Vol 4 No 12 Yorkshire Ramblers' Club Journal

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Vol 4 No 12 Yorkshire Ramblers' Club Journal '':. , .., ::' Editor, Xildwictiipk,: Hall, Keighlcy; VOL. IV, EntrBu ()n the Grigrrn The Aurora Borealis An Attempt on Kamet ..i Sinri: A Desert Ride The Siege of Mere Gill .: " Tlre Strenm-Bed of Fell Beck When I'an blew on his pipes' (Jlrippingr ... Kinrlrcrl Journals M enrbcrs' flolidays.,. licviews PHOTOARAPHS. ' .. Mana Gorge, Garhwal .., Krmet frorn the Ghastoli Glacier .-:ri JebelSerb{l .i.' '.n,, Plain of Er-raha . i l 3al aaa aaa,' ,') Watly Feirin ... aat .!r .a,aa M oun t Sinai The Oasis of Feirdn (or Rephidim) ..1 1r1. PLANS. I'hn r>f I\t ere Gill r .. F'cll ltcck, with the Rat Ilole and Spout Tunnel... ISSUED VEARLY. Publlrhed by thc YorLshirc RnmblerB'Club, t0, l'ark Slrect, Leeds. PRIGE TWO SHILLINGS NET. }'OSTAGE 8d. JaUES S. CANTER, The Alpine 4ootmaker, 16 SOUTH MOLTON STREET, L o'*'o"J'ii'' n. Nailed in this Nailed in this Style, Style, J S. CARTER'S CELEBRATED CLIMBINC BOOTS. t2 f,2 Woollen Gloves, Sleeping Tents, Woollen Anklets, Sleeping Bags. Tinted lliicksacks, Spectales, I)uttees. Knives, etc., etc. 'TOBOGGANING, SKATING AND NORWEGIAN PATTERN; SKI-ING BOOTS A SPECIALITd. lllustrated Catalo$ue on Application. REYII0LDS & BRAllS0t, LTD. PRISMAT|C BmollutAR EIASSES. The " RYSTOS STEREO " PRISMATIC BINOCULARS, with rack adjustment and widely separated obj ectives, giving enhanced stereoscopic eftect, magnifying 8 diameters - €4, 4s. Od. PRISMATIC BINOCULARS with larger objectives, so constructed as to admit fhe llaximum amount of light- that is possible in this trTpe of glass, from - €6 Os. Od. Frc. 1. ARTHUR BEALE PRISMATIC BINOCULARS g MONOCULARS (Late JQHN BUCI(INGIIAM), by Goerz, Busch, Zeiss, Ross, Dollond, Hensoldt, &c. I94 SHAFTESBURY AVENUE, LONDON, W.C., ACHROMATIC from FIELD GLASSES of the ordinary type, €1 Os. Otl. Is the Only Maker of the Celebrated WATCH FORM AIIEROID BAROMETERS, from - - €1 1s. Od. ATPINE CLUB ROPE, PEDOMETERS, POCKET COMPASSES, Which is almost exclusively employed MAP MEASURES, &c. By the Leading Mountaineers of the time. It is made of the Rest Manilla Henrp, and the new Rope norv being made, which from tests taken (Admiralty proof) is of a much greater breaking strain than fornerly, is marked by three red worsted threads, PHorocRAPHrc AppaRATUS one in the centre of each strand, to distinguish it from others on the narket, and not one thread only in the centre of the Rope as AND EVERY REQUISITE IN PIIOTOGRAPHY. heretofore (see the Report of the Special Committee on Ropes, etc., IIAND and STAND CAMERAS tn great varlety. in Vol. I., No. 7, of the ALPINE JOURNAL). Each length is tied with l{ed Tape bearing my Name. Bewa,re of fraudulent lmitations. ..RYSTOS'' REFLEX CAUERA, A thoroughly effrcient instrument for high-class work. Particulars on application. ARTHUR BEALE (late John Buckingham), " CARBINE " CAMERAS (as Fig. 2) for 194 Shaftesbury Avenue, London, W.C. daylight loading films, from 80s. and Foreign Makers kept in Stock; Riicksacks, for glass plates, Ice-axes by' English Belts, The " KLIMAX," Slings, &c. Price Lists on application. from - 84 Os. Od. Also Sole Uaker of the Verner safety SlltrB tor Moutrta,h allal Rocts work. KODAKS AND " EI{SIGI{ " CAMEBAS, Diploma awarded for Alpine Rope at the Bergen Sports Erhibition, r9ro. for daylight loading films, from 6s. " KLITO " FOLDING CAMERAS, for glass plates, from 91s. " RYSTOS " STAND CAUERAS and other designs. .. RYSTOS,, DEVELOPINC BATHS ANd DARK ROOM LAUPS for Gas and ElectricitY. PHOTOGRAPHIC PLATES and FILMS of all makes. ILLUSTRATED AATALOCUE' IO4 pascs' FREE. 14 COMMERCIAL ST., LEEDS. TEL, 96A OENTRAL. ComplotG lllountalneerlng Outfitters, FREDERICK & Co., LEEDS. SHOW ROOM_FINST FLOOR. County Arcade, THE Woollen l-le lmets, Glacier Lantern 2t9 o {olding o Ramblers' Club for Pocket, Light F )orlcsttire Journal Slip0q15, i, 7ls folding for Poctet,2/9 = Vor. IV. rgr2. d Spiral Puttees, SaiJals t No. rz. Wading, all shades, for F ale 3'c al_ 6Z6 Snow Fo Fl Spectacles, x€ Compasses 1/- and 1/6 ON THE GRIGNA. <g from c,uli-.n., Bv RBcrueLD FARI{ER. tlE 4 spike 5/6 5o oi 8 ,, to/6 '::t- rc ,,1216 QO have already sung ? Aluminium I the song of the Mont Cenis. Sung The..BERNESB" - t2l6 2.u; rlc Cookers Scarpetti, it, indeed, with such ardour that this year, judging from the <E r Pint 1216 Freilerick's Rucksacks are Watelproof and of the 6/9 Pair. .?3 Avt most serviceable Pattern' letters I have received, the Hotel de la Poste will do well Erl a ,, 1416 Cheap Rucksacks .. 316' 416 r J'ost . 3d. roNis. ax 4 ,' 16/G io'rist . '-. -..716t ' 3d' Mummery to build itself a mighty annexe. Thcrefore I will not here H Larce Tourist -.. loi6: . 3d' Type with g 9.? Beriese ..' l2€i '. 4d' -Iointed Ash repeat former picture its pansy-carpets, its gentian- Poles, 14 my of Fl -o Toboggans Guicle ... 16/_\ ,, 4d. os o5 z Persons, ttom 17|li 6('/- pavements, the clear nip of the air, and the luminous 0aH ,d o weight 8lbs. beauty o of its hills ; I will only say that sad will be the SKIS It \\'"[Ip,oo{ year that prevents me from returning when die, from 3Ol-pair Ground thither; I Sheets. Huitfeldt and fronr 15/- if I have been as good as the good Americans who go for Ellefsen Bindings, their reward to Paris, without doubt i shail be allowed to ENGLISH PICK, No. r Ouality',3l4 18/- re-visit the Mont Cenis. In |une, I9I I, I spent there a " 1 " no"rLADDERs, 15/6 -J week as rapturous as that of the year before; all the rocks tsrederlck S lce Axes CheaPer patent. AT.PENSTOCKS, on the l,ittle Col were rosy with Primulas, and I even at 161- ard 17l- 3oft. _ i6/_ 2/6,3/6 afi 4/6 6oft. - e2l- toiled up for hours over the solid snows that still clothed The Ontv Perlect Maximum Strength' HAND STOCKS, the Col de Clapier, in the instinct that the small cliffs above climbine Gtove, fronr 2/-to 4/6 the Lac Savine might have been kept open by the winds. per pair guaranteed. s/s \ltll;l: Sneciel Nailing.3O/- or Hazel. per pair. bther MountalneerintBoots Irom l8/6. Oak, CherrY, And so it proved and even, on one broken bluff, the King 6oft. 8oft. rooft, ; creen Strand Alplne Rope ..' l(J/6 13/6 16/6 of the Alps had begun to blink his azure eye to the day- Frederlck's SDeclal Red "";"- "':'-' ";:- "' "' ::' " qie 1o/s 72/6 proiea to'ue tr." toi cli-uirg p"tpo.".. light. slopes of the Lake were still all " Fro- u'i"""rt ii"-in. E Coll. Rop""'iu"r" "tro"g".t But the Clear Hemp Ice A*e Sling, 9d. icebound, and the season had not yet settled into the Ice Axe Cases, Leatt'e4 2/6 serenity of summer. Combination Knife. It is always rvith a pang that I desert known lands for Tin Opener and Corkscrew,2/- new. Possibilities, from afar, are strangely alluring ; when A large Varietl' Swiss Nails and cornes rather and Studs alwaYs in stock' it to realizing them, they grow vast Customers' Own Boots carefullY alarming the certainties of the present are far more nailed, 5/- ; Per Pair. comfortable. So with reluctancc did I go clown from the lllustrated Catalogue free on appli- Mont Cenis to Susa, on my way to the Italian l,alies, for cariorr, containing llst of everything thc l\lountaineer, Cave Explorer, or Carnpcr may require MOTTO: Only tho bort It good enouglr for lhe Mountaineer' 2 The Yovkshire Ramblers' Club lowrnal' On the Grigna. 3 my first sight of Como. The journey was hot and stuffy. lry lapping blue water in sunshine, with hills of a decent Monte Viso hid his face and denied me good omens. hciglrt, discrcet in the distance, make up the most perfect After a night of luxury in Turin (which to me is always the Ittlthtau that Nature call compose. The soft exquisiteness Capua of the Western, as Bozen of the Eastertr ranges ; I rrf Como is a trifle tlzltttral io those who have known find myself repeatedly gravitating towards one the invariably fir:rce and austere glory of more drastic mountains. or other in the course of my wanderings), half a day of And_-y.t, and . yet-though many be the dull sky_lines quick traveiling carried us from Milan over the ocean of itlrrve como, what picture is there more beautiful than that the Plain, into its first ripples, the advancing surf of the of lhc widening Lake towards Bellagio? Ahead, far above Alps, through breakers of increasing height, to drop us tlrt: green ridges, towers suddenly th! grim granitic cone of suddenly at an unexpected turn, above the waters of Como, I .t:gr,.e, and the vast limeston. of the Grigna rises gleaming steely in their narrow trough, between steep ,,ver -"rJ Varenna. Bellagio, slumberous along its protontory, mountains, filmed and thunderous with advancing storm' trtirrors -cle., the dark flame of its cypresses ir the w"ter, We had hardly got o11 board the boat before the tempest trrrrl lics its length among roses; in face of it, away up at brol<e, and for three hours raged with a roaring fury of hail llre toprnost end of the Lake, the little lower hills .r" pui to that lashed the Lake to a grey mist, and only now and then, slr;rrrrc by the first outliers of the real Alps_scarred, ragged in violet glare of tl:e lightning, showed phantom peaks r',ur11(:s the irrrleed, of no conspicuous form or eminence,"Iut far overhead-ghostly as peaks in a Chinese painting, with lir.nrrirre rnasses of bare rock, and ice and snow.
Recommended publications
  • (0)27 966 01 01 Sunnegga Furi Furi Breuil-Cervinia
    DE FR EN IT SUNNEGGA-ROTHORN 7 Standard 16 Chamois 28 White Hare 37 Riffelhorn MATTERHORN GLACIER 56 Kuhbodmen 65 Rennstrecke / Skimovie SOMMERSKI / BREUIL-CERVINIA 11 Gran Roc-Pre de Veau 39 Gaspard 9 Baracon PANORAMAKARTE / PLAN PANORAMIQUE / 1 Untere National 8 Obere National 17 Marmotte 29 Kelle 38 Rotenboden PARADISE 57 Aroleid 66 Theodulsee THEODULGLETSCHER 2 Cretaz 12 Muro Europa 46 Bontadini 2 10 Du Col PANORAMIC MAP / MAPPA PANORAMICA. 2 Ried 9 Tufteren 18 Arbzug 30 Mittelritz 39 Riffelalp 49 Bielti 58 Hermetji 67 Garten Buckelpiste 80 Testa Grigia 3 Plan Torrette-Pre de Veau 13 Ventina-Cieloalto 47 Fornet 2 11 Gran Sometta 2a Riedweg (Quartier- 10 Paradise 19 Fluhalp 31 Platte 40 Riffelboden 50 Blatten 59 Tiefbach 68 Tumigu 81 Führerpiste 3.0 Pre de Veau-Pirovano 14 Baby Cretaz 59 Pista Nera del Cervino 12 Gran Lago strasse, keine Skipiste) 11 Rotweng 32 Grieschumme 41 Landtunnel 51 Weisse Perle 60 Momatt 69 Matterhorn 82 Mittelpiste 3.00 Pirovano-Cervinia 16 Cieloalto-Cervinia 60 Snowpark Cretaz 14 Tunnel 2017/2018 3 Howette 12 Schneehuhn GORNERGRAT 33 Triftji 42 Schweigmatten 52 Stafelalp 61 Skiweg 70 Schusspiste 83 Plateau Rosa 3bis Falliniere 21 Cieloalto 1 62 Gran Roc 15 E. Noussan 4 Brunnjeschbord 13 Downhill 25 Berter 34 Stockhorn 43 Moos 53 Oberer Tiefbach 62 Furgg – Furi 71 Theodulgletscher 84 Ventina Glacier 4 Plan Torrette 22 Cieloalto 2 15a Sigari 5 Eisfluh 14 Kumme 26 Grünsee 35 Gifthittli 44 Hohtälli 54 Hörnli 63 Sandiger Boden 72 Furggsattel 85 Matterhorn glacier 5 Plan Maison-Cervinia 24 Pancheron VALTOURNENCHE
    [Show full text]
  • Mountaineering Ventures
    70fcvSs )UNTAINEERING Presented to the UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO LIBRARY by the ONTARIO LEGISLATIVE LIBRARY 1980 v Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2010 with funding from University of Toronto http://www.archive.org/details/mountaineeringveOObens 1 £1. =3 ^ '3 Kg V- * g-a 1 O o « IV* ^ MOUNTAINEERING VENTURES BY CLAUDE E. BENSON Ltd. LONDON : T. C. & E. C. JACK, 35 & 36 PATERNOSTER ROW, E.C. AND EDINBURGH PREFATORY NOTE This book of Mountaineering Ventures is written primarily not for the man of the peaks, but for the man of the level pavement. Certain technicalities and commonplaces of the sport have therefore been explained not once, but once and again as they occur in the various chapters. The intent is that any reader who may elect to cull the chapters as he lists may not find himself unpleasantly confronted with unfamiliar phraseology whereof there is no elucidation save through the exasperating medium of a glossary or a cross-reference. It must be noted that the percentage of fatal accidents recorded in the following pages far exceeds the actual average in proportion to ascents made, which indeed can only be reckoned in many places of decimals. The explanation is that this volume treats not of regular routes, tariffed and catalogued, but of Ventures—an entirely different matter. Were it within his powers, the compiler would wish ade- quately to express his thanks to the many kind friends who have assisted him with loans of books, photographs, good advice, and, more than all, by encouraging countenance. Failing this, he must resort to the miserably insufficient re- source of cataloguing their names alphabetically.
    [Show full text]
  • Antrona Ophiolite, Pennine Alps) As Inferred from Microstructural, Microchemical, and Neutron Diffraction Quantitative Texture Analysis
    Ofioliti, 2011, 36 (2), 167-189 167 MANTLE ORIGIN OF THE ANTRONA SERPENTINITES (ANTRONA OPHIOLITE, PENNINE ALPS) AS INFERRED FROM MICROSTRUCTURAL, MICROCHEMICAL, AND NEUTRON DIFFRACTION QUANTITATIVE TEXTURE ANALYSIS Paola Tartarotti*, , Michele Zucali*,°, Matteo Panseri*, Sabrina Lissandrelli**, Silvia Capelli*** and Bachir Ouladdiaf*** * Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra “Ardito Desio”, Università degli Studi di Milano, Italy. ** Via G. Marconi 66, 28844 Villadossola, Italy. *** Institut Laue-Langevin, Grenoble, France. ° CNR-IDPA, Sezione di Milano, Italy. Corresponding author: e-mail: [email protected] Keywords: Antrona ophiolite, serpentinite, mantle peridotite, neutron diffraction, Quantitative texture analysis. Pennine Alps. ABSTRACT The Antrona ophiolite is located in the Italian side of Western Central Alps. In the Alpine nappe stack, it lies at low structural levels, being sandwiched between the overlying continental Monte Rosa Nappe (upper Penninic) and the underlying Camughera-Moncucco continental Unit (middle Penninic). The ophiolite sequence includes serpentinized ultramafites, metagabbros and mafic rocks covered by calcschists. The ultramafic portion of the Antrona ophiolite consists of serpentinized peridotites, with interbedded layers of various mafic/ultramafic rocks, and underlies the mafic rocks and metasediments. In spite of the Alpine tectonic and metamorphic evolution of the Antrona ophiolite and its heavy serpentinization, the ultramafic rocks preserve relict texture and miner- alogy that allow discussing the nature of their protoliths. Olivine-clinopyroxene-spinel-bearing serpentinites still retain relict porphyroclastic texture, com- monly attributed to mantle peridotites. This inference is supported by quantitative textural analysis of Lattice Preferred Orientation by neutron diffraction, per- formed for the first time in olivine crystals of Alpine ophiolites, suggesting T conditions > 800°C for the activation of slip systems.
    [Show full text]
  • Breuil-Cervinia Valtournenche Emozioni Da Sempre
    Breuil-Cervinia Valtournenche Emozioni da sempre... "Heureux celui qui sur ces monts put longtemps se reposer. Heureux celui qui les revoit s'il a dû les quitter." Lord Byron 2 0 0 9 75 ANNI DI STORIA Il più nobile scoglio d’Europa John Ruskin Breuil-Cervinia Valtournenche Dove la neve è più neve. Sci, neve, adrenalina, passione, divertimento, emozioni. L’inverno a Breuil-Cervinia e Valtournenche significa sci, aria pura ed emozioni che solo questa montagna sa dare. Qui l’emozione di una discesa, può essere classica o estrema, a seconda dei gusti e delle capacità di vivere i 4 mila metri sci ai piedi. Un mondo che tuttavia non è fatto solo di neve e sci, ma è tradizione, cultura e rispetto della natura. L’inverno a Breuil-Cervinia resta nel cuore. Quassù le emozioni colorano il bianco dell’inverno. Panorami mozzafiato accompagnano l’ospite durante tutta la giornata. Vuoi volare davvero per scendere con gli sci? A Breuil-Cervinia puoi farlo grazie all’emozione dell’Heliski: pochi minuti di volo e professionisti dell’aria a bordo di moderni e sicuri elicotteri ti portano in quota dove cime incontaminate e crinali suggestivi faranno da cornice alle tue discese da favola, accompagnati da guide di alta montagna o maestri di sci. Per chi non volesse lasciare le piste battute e volesse provare l’emozione di scendere tra i pali stretti non mancheranno le occasioni per misurarsi contro il cronometro. Infine se la neve e il ghiaccio non ti spaventano neppure all’imbrunire, ti aspettano le corse in speciali kart pensati per correre in sicurezza su di un percorso ghiacciato.
    [Show full text]
  • The Matterhorn Centenary 7
    THE MATTERHORN CENTENARY 7 THE MATTERHORN CENTENARY (Nine illustrations: nos. I- 9) VEN though the Matterhorn fell with unexpected ease to the first party which seriously pressed an attempt from the Swiss side, the eauty and isolation of the peak and its apparent inaccessibility- the latter confirmed by the lengthening history of frustrated attempts by the Italian ridge made it the most sought after prize in the Alps at the time of the first ascent. It still remains so, in the obvious sense to which the congestion of the Hornli ridge on any fine day in July or August bears witness. It has become a tourist's mountain, as well as a mountaineer's. But the mountaineer, however much he may deplore the fixed ropes and the crowds which swarm up and down them, will still wish to have climbed the Matterhorn. Neither the highest nor the hardest of the great peaks of the Alps, it continues to exercise much the same special fascina­ tion for climbers as it exercised a hundred years ago. July 14 of this year marks the hundredth anniversary of the day when Michel Croz' blouse, fixed to a tent-pole on the summit of the Matter­ horn, was seen 'at Zermatt at the Riffel in the Val Tournanche '; when the watchers in Breuil cried, 'Victory is ours!'; and when, an hour or two later, a sharp-eyed lad in Zermatt ran into the Monte Rosa hotel, saying that he had seen an avalanche fall from the summit of the Matter­ horn onto the Matterhorn glacier, and was reproved for telling idle stories.
    [Show full text]
  • Alpine Notes
    • • • 200 ALPINE NOTES and was commissioned as a specialist officer in one of the ~cientific branches, in which he rose to the rank of Squadron-Leader. His line of research was to investigate \Vind spe-ed and visibility as they affect parachute landings. I~ was while serving in this capacity that, in order that he might himself apply the test of practice to his theories, he yolun­ teered for a bombing raid, from which he was reported missing, presumed killed, in the spring of 1943. Most of Crichton-Miller's climbing was done with his- family and family friends; however, as an undergraduate he was an active member of the Oxford University Mountaineering Club, and was for a time on the committee. As a climber he was strong and safe, well -grounded in Alpine ·tradition. His big frame seemed to belong to the epoch of frontal attack and hours of tireless step-cutting. _Probably his best climb was a guideless ascent of the Zmutt ridge in 1938 . He was ·. elected to the Alpine Club in 1936. · .J. c. RYLE . • ALPINE NOTES • Year of THE ALPINE CLUB OBITUARY : . Election Pasteur, W.~ C. B., C.M.G., M.D., F.R.C.P.... ••• 1879 Tupper-Carey, Rev. Canon A. D. ... .• ••• ~896 Patchell, C. W. ~. .. • • • 1897 Pa(ker, J. Kenyon . .. ••• 1904 W atson, B. W. .. 1910 Crichton-Miller, Squadron Leader C., R.A.F.V.R. 1936 • • • ZERMATT AND SAAs FEE. We have received the following letter from our member Mr. I. de Bruyn, dated Zermatt, August 24, 1943, for which we are much indebted.
    [Show full text]
  • 1953-1968.Pdf
    VOLUMES 59 TO 73 Index The Alpine Journal 1953-68 Compiled by D. F. o. Dangar SBN 9°°523 04- 2 The Alpine Club, 74- South Audley Street, London, WI Y 5FF Preface The present volume of the Index to the Alpine Journal, the fourth in the series, carries the Index from 1953 (Volume 59) to 1968 (Volume 73), the last year before the change of the Journal into a single annual volume. The proposal for this continuation of the consolidated Index was made in late 1968, when the Committee invited Mr D. F. O. Dangar to undertake it. His willingness to do this in addition to the heavy burden of the Assistant Editor- ship of the Alpine Journal itself, and the speed with which he completed the vast amount of work involved, are very greatly appreciated; and the Alpine Club has recognised the outstanding contribution which he has made to the objects of the Club, through his work both on the Alpine Journal and on suc- cessive volumes of the Index, by electing him to Honorary Membership. The thanks of the Club are also due to Mrs Sarah Hollis for her work on the typescript. Charles Evans President May I970 Foreword This Index has been compiled on the same basis as the previous volume, but, to save space, the writers of obituaries and reviews have not been indexed. In addition to portraits, illustrations that have been indexed are, in general, those of single mountains or mountain ranges which are likely to be of geo- graphical interest. Pictures of pitches, or small sections of a climb, high camps and similar subjects have not been indexed: although of contemporary interest, it is felt that such illustrations, which usually in any case are referred to in the associated articles, can be omitted without serious detriment to the value of the Index.
    [Show full text]
  • In Praise of Switzerland: Being the Alps in Prose and Verse
    ii":lui|iii!iii r*:* W^ Iv-U-'A fit Vrh t-IlT mm €!0tttett l^wtijsitg pitotg FROM THE INCOME OF THE FISKE ENDOWMENT FUND THE BEQUEST OF lyibrarian of the University 1868-1883 1905 I 3I«4 Cornell University Library DQ 824.S74 In praise of Switzerland: 3 1924 028 500 217 olin r^-> Cornell University 'm Library The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924028500217 IN PRAISE OF SWITZERLAND CONSTABLE'S ANTHOLOGIES Uniform with this Volume Demy 8vo. Six Shillings net per Vol, IN PRAISE OF OXFORD. An Anthology of Oxford and Oxford Life in Prose and Verse. By Thomas Seccombe (Balliol College) and H. Spencer Scott (New College). Vol.. I: Oxford History and Oxford Topography. Vol, II : Oxford Society ; Life and Manners. IN PRAISE OF EDINBURGH. By Miss Rosaline Masson. IN PRAISE OF CAMBRIDGE. , By Sydney Waterlow, M.A. IN PRAISE OF AUSTRALIA. By Mrs. Florence Gay. IN PRAISE OF WINCHESTER. By Audrey Locke. [/« Preparation, Other volutnes to follow. IN PRAISE OF SWITZERLAND BEING THE ALPS IN PROSE AND VERSE BV HAROLD SPENDER MEMBER OP THE*ALPINE CLUB AUTHOR OF 'through THE HIGH PYRENEES* ' ' AT THE SIGN OF THE GUILLOTINE 'the arena,' ETC ' I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills : fiom whence cometh my help.'—Psalm cxxi. LONDON CONSTABLE AND COMPANY LTD. 10 ORANGE ST. LEICESTER SQUARE W.C. 1912 TO MY FRIEND CHARLES E. SHEA THE COMPANION OF MANY HAPPY CLIMBS PREFACE A WORD ON THE ALPS.
    [Show full text]
  • Cervinia Andvaltournenche
    Cervinia and Valtournenche summer 2008-09 Produced by: Sport & Promozione S.r.l. (Breuil-Cervinia). Creative project and graphic production: Caterina Barale and Anna Mazzucchi: [email protected] Photographic archive: Cervino S.p.A. - Consorzio - A.I.A.T. - Fans de Sport - Guide del Cervino - Pentaphoto (Milan) - Riccardo Castellaro - Celestino Vittaz - Lonati. Data updated to June 2008. www.cervinia.it Index. air info Domaine Skiable 3 Insurance 29 Speed Skiing 4 Lift system tariffs 30 Aerial sports 6 Professional tariffs 35 Skirama 6 int Packages 36 Hotel tariffs 40 Maps 56 Consortium member companies 60 water Info and preview 62 Snowboarding and boardercross 9 How to get here 64 Entertainment 10 Addresses 65 Winter sports 12 Alpinism 14 The voice of water, the peace of the air, the strength of the earth and the ardour of fire: the four elements of nature tell of winter in Breuil- Cervinia and Valtournenche. A world that is more than just snow – a earth Tours 17 mountain full of life, culture and entertainment. A place where the Skipasses 18 most advanced technological performances live in harmony with Web 20 nature, and the winter chill blends with the warmth of traditions. Let the four elements tell how you can discover a unique district. fire Cuisine and flavours 25 Activities for everyone 24 Infrastructures 26 Types of skipass 28 1 In Cervinia and Valtournenche, the winter air is special. Not just because it’s so pure at an altitude of four thousand metres, but because the excitement Domaine Skiable: guaranteed fun. of the mountains is tangible.
    [Show full text]
  • One Hundred Years Ago (With Extracts from the Alpine Journal)
    CA RUSSELL One Hundred Years Ago (with extracts from the Alpine Journal) (Plates 60-64) he night, thanks to the moon, was almost as bright as day, but even, Tlow down as we were then on the moraine, where hardly a breath of air was stirring, it was bitterly cold. The snow was, as usual this winter, absolutely perfect and we forced our way rapidly up the two ice walls, emerging on the small snowfield below the "Schneekuppe" orlower peak of our mountain. The wind caught us fairly here, and the cold became almost unbearable. Ina few minutes we were all literal impersonifications of Winter. At 6.50 we reached the Schneekuppe just as day broke. The Sattel was crossed and now only the last peak, abrupt and splendid, just gilded rosy­ red by the rising sun, rose before us. At 7.20 we stood on the actual summit, staying only a moment to scrawl ournames with shaking fingers on one of the many cards decorating the little cairn, and then fled, never halting till we reached the Sella Pass and warm sunshine. The second winter ascent ofPiz Roseg, on 26 February, was one ofa number of fine expeditions in the Bemina Alps undertaken by EL Strutt1 with the guides Martin Schocher and Sebastian Platz during the early months of 1899. On 18 February, accompanied by William Williams, the party com­ pleted a traverse of the four Bellavista peaks under winter conditions before reaching the summit of Piz Zupo and on 4 March traversed Piz PaIn after joining forces with Leonard Rawlence.
    [Show full text]
  • The Making of a Mountaineer
    THE MAKING OF A MOUNTAINEER Climbing the Matterhorn by the Zmutt ridge. " We had to cut steps across a wide ice slope " {page 187). Frontispiece THE MAKING OF A MOUNTAINEER BY GEORGE INGLE FINCH WITH SEVENTY-EIGHT PHOTOGRAPHS, ONE DRAWING AND TWO DIAGRAMS ARROWSMITH :: LONDON :: W.C.I 5)0 Fitst published in May, 1924 Printed in Great Britain by J. W, ARROWSMITH LTD. II Quay St. & 12 Small St., Bristol MY WIFE '1 i / n ft CONTENTS PAGE Preface . IX I Early Days . 13 II Climbing in Corsica 20 III The Wetterhorn . 40 IV The Jungfrau 52 V The Jungfrau and the Jungfraujoch . 68 VI On Skis in the Bernese Oberland 82 VII On Skis in the Bernese Oberland (continued) 95 VIII A Winter's Night on the Todi 107 IX The Bifertenstock 122 X Monte Rosa .... 140 XI The Twins .... 153 XII The Matterhorn—A Beginner's Impressions 164 XIII The Matterhorn . 182 XIV The Dent d'Herens 193 XV Mont Blanc .... 213 XVI Mont Blanc from the South . 227 XVII Two Chamonix Aiguilles 248 XVIII The Aiguille du Dru . 269 XIX Towards Mount Everest 283 XX Mount Everest 2Q6 XXI Mountaineering Photography 335 1 ' ILLUSTRATIONS Climbing the Matterhorn by the Zmutt ridge Frontispiece FACING PAGE Rock-climbing ..... 14 Crossing a steep snow slope 14 Scrambling in the range of the Todi . 18 Climbing the Capo al Dente 24 The southern summit of Capo Tafonato 28 The Cinque Fratri from below the Col de Foggiale 32 Pagha Orba from the Cinque Fratri 36 Morning mists 44 Clim.bing down a steep ridge 48 The short cut—roping down 48 The north face of the Jungfrau 52 The icefall of the Guggi Glacier 56 " We basked on the roof of the Guggi hut 62 Cutting steps over the upper lip of a bergschrund 76 Evening storm .
    [Show full text]
  • 'Bibliothèque Section Monte-Rosa
    DOOOOOOOOOOOOGOOOOOOOOOOOGOOOG BIBLIOTHÈQUE CANTONALE DU VALAIS SION * 'Bibliothèque de la Section Monte-Rosa C. A. S. O OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOGOOOQOOO (^ 1897 WRYMPEES GUIDES ADVERTISES. THE "PEN& PENCIL" SERIES. A Series of Beautifully Illustrated, interestingly written Books of Travel for the Drawing-Room Table, for Birthday Presentation, and for high-class Prizes. 8s. each, la handsome Cloth, gilt; or, 30s. each In Morocco Leather. AUSTRALIAN PICTURES. By HOWARD WILLOLH CANADIAN PICTURES. LORNE. Ss. ENCLISH PICTURES. By S.G.GREEN, D.D. FRENCH PICTURES. By S.G.GREEN, D.D. Ss. CREEK PICTURES. By J. P. MABAFFY. SS. ICELANDIC PICTURES. By F. W. W. HOWELL, F.R.G.S. Ss. INDIAN PICTURES. By WMJIBWIOK, M.A. SS. IRISH PICTURES. By R. LOVETT, M.A. SS. ITALIAN PICTURES. By SAMUEL MANNING, LL.D. Ss. THE LAND OF THE PHARAOHS. By SAMUEL SING, l.L.I). New Edition with Chapter on Re Egyptian Discoveries, by Prof. FLINDEK* PET D.C.L. 8s. LONDON PICTURES. By R. LOVETT, M.A. SS. NORWECIAN PICTURES. By R. LOVETT, M.A. PICTURES FROM BIBLE LANDS. Edited by GREEN, D.D. Ss. PICTURES FROM BOHEMIA. By JAMES BAKER F.K.G.S. Ss. PICTURES FROM HOLLAND. By it. LOVETT, M.A. SS PICTURES FROM THE CERMAN FATHERLAND SAMUEL (J. GREEN, D.U. Ss. RUSSIAN PICTURES. Bv THOMAS MIOHELL, G.B. 8S. SCOTTISH PICTURES. By S. G. GREEN, D.D. Ss. SEA PICTURES. By Dr. MACAULAV. Ss. SWISS PICTURES. New Edition. Ss. ft THOSE HOLY FIELDS." Palestine Illustrated by Pen and Pencil. By SAMUEL MANNING, LL.D. 8s. UNITED STATES PICTURES. By RICHARD LOVETT, M.A.
    [Show full text]