Jaime, ¿cómo se ponen los crampones?
Travesía en las alturas / 1
Del refugio de Bujaruelo al de Góriz, primera etapa de la Alta Ruta de los Perdidos
La Brecha de Rolando y el aéreo paso de los Sarrios, puntos fuertes de la jornada
El itinerario abarca 15,5 kilómetros con casi 1.600 metros de desnivel positivo y más de 700 de negativo
Un grupo de excursionistas se preparan para ponerse los crampones y encarrilar la ruta hacia la Brecha de Rolando
ROSA M. BOSCH
26/07/2021 06:00
A las seis y media de la mañana del lunes 12 de julio, en el comedor de Bujaruelo ya huele a tostadas y a café recién hecho. Es muy pronto para tener hambre, pero los excursionistas dan buena cuenta del pan con queso y chorizo, conscientes de que la primera etapa de la Alta Ruta de los Perdidos (ARP) les depara casi 1.600 metros de desnivel positivo a lo largo de 15,5 kilómetros por algún que otro tramo vertiginoso y entretenido. Pilar Escolano, coordinadora de la ARP, ya alertó la tarde
Alpinismus - Österreichs Berg-Hattrick
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3 июня - события дня - Тюменская линия
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No matter how ultralight I go, there is one backpacking luxury I’m unwilling to give up: my book. Whether I’m lounging in frontcountry comfort with a thousand-page novel or wedging a tiny paperback in the outer pocket of my backpack, I always have a story close at hand. For summer overnights I prefer a lighthearted (and physically light) tome, one that won’t keep me and, depending on headlamp brightness, my tentmate awake into the wee hours, and doesn’t add too much weight to my pack. These eight picks from Backpacker’s editors are ideal summertime reading, and light enough to bring with whether you prefer paperback or ebook.
The four-member Pakistani team that successfully completed the Annapurna expedition. Photo courtesy: Sirbaz Khan Instagram
Overcoming “tons of snow” and a thunderstorm, climbers Sirbaz Khan and Muhammad Abdul Joshi became the first Pakistanis to summit the 8,091-metre Annapurna peak in Nepal on Friday.
The Sirbaz-Joshi duo made the first summit push on April 13 but were unable to succeed as ropes could not be fixed. The second summit push on April 14 was again unsuccessful as the team ran out of rope at Camp IV (6,900m). For the Pakistani team, it was a case of ‘third time lucky’ and at 1:17pm on Friday, Sirbaz and Joshi were standing on top of Annapurna, according to details shared by their teammates on social media.