2012 Piolets d'Or recipients climb Janak west face

Posted by Lindsay Griffin on 14/11/2012
Upper west face and southwest pillar of Janak showing bivouac site. Marcic/Strazar.
View 1 of 4

Young Slovenians Nejc Marcic and Luka Strazar, who earlier this year were awarded a Piolet d'Or for their fast and minimalist first ascent of the west face of K7 West in 2011, have made the second ascent of Janak (7,041m) via a new route up the 1,400m west face.

After setting up base camp in Lonak on the normal trekking route to north Kangchenjunga base camp in remote Far East Nepal, they subsequently made a lengthy journey north to establish an advanced base on the rarely visited Chijima Glacier, west of the peak.

From here they first attempted the unclimbed Lashar II (6,803m), gaining valuable acclimatization but unable to summit due to poor conditions.

They then set off for Janak's unclimbed west face. The pair originally planned a line up the centre but because of poor snow conditions were forced further right, joining the upper section of the southwest pillar after ca1,150m. From here they followed the last 350m of the Stremfelj-Zalokar route to the summit.

They made one bivouac high on the mountain after joining the southwest pillar, reached the summit next day at around 2pm, and were back at advanced base by 11pm the same day.

Their route involved much hard ice, though the main difficulties were not the climbing technicalities, which were relatively reasonable, but low temperatures and strong winds on the second day.

The ca 1,400m route was named Modri Dirkac (Blue Racer) and had difficulties to 80° and M4.

In 1998, after an unsuccessful attempt on nearby Drohmo (6,855m), a small British-Sherpa party managed to penetrate the gorge above Lonak and work up valley to reach the upper Broken Glacier below the south face of Janak.

They were almost certainly the first climbers to reach this location since 1910, when the Scottish explorer Dr Alexander Kellas arrived on the upper glacier from the east, over a small col.

Although the 1998 party were able to traverse a 6,095m summit opposite Janak, which they named the Wave, they were unable to make a significant attempt on the main mountain. However, they did discover a feasible route on the right side of the south face, and noted the superb southwest pillar.

One of Slovenia's accomplished Himalayan climbers, Andrej Stremfelj, reached the upper Broken Glacier in 2005, hoping to climb the southwest pillar. During acclimatization from base camp at Lonak, Stremfelj and Miha Habjan reached the Chijima Glacier west of Janak and made the first ascent of Lashar I (6,842m), no doubt having good views of Janak's west face and upper southwest pillar.

Later, they decided against the southwest pillar and attempted the line on the right side of the south face, retreating in a storm from 6,650m.

Stremfelj returned the following year with Rok Zalokar and climbed the elegant southwest pillar, finding it only slightly easier than the Croz Spur in winter. This was the first ascent of Janak.

Subsequently, a few parties have attempted the south face but with no success.

Marcic and Strazar were part of a strong Slovenian team (that included Habjan), which also attempted the south face of Janak, and lines on Lashar I and II. These failed due to poor conditions, strong winds and low temperatures.

Nepal this autumn has been dry and unusually cold, making conditions on primarily sunless faces either too bare or badly unconsolidated (British alpinists Jack Geldard and Rob Greenwood were unable to complete their proposed new route on the north face of 6,654m Peak 41 for these very reasons).

The Slovenians also felt there had been much glacial recession since Stremfelj's last visit. The initial couloir on his route up Lashar I could not be entered.

The distinguished mountaineer Marko Prezelj, who mentors young alpinists in Slovenia, was very happy to see that Marcic and Strazar's ascent of K7 West was not a one-off, and that they were not interested in the "public" fame generated by popular areas and objectives, but went for lines that really inspired them, irrespective of location.

Thanks to Zdenka Mihelic for help with this report. 



« Back

Post a comment Print this article

This article has been read 1190 times

TAGS

Click on the tags to explore more

RELATED ARTICLES

Apply for a BMC expedition grant
1
Apply for a BMC expedition grant

An introduction to BMC and MEF mountaineering grants.
Read more »

The most impressive traverse ever completed?
0
The most impressive traverse ever completed?

Belgian climber Sean Villanueva O'Driscoll has been willingly stuck in Patagonia since Covid-19 kicked off, and making the most of it: jaws dropped around the climbing world when he became the first to solo the Fitz Roy Traverse late last week. This epic route, fantasised about by anyone who has ever seen a photo of the jagged skyline above El Chalten, was first completed by the dream simul-climbing team of Alex Honnold and Tommy Caldwell in 2014. The route traverses the iconic Cerro Fitz Roy and its six satellite peaks: 5km of ridge line with around 4000m of vertical gain.
Read more »

Latok I, Lunag Ri, Lupghar Sar West ascents awarded with Piolets d'Or 2019
0
Latok I, Lunag Ri, Lupghar Sar West ascents awarded with Piolets d'Or 2019

Three innovative ascents have been honoured by being awarded the Piolets d'Or 2019 including the ascent of the Latok I north ridge made by the British/Slovenian team of Tom Livingstone, Aleš Česen and Luka Stražar. The other two awards have been given posthumously to bold solo ascents: David Lama's ascent of Lunag Ri and Hansjörg Auer's ascent of Luphgar Sar West.
Read more »

Post a Comment

Posting as Anonymous Community Standards
3000 characters remaining
Submit
Your comment has been posted below, click here to view it
Comments are currently on | Turn off comments
5

RELATED ARTICLES

Apply for a BMC expedition grant
1

An introduction to BMC and MEF mountaineering grants.
Read more »

The most impressive traverse ever completed?
0

Belgian climber Sean Villanueva O'Driscoll has been willingly stuck in Patagonia since Covid-19 kicked off, and making the most of it: jaws dropped around the climbing world when he became the first to solo the Fitz Roy Traverse late last week. This epic route, fantasised about by anyone who has ever seen a photo of the jagged skyline above El Chalten, was first completed by the dream simul-climbing team of Alex Honnold and Tommy Caldwell in 2014. The route traverses the iconic Cerro Fitz Roy and its six satellite peaks: 5km of ridge line with around 4000m of vertical gain.
Read more »

Latok I, Lunag Ri, Lupghar Sar West ascents awarded with Piolets d'Or 2019
0

Three innovative ascents have been honoured by being awarded the Piolets d'Or 2019 including the ascent of the Latok I north ridge made by the British/Slovenian team of Tom Livingstone, Aleš Česen and Luka Stražar. The other two awards have been given posthumously to bold solo ascents: David Lama's ascent of Lunag Ri and Hansjörg Auer's ascent of Luphgar Sar West.
Read more »

BMC MEMBERSHIP
Join 82,000 BMC members and support British climbing, walking and mountaineering. Membership only £16.97.
Read more »
BMC SHOP
Great range of guidebooks, DVDs, books, calendars and maps.
All with discounts for members.
Read more »
TRAVEL INSURANCE
Get covered with BMC Insurance. Our five policies take you from the beach to Everest.
Read more »