This story is a very simple one. On impulse
I decided to join a group who planned to climb Mount Elbrus. I knew if I didn't
just get on with it I never would.
The Caucasus Mountains form a formidable
yet politically edgy boundary between Russia and Georgia. The historical geopolitics of this region is intricate
and fascinating. Mount Elbrus is the highest peak in the Caucasus range, the
highest mountain in Russia, the highest point in Europe, and is therefore one
of the celebrated “seven peaks” – the highest point on each of the seven
continents. An opportunity for such a climb
is not to be passed by
However, to my
delight after a period of indecision my long time trekking/climbing companion
also decided to join this mini-expedition and the adventure was cemented by the
promise of a new shared experience with someone of a like-mind and previous
shared experiences.
Mountaineering memories tend to be random. The
generally avowed intent is to clamber up the side of a mountain, celebrate the
summit achievement and slide exhausted down again. On the face of it while this
a linear ascend-stop-descend sort of activity, the memories of sights, sounds,
smells, fears . . . are decidedly non-linear. A chronologically
exact tale of ascent and descent is not actually a particularly good story because
it doesn't really describe all manner of turbulent emotions in attaining (or
not) whatever was set to achieve be achieved. Frankly a blow-by-blow account of
a five hour grind up a thirty degree featureless snow slope is about as
captivating as, well as walking up the self same slope for 5 hours.
Little episodes in gigantic environments describe
a mountain, and as such celebrate in my mind at least the ineffable
timelessness of landscapes, and the sheer exhaustion of tribulations far beyond
‘normal’ life. The fact is that long after it’s over minor events, or smells,
or sights trigger vestigial memories and for a moment, just for a moment, the
mind wanders back . . . . . .
Oh - and lets just dispense with that old
chestnut of climbing “because it’s there”. George Mallory actually presented a
far more quotable quote -
“So, if you cannot understand that
there is something in man which responds to the challenge of this mountain and
goes out to meet it, that the struggle is the struggle of life itself upward
and forever upward, then you won’t see why we go. What we get from this
adventure is just sheer joy. And joy is, after all, the end of life. We do not
live to eat and make money. We eat and make money to be able to enjoy life.
That is what life means and what life is for.” (Sourced
from - https://www.goodreads.com/author/quotes/3348511.George_Mallory).
He of course famously died during the
ultimate challenge on the then ultimate mountain, but hidden somewhere in that
glorious jumble of words is the equally succinct (not to say facile) unsaid
phrase – “and because I’m here!”
What a celebration of life!
We stayed close to the village of Terskol .
From there we ascended and descended Mount Cheget, climbed to the Terskol
Observatory and climbed down again. We rode the cable car to the Mir Station
and walked up to the Barrels huts and ran back down again. We then relocated to
the Barrels huts and did a couple of further acclimatisation climbs and then
finally made a summit attempt. For some reason this disjointed exercise seemed
to be more tiring than a gradual and continuous ascent, adhering to the “walk
high and sleep low” dictum.
So this is a disjointed story of an
up-and-down sort of trip. However there is an underlying theme in this and all
such stories. There are many wonderful quotes that illustrate this theme; and
here’s one from Arlene Blum, “You never conquer a mountain. You stand on the
summit a few brief moments and then the wind blows your footprints away.”
The initial acclimatising walks are followed by the ascent, and unsurprisingly the exhausting descent.
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