standing on end from the static of the electric storms; on the
summit of the granite monolith of Spitzkoppe in Nambia, to stare over miles of
desert; on the summit of Monteseel, all of 10 metres higher than where I had
started; on the summit of Mont Blanc du Tacul in the Alps as the sun rose.
And I had failed on as many in those years. Turned back from the Western
Injisuti Triplet in the ‘Berg by driving rain; hopelessly lost in the mists of
the Ruwenzori; retreating from tottering choss on Illampu in the Andes.
I sunk down onto my knees beside Ian and hugged him, barely able to feel the man
beneath the piles of clothing we were both wearing. I turned to hug Pemba,
acutely conscious of the pleasure of being able to share the moment with friends
and team mates.
Ian handed Pemba the camera and we clambered onto the summit itself, no bigger
than a table top, sloping gently and then increasingly steeply down on all
sides. We perched next to the tripod and flags, holding out Ian’s iceaxe with
the Nepalese and South African flags hanging from it.
I looked down at the multi-coloured blaze of the South African flag with a
shiver of excitement.
Long ago I had stood in my school hall, mouthing the words of Die Stem and
wondering what it would be like to live in a country where one was actually
proud to be a citizen, where the anthem and the flag really meant something.
As the years passed I experienced the frustration of a country that seemed as if
it would never change, the fear and adrenaline of Wits students taunting the
riot police, the despair of my male climbing friends as they sought way to avoid
army call-up, either in endless further degrees or in skipping the country.
The changes in the country are all linked in my mind to climbing. I came down
from climbing Mpongwane to find the ANC had been unbanned. On the day Mandela
was released I was on a train back to Rondebosch after a day of climbing on the
Lion’s Head Granite with Linda. In the excitement of reading the news reports we
missed our station and landed up in Muizenburg.
As I looked down at what was for a brief moment the highest flag in the
world, I was proud to be South African, and proud to have forged a tiny place in
the history of my country. Although the three of us seemed so alone on that
summit, back in Gauteng thousands of South Africans were listening over Radio
702 as I spoke from the top of the world to my mother in her Johannesburg living
room. That summit was the result of help and support from people all over Nepal
and South Africa. We took the South African flag down with us, to return to President Mandela,
who, as our expedition patron, had given it to us. But I was reluctant to leave
no trace of South Africa’s brief passage across the top of the world. I took the
South African flag badge that was pinned to my fleece jacket, and placed it in
the snow. A tiny bit of South Africa still lies up there somewhere.
Yet the expedition was not over. Every step taken on the way up had to be taken
again on the way down before we were safely off the mountain. I knew the risks
of descent, the chances of making a mistake due to tiredness or simply lack of
concentration. With the drive for the summit gone, all that remained to keep us
moving was the survival instinct. As we moved down the ridge we passed the body of New Zealand expedition leader
Rob Hall, one of the victims of the great storm of two weeks previously, where
eight climbers had lost their lives, while we had been pinned down in our Camp
Four, at 8000 metres. I stood by him for a few minutes, a tiny personal tribute to the life, the
achievement and the tragic death of this talented climber. It was so strange
that we could be both be climbing the same mountain and yet have such radically
different experiences.
We crossed slowly over the south summit and down onto the steep ridge below. We
passed Ang Dorje Sherpa and Jangmu Sherpa, who went on to reach the summit an
hour after I had. Then Bruce Herrod, the expedition photographer, became visible
below us, moving up the steep ground above the rock step. As we balanced
precariously on the ridge he pulled me into his arms for huge bear hug. He was
so pleased that we had done it, that following the weeks of work that we had all
put into the enterprise, the expedition had achieved its goal. We suggested he
return with us, but he was adamant that he wanted to go on. With perfect
weather, plenty of oxygen, a radio, many hours of light left, it was not an
unreasonable decision. After extensive discussion we wished him luck and he went
on up. Bruce called us from the summit when he finally reached it. The joy and pride in
his voice was all we had to carry with us in the long hours that followed, as we
waited for the return that never came. Bruce vanished on the summit ridge of
Everest.
Like all beginners I had spent the first months of my climbing career assuring
my parents that this was a totally safe sport, and they need have no worries.
The years that passed revealed the lie behind that. I remember the day that
Grant Murray, climbing on the OMSH wall to demonstrate to Orientation week
beginners how safe climbing was, tried to lower off on his gearloop. It broke
and as he crashed into the floor his ankle broke as well.
As the years passed a succession of lives were given up to the challenge: Gill
Graafland, Martin Seegers, Deiter Lubber, Dave Cheesemond, Erwin Muller, Phil
Lloyd, Bev Opperman, Greg Lacey. I remember the the phone call that told me my two climbing partners from the
Bolivian Andes expedition, Stephen Kelsey and Graham Whittaker, had died
together on a mountain in Peru. I nearly gave up mountaineering then, to return
to my rock-climbing roots. No summit can be worth a human life. But why then do
we not stay at home? Why not avoid all of the many risks involved in climbing?
In the end I realised that sometimes it is the risks that make life worth
living, that bring us an intensity of experience that no amount of Johannesburg
suburbia ever will.
In the two long days of climbing that followed to get us and all our kit down to
the safety of base camp, emotions oscillated like a rollercoaster. The triumph
and the tragedy swirled round each other as we sought to find a perspective on
the experience. The friendships made on the mountain carried us through the
strain of the criticisms that enveloped us from the arm-chair critics.
As the small group of people that had made up the First South African Everest
Expedition walked down the Dudh Kosi valley, between some of the great mountains
of the world, we were already discussing future possibilities, other
expeditions.
On 25 May 1995 Ian Woodall, Pemba Sherpa, Cathy O’Dowd, Ang Dorje Sherpa and
Jangmu Sherpa reached the summit of Everest on the First South African Everest
Expedition. Nawang Sherpa reached 8000 metres and Deshun Deysel reached 6500
metres. This article appears in edited form in the Wits Mountain Club Journal 1996.
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