Roger Schäli free climbs north face of Arwa Spire

Posted by Lindsay Griffin on 27/10/2012
North face of the Arwa Spire. Fior di Vite climbs the rightward slanting couloir left of centre, then moves right onto the rock face to climb steeply to the Central Summit, which appears highest in this photo. Frank Kretschmann (funst.de)
View 1 of 3

Making his third visit to the Arwa Valley, Swiss Roger Schäli has made the first free ascent of his own route on the north face of the Arwa Spire (6,193m), a spectacular triple-summited rock and ice monolith in the Indian Himalaya.

The Arwa Valley lies in the Western Garhwal, north of the holy Hindu temple of Badrinath. It was a visit in the late 1990s by Indian Himalaya guru Harish Kapadia, who brought back stunning photos of the Arwa Tower and Spire, that first attracted a certain Mick Fowler.

With Kenton Cool, Crag Jones and Stephen Sustad he gained permission to climb in the valley during the spring of 1999.

Fowler and Sustad were successful on the higher Arwa Tower (6,352m), climbing it by the 1,000m northwest face at British 5b, A3 and Scottish V/VI. Cool and Jones made two attempts on the north side of the Spire (6,193m) but failed to summit.

Undeterred Cool returned the following year with Andy and Pete Benson, Ian Parnell, Al Powell and Dave Wills. Various lines were tried before the Bensons made the first ascent of the East Summit of the Spire via the east ridge (TD+). Cool and Parnell followed several days later.

In 2002 it was the turn of climbers from the Groupe Militaire de Haute Montagne (GMHM), who put up two new routes on the Tower, and made a fast repeat of the British route on the east ridge of the Spire.

It was during all this French activity that young Swiss guides Stephan Harvey, Bruno Hasler and Roger Schäli arrived in the valley, with the aim of putting up a new route or two on the unclimbed north face of the Spire.

The three first attempted the prominent north couloir of the unclimbed Central Summit, fixed some rope, and then set off with a portaledge. Moving out right from the top of the couloir, they found the rock too cold and snowy to free climb in rock shoes, so aided four pitches to reach easier ground and the summit, which they felt was probably the highest of the three.

They celebrated their success with the Italian Grappa, Fior di Vite, which became the name of the route. The difficulties were rated at 80° VI+ and A2, and the line 800m in length..

They then turned their attention to the unclimbed West Summit and made a classic siege ascent, initially by the north couloir (attempted in 2000 by Powell and Wills) and then the barrel-shaped rock buttress to the right. They took seven days to reach the summit via Capisco (A3 and M6+). Later, these ascents were nominated for the Piolet d'Or.

The Huber brothers hoped to free climb Capisco in 2005, but although they were able to make the second ascent of the route, poor weather forced them to use aid.

In 2002 Schäli was only 23 and the whole experience was new, but by 2011 he and Italian partner Simon Gietl felt the time was right to transfer their vision of alpine style free climbing at lower altitudes to the rock and ice faces of the Himalaya.

Schäli wanted to try Fior di Vite again and the two arrived with cameraman Daniel Ahnen. However, in the early stages of the expedition, Ahnen and a companion were walking towards the face in order to capture pictures, when at ca 5,400m Ahnen fell 50m into a deep crevasse.

For five days, with the help of the Indian military, the climbers tried to rescue Ahnen, but were unable to make any voice or visual contact. The expedition was abandoned, and for Schäli the weeks after this tragic accident proved the most difficult of his life.

Nonetheless, this autumn Gietl and Schäli were back, now accompanied by experienced climber and cameraman Frank Kretschmann and guide Andrea di Donato.

Conditions were better, though it proved a cruel fight against freezing fingers, and cold feet in rock shoes. Placing solid natural gear was often very difficult. But the 800m route was free climbed, to the summit, by Gietl and Schäli at 90° M6 and 7a.
 



« Back

Post a comment Print this article

This article has been read 1375 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 »

Everest: the proposed new rules
3
Everest: the proposed new rules

A spike in deaths on Everest this year provoked media attention and an outcry of opinions. At a press conference last week, Nepal's Ministry of Tourism proposed stricter access regulations. But what should change, and will anything actually happen?
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
2
Anonymous User
29/10/2012
simon gietl is italian, not swiss.
Tim Waterhouse(staff comment)
30/10/2012
@Anon: thanks, now corrected

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 »

Everest: the proposed new rules
3

A spike in deaths on Everest this year provoked media attention and an outcry of opinions. At a press conference last week, Nepal's Ministry of Tourism proposed stricter access regulations. But what should change, and will anything actually happen?
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 »