Dynatech-elevation

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Archivos de la categoría: 'ZONE Dynatech Expeditions'

Am vergangenen 25. März wurden in der Fa. Dynatech die Expeditionsteilnehmer Adrián Uclés, Raúl Martínez und Fran Lorente in Anerkennung ihrer im letzten Jahr anlässlich der Expedition DYNATECH – ALPAMAYO 2010 erbrachten herausragenden sportlichen Leistungen feierlich geehrt.

Bei besagter Expedition gelang es ihnen, unsere Flagge auf dem Gipfel des als “schönsten Berg der Welt” bezeichneten Alpamayo und ferner auf zwei weiteren Gipfeln, dem Pisco und dem Vallunaraju – alle in der Cordillera Blanca, den nördlichen Anden Perus gelegen – anzubringen.

Der Akt begann mit einem Mittagessen in den Einrichtungen des Unternehmens; anschließend wurden den Expeditionsteilnehmern zum Gedenken an die Expedition Glasstatuen überreicht. Fran Lorente konnte aus Gründen, die nicht in seiner Macht lagen, nicht an der Ehrung teilnehmen; besagte Statue wurde stellvertretend von Carlos Pauner in Empfang genommen.

VON LINKS NACH RECHTS: ADRIÁN UCLÉS, FRANCISCO MATEO, CARLOS PAUNER, RAÚL MARTÍNEZ.

VON LINKS NACH RECHTS: ADRIÁN UCLÉS, FRANCISCO MATEO, CARLOS PAUNER, RAÚL MARTÍNEZ.

Im Anschluss daran erwies uns der berühmte Himalaya-Bergsteiger Carlos Pauner die Ehre, die nächste Herausforderung der Dynatech-Expeditionsteilnehmer vorzustellen, die für den Juli dieses Jahres geplant ist:

Die Ersteigung des Gipfels des Gasherbrum II.

Der Gasherbrum II, auch K4 genannt, ist ein 8.035 m hoher Berg, gelegen im pakistanischen Teil des Karakorum; es handelt sich um einen der 14 Berge, die höher als 8.000m sind. Die Expedition sieht vor, über den sogenannten “französischen Weg” aufzusteigen, der 1975 eröffnet wurde und den noch kein Spanier betreten hat.

Die Expedition DYNATECH – GASHERBRUM II 2011 ist eine extreme Herausforderung: Ein Gipfel in mehr als 8000m Höhe und ein Aufstieg über einen anderen Weg als den normalen, auf dem auf keine andere Expedition getroffen werden wird und so auch keine Hilfe oder Unterstützung von außen zu erwarten ist.

Carlos Pauner ( www.carlospauner.com ) gab dem Dynatech-Personal nähere Einzelheiten zum Projekt bekannt. Er selbst ist ganz nahe an der Erfüllung seines eigenen Ziels, nämlich die Gipfel der 14 höchsten Bergen der Welt zu besteigen, die alle über der Achttausendmeter-Grenze liegen. Bis jetzt hat er 10 geschafft; zur Zeit befindet er sich bereits im Basislager des Lhotse (8.516m), um seinen elften Gipfel zu erklimmen. Wir von Dynatech wünschen ihm viel Erfolg und eine sichere Rückkehr.

Nach der Besteigung des Lhotse hat er dann ungefähr einen Monat Zeit, sich von den Anstrengungen zu erholen, um anschließend die Abreise zum K4 vorzubereiten. Zu diesem Zeitpunkt werden sich dann unsere Expeditionsteilnehmer Adrián Uclés und Raúl Martínez (Fran kann dieses Mal nicht teilnehmen) Carlos anschließen, um diese Herausforderung gemeinsam zu meistern. Außer unserem eigenen Team kann Carlos dieses Mal auf Javier Pérez, Isabel Santolaria und Juan Carlos Cirera zählen; sie alle stammen aus Aragonien, womit sich die Expedition zu 100% aus Personen aus unserer Region zusammensetzt.

Sobald es neue Nachrichten gibt, werden wir Sie informieren.

1 August, 2010

VIEW OF THE ALPAMAYO SUMMIT (5.947 m)

VIEW OF THE ALPAMAYO SUMMIT (5.947 m)

RAUL MARTINEZ Y ADRIAN UCLES ON THE ALPAMAYO SUMMIT(5.947 m)

RAUL MARTINEZ Y ADRIAN UCLES ON THE ALPAMAYO SUMMIT (5.947 m)

We just got to Huaraz, now are the 21 h PM and we are very tired. Broadly speaking, we can say that everything went as planned.

We arrived at BC on the 28th, Day Celebrations in Peru. The next day we moved from CB to CII, directly, without sleeping on the CI. Ten hours of activity to exceed 1100 m.
Continue reading “Ankunft auf dem gipfel (5.947 m)” »

Leider ist der Eintrag nur auf Español verfügbar.

Today we got to Base Camp, a little tired; the journey here was very long. On the way we met Igor, a Basque who intends to travel around Peru for three months; but for now he has the same goal as us, this is the second time he is trying to reach it.

He arrived at Base Camp with the intention of joining another roped team. We gave him the opportunity to join us, we think that being a double roped team increases our chances of success; this way we all benefit from it.

Postal

Tomorrow we will climb towards IC; we must surpass a cumulated one thousand two hundred meters incline. We will see the most beautiful mountain in the world from up close; we will look at its face and caress its slopes.

We hope the Alpamayo welcomes us with its best clothes and our dream comes true.

Fran Lorente

28 Juli, 2010

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Our bodies are ready once again to face new slopes and long days. We are slowly getting used to the fact that we are in the final stage of the expedition. We are aware that all the efforts we have made up until now were in order to be ready and able to face our great goal more competently.

Tomorrow we are setting off to our mountain’s Base Camp. It is a long twenty-two kilometre journey which we think we will complete in approximately eight hours; the following day we will set off to the IC, where we’ll spend the night and we will wait for the best day to try to reach the top. It will all depend on whether anything has gone wrong, the weather is good and we have the strength to continue.

In principle, we can’t send news out from Base Camp, if we find a way we will keep you informed. It seems that we will not be able to send reports for a few days; as soon as we are able to, we’ll keep you up to date.

Your support has always been important but we are now at the critical point of this adventure and we need to feel you are close.

We thank Dynatech for its help, our families for their understanding and all of you for following our progress.

Fran Lorente

27 Juli, 2010

Today we had the break we deserved, after all our efforts over the past few days.

We are aware that this expedition is not over yet. Therefore this break is only a breather, an interruption in the project. We spent the day reorganising equipment and planning our tackle on the Alpamayo, our Ithaca, our dream, our aim.

We tried to find last minute information. Apparently, the mountain’s conditions are good.

LOCO MOYA

After the accident, calm has settled, that’s the way the mountain is. Climbers hold themselves back when news is not good; an easily understandable human reaction. But the mountain is still there, forever serene, forever superior, forever powerful, no event can perturb it. However, today we met a special guy, one of those who understand the mountain and behave like it. Manuel Moya, “loco Moya” for friends, a Chilean, engineering student, with a spotless mountaineering profile, not only for his sports curriculum, but also for his serenity, for his way of facing slopes. He reached the Alpamayo IC one day after the accident; the rescue operation had already started so he couldn’t do anything. His intentions didn’t change, his analysis was clear: he was facing a serene mountain, unaffected by events. Loco Moya used the Alpamayo’s weapons and was cool and calm when facing its slopes, taking careful steps, sparing his efforts. He went past the Argentinean’s body but he focused on the way to the top. Nineteen hours after starting his ascent, at nine pm they reached the top of the Alpamayo, only his roped team was able to face the Direct French route.

This is the way things are, only those able to face up to the challenge albeit circumstances deserve to reach their goal; with perseverance, determination and without ever losing faith.

Fran Lorente

24 Juli, 2010

We mention one of the comments on the Dynatech blog, to provide some information.

http://blog.dynatech-elevation.com/2010/07/22/sin-tregua/comment-page-1/#comment-1754

  1. Julieta says:

Hi…excuse me…I’m writing because I’m really worried…I see that you
keep your blog updated and I’d like to know whether you have some information about the mountaineer who had an accident on the Alpamayo. Some of my friends are over there and I can’t locate them…I’d like to know if there is any news about the person who fell…thanks a lot.

From our location in the Andes, the news comes from third parties, therefore it is not very reliable. We heard at Casa Zarela that an Argentinean mountaineer was climbing the French Direct route to the Alpamayo; he was going to climb with his partner but, in Huaraz, they found out that she was three months’ pregnant and preferred to remain at Base Camp, he decided to climb on his own. On the fifth pitch, he plunged into the void dragging with him a two-Austrian roped team. The Argentinean died, one of the two Austrians has a serious spine injury and we haven’t heard anything about the other one.

Aclimatando

ADRIAN UCLES

As for our intentions, we aim to go to the Pisco area, 5735 m, in order to continue the long acclimatisation process; to do this, we must reach the Base Camp, located at 4700 m, today, sleep and set off to the Pisco on the following day. We’ve been talking to some Italian people, who recently descended, and the conditions on this mountain seem to be very good; we expect to find it in these same conditions.

We are now ready to face new slopes and suffer while climbing them with the only purpose of reaching our goal.

Fran Lorente

Leider ist der Eintrag nur auf Español verfügbar.