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Skiing the 3 highest mountains
Sunday May 31, 2009 - Email this article to a friend
That's what the extreme skier, Frederik Ericsson, is planning to do and he's been telling PlanetSKI about it. He sets off this weekend.
Frederik does not come across as your typical extreme skier. He's quiet, modest and doesn't talk about his exploits in a loud voice. He hasn't got any carefully cultivated stuble and doesn't wear colours that deliberately clash to draw attention to himself.
In a lift queue you would barely notice him.
Yet he is attempting to do what no other person has done before - climb up Everest, K2 and Kangchenjunga with skis on his back and then come down.
In trainingArguably, the toughest challenge of the three will be his expedition to the world's second highest mountain, K2. He sets off to Pakistan from his home in Chamonix on Saturday.
Fredrik will keep us updated here at PlanetSKI.
"The preparations for this summer's Pakistan expedition are full on. I've been doing my best to get into shape with running, mountainbiking, skiing and alpine climbing. The weather has been very unstable lately so conditions for climbing high peaks hasn't been great," he tells us from his home town of Chamonix. "I have made two unsuccesful attempts of Aigulle Verte and Mont Blanc."
Our content editor, James Cove, spent a day skiing with Fredrik last winter in Argentiere and then had a chat with him about his plans.
If you like some of the vidoes we have put up at PlanetSKI then don't forget to take a look at the PlanetSKI page on You Tube and our own vidoes section.
Fredrik Ericsson is one of the world's leading high altitude skiers with ski descents on some of the highest mountains on earth, including Peak Somoni, Shisha Pangma, Gasherbrum 2, Laila Peak and Dhaulagiri.
“I have already skied on three of the big peaks. During these adventures I gained critical experience that will apply towards my goal of skiing the absolute highest. The project spans two years and I will try to ski the three highest mountains in the world: K2 (8,612m) this summer, Kangchenjunga (8,586m) in autumn 2009, and Mount Everest (8,850m) in the autumn of 2010,” says Fredrik.
The first big challenge starts now when Fredrik, together with his Italian companion, Michele Fait, go to the Karakoram mountain range in Pakistan. The mountain they plan to climb and ski, K2, is probably the hardest of all 8,000m peaks. It is an incredibly beautiful, remarkably steep pyramid with no easy route to the top.
Climbing the mountain is complicated by unusually severe and unpredictable weather systems.
We wish him luckK2 was first climbed in 1954 by the Italians Achille Compagnoni and Lino Lacedelli. Since then, The Savage Mountain – as it has come to be called due to the extraordinarily high number of deaths on the mountain – has been climbed on 10 different routes and only around 200 people have summited. So far no one has made a complete ski descent from the summit of K2.
“This means that we can become the first in the world to ski the mountain,” says Fredrik.
After a long, rough journey by airplane, bus, jeep and on foot the team will arrive on the Goodwin-Austen Glacier at the foot of K2 where they will set up base camp at an altitude of about 5,000 meters. They will prepare for the big challenge over a period of one month during which they will undertake several acclimatizing climbs. One of these training climbs will be a side trip to attempt the first complete ski descent of coveted Laila Peak (6069m).
Mid-July will see the duo start the grueling climb to the top of K2.
They will not use supplemental oxygen and will carry all the same equipment as the other climbers.
"In addition, we'll also be carrying all of our ski equipment and wearing ski touring boots which are not nearly as warm, comfortable or functional as climbing boots. This makes the climb much more difficult for us than for other climbers,” says Fredrik.
Fredrik and Michele plan to climb the south-southeast ridge, a long and serious route featuring extremely strenuous, high-altitude climbing.
During the weeks leading to their final push, the team will methodically climb higher and higher up the mountain while their bodies and minds grow accustomed to the debilitating hardships of climbing at such altitude. When the team is fully acclimatized, the two will need four days to get from base camp to the summit, spending three nights in high-altitude camps on the way.
“On the final day of our summit push we will start climbing from our 8,000m camp at midnight and I believe it will take about 12 hours of climbing in The Death Zone to reach the top,” says Fredrik.
The ski descent, which is the highlight of the two-month expedition, is expected to take five hours. The descent from the summit all the way to base camp, has a vertical drop of almost 3600 meters and has very steep sections of up to 50 degrees inclination.
“To ski at 8,000m is extraordinarily difficult and in the beginning we have to stop to rest after only a few turns. After four to five turns Im as exhausted as after skiing 1,000 vertical meters in the Alps,” says Fredrik.
The project to be the first in the world to ski the three highest mountains is a step towards Fredrik’s ultimate goal to ski all 14 of the worlds 8,000m peaks.
Fredrik will be keeping us posted here at PlanetSKi on how the expeditions goes and we will be posting regular updates.
Fredrik Ericsson grew up in a town called Umeå in the northern part of Sweden but since 2000 has spent most of his time in Chamonix in the French Alps. As a professional skier he spends the winter traveling to ski resorts in the Alps and exotic mountain ranges around the world.
Training on Mt EtnaBelow is a short summary of Fredriks previous ski descents:
• 2003 - Peak Somoni, Tajikistan (7,495m). Skied from summit to 4,500 meters.
• 2004 - Central summit of Shisha Pangma,Tibet (8,012m). Skied from summit to 5,600 meters.
• 2005 - Gasherbrum 2, Pakistan (8,035 m). Skied from summit to 5,500 meters.
• 2005 - Laila Peak, Pakistan (6,069 m). Skied from 5,940 meters.
• 2007 – Dhaulagiri, Nepal (8,167 m). Skied from 8,000 to 4,700 meters.
• 2008 – Kangchenjunga, Nepal (8586 m). Skied from 7,000 to 5,500 meters.
Fredriks sponsors: Dynastar, Osprey, Tierra, Hestra, Adidas Eyewear and Grivel.
Supporters: Tissot, Exped, Giro, Scarpa, Primus, Ortovox, Therm-Ic, Jämtport.
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