Luka Lindic – Adventure Sports https://blogs.dw.com/adventuresports Mountaineering, climbing, expeditions, adventures Wed, 20 Feb 2019 13:29:24 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 Ines Papert: “I’m certainly quite proud” https://blogs.dw.com/adventuresports/ines-papert-im-certainly-quite-proud/ Thu, 27 Oct 2016 14:27:26 +0000 http://blogs.dw.com/adventuresports/?p=28713 Ines Papert

Ines Papert

If a good mood could be converted into electricity, Ines Papert right now wouldn’t need any socket at home. I can literally hear the beaming face of the 42-year-old German top climber on the phone when we talk about her success at the 5842-meter-high Kyzyl Asker in the border area between Kyrgyzstan and China. Along with her 28-year-old Slovenian rope partner Luka Lindic, she has opened – as reported – a spectacular route through the Southeast Face of the mountain. A line where many top climbers had previously failed, she herself twice.

Ines, how does it feel to have fulfilled  a dream in the third run (after 2010 and 2011)?

Really good would be an understatement. (She laughs) There are actually no words for it. I still wake up sometimes in the morning and think: Was this just a dream? The moment up there was very emotional, though brief. We knew the weather turned and we quickly had to climb down again. There was not much time to enjoy it. But it’s still an unforgettable experience.

Ines and Luka Lindic on the summit of Kyzyl Asker

Ines and Luka Lindic on the summit of Kyzyl Asker

You have been for the first time en route with Slovenian Luka Lindic and returned with such a big success. Did it just fit?

Kyzyl Asker was still hard to digest after I had failed in 2011 for the second time. It was clear to me that I should have a better team if I try it again. I did not want to leave it to chance, I just had to listen to my inner voice. When I showed Luka a picture of the wall at an event of our joint sponsor, I immediately felt his enthusiasm. In the meantime, I can recognize whether such emotions rise from deep conviction or from cool calculation that it might be good for his vita. I immediately realized that Luka was serious. Of course, I have followed his expeditions during the past years. You couldn’t wish for a better climbing partner for such a project. There were actually no causes of friction between us. We didn’t have to communicate a lot on the mountain. It was just clear how to tackle it.

Did you have to motivate each other?

This wasn’t necessary at all. We were highly motivated from the beginning when we saw how good the conditions were compared with my two previous attempts. We arrived, made our acclimatization tour, waited in a blizzard for two days and then immediately used the first good weather window. There weren’t any long waiting periods, problems with high altitude or any other ones.

Ines climbing in perfect ice

Ines climbing in perfect ice

You finished a line that had been a too hard nut to crack for many expeditions before. You yourself had also failed twice. What was the secret of success this time?

I had considered that it was more favorable to travel from China to the mountain. That was what Nicolas Favresse and Sean Villanueva had done for the first time in 2013 when they had first climbed the South Pillar to the right of our route. Until then, we thought we had to travel via Kyrgyzstan. From the Chinese side, you don’t have to carry your baggage over 16 kilometers across a 5,200-meter-high pass to Advanced Base Camp, as you have to do in Kyrgyzstan. In addition, you set off in China at an altitude of 2,900 meters and can acclimatize much better than in Kyrgyzstan, where you first have to go by car up to 4,000 meters. So we had a shorter access and more elevation to acclimatize.
The second secret of success was our team. Luka is just incredibly fast. We perfectly complemented each other and were able to speed up. For us it was clear that we had to climb almost the entire 1,200 meters difference in altitude to the summit ridge on the first day.
And then the good conditions! During my first attempts the conditions had been really difficult. Then we had at least M 8 pitches. Such a difficult mixed climbing takes much more time than now in a closed ice line, which is only interrupted a few times by rock sections.
Another success factor was that we had only one backpack. We have done it in a light style. We had only a two-person sleeping bag, no reserve of gas and food, only the absolutely necessary clothing.

Uncomfortable bivouac

Uncomfortable bivouac

Did you have to go to your limit when climbing?

Actually, I was only at my limit high up in the wall. It’s really tough if you have only one backpack. I don’t know whether I would do it again. Perhaps it would be better to divide the equipment, between a light backpack for the leading climber and a heavier one for the second. We took turns at leading every few pitches. The passages in which I was the second and had to carry the heavy backpack were the most exhausting ones. Finally Luca once more accelerated. I might have bivouacked already one, two pitches below. But we were looking for a place to sit on reasonably. Unfortunately, this didn’t happen.

The success proved you right, even if you have spent a very cold night.

But this only worked because we didn’t have to climb a lot afterwards. After this night neither of us would have been able to climb once more in the same difficulty as before.

The new route via the Southeast Face

The new route via the Southeast Face

Where do you rank this success in your career?

Actually, very, very high up. (She laughs) I simply like the Alpine style best. You are flexible and fast, you can also use small time windows. This style was simply suggested for our line. I am certainly quite proud.
I have been also very happy about various comments on Facebook, by climbers who had previously tried in vain to climb the route. This is the greatest reward at all. Someone could have also been pissed and could have written: This was actually my line, it was reserved for me. You can see that, by and large, the climbing community works well, that we don’t grudge each other a success. This was a nice experience.

And now you feel empty and don’t know what to do next?

No way! I always have a lot of ideas. I don’t even know when to realize it all. My life is not enough for that. We had a little time left in China at the end of our expedition to create a list of possible goals for the next time.

In other words, you’re going to climb with Luka again?

For sure, we already have very concrete plans.

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Ines Papert on Kyzyl Asker: Success in the third run https://blogs.dw.com/adventuresports/ines-papert-on-kyzyl-asker-success-in-the-third-run/ Fri, 21 Oct 2016 09:14:04 +0000 http://blogs.dw.com/adventuresports/?p=28641 Papert (l.) and Lindic on top of Kyzyl Asker

Papert (l.) and Lindic on top of Kyzyl Asker

Some mountains act to certain people like magnets. They exert an almost magical pull, even if they are as difficult to reach as the Kyzyl Asker in the border region between China and Kyrgyzstan. For the third time, the German top climber Ines Papert traveled to the 5842-meter-high mountain to try to climb a new route via the difficult Southeast Face, which she just couldn’t get out of her mind. In 2010 and 2011 Ines had failed, now she returned with a success. “I am the happiest person on the planet. It keeps me smiling for a bit longer,” Papert writes on Facebook. Three weeks ago, the 42-year old climbed along with the 28-year-old Slovenian Luka Lindic through the wall to the summit of Kyzyl Asker. In the past years the 1200-meter-high couloir had been a too hard nut to crack for several expeditions. Papert and Lindic baptized their new route “Lost in China”. For the first time Ines had traveled to the mountain not from Kyrgyzstan but from China. This made the expedition so distinctive, she writes: “The language, the culture, the time spent and the vastness of the country often gave us the impression of being lost.”

Almost easy

The new route via the Southeast Face

The new route via the Southeast Face

On 30 September at 5 a.m., Ines and Luka climbed into the Southeast Face. “We knew we had to make progress quickly to reach the summit ridge that same day. Otherwise, the predicted good weather window would close and we would have to retreat or be caught in a snowstorm.” In 2010, Ines had to turn around 300 meters below the summit because of heavy snowfall and avalanches. This time, she found quite different conditions: “Neither Luka nor me had climbed such a perfect ice and mixed route at an altitude this high before. The same route had cost us incredibly much time in 2010 because of the difficult conditions. This time it seemed almost easy.”

Tough bivouac

Ines climbing the wall

Ines climbing the wall

They climbed until 10 p.m. and bivouacked two pitches below the summit ridge. In painstaking work, they prepared with their ice axes a small seat. “We were protected from the wind but still exposed and far from comfortable.” The two climbers spent a frosty night on the ledge. “Luka said it was one of the toughest bivys. I had already experienced nights like these twice here on Kyzyl Asker,” writes Ines. At noon the next day, Papert and Lindic reached the cornice-covered summit. The Slovenian let the German climber go ahead. She had invested so much energy into this mountain, now Ines fulfilled her dream: “I was speechless and simply happy to experience this moment. Luka arrived and I could see joy in his face as he stood next to me.”

One of the best lines

 Luka in action

Luka in action

Lindic belongs to the young generation of strong Slovenian climbers. In 2015, Luka was awarded the Piolet d’Or, the “Oscar of the mountaineers”, along with his countrymen Marko Prezelj and Ales Cesen. Last summer, Luka and Ales had succeeded the only fourth climb of the difficult Northwest Ridge of the almost-eight-thousander Gasherbrum IV (7,932 meters) in Pakistan. Lindic has enjoyed the expedition with Ines Papert. “One of the best lines I climbed so far,“ the 28-year-old writes on Facebook. “Thank you Ines for the idea and great times.”

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Lindic and Cesen reach North Summit of Gasherbrum IV https://blogs.dw.com/adventuresports/lindic-and-cesen-reach-north-summit-of-gasherbrum-iv/ Fri, 29 Jul 2016 16:05:29 +0000 http://blogs.dw.com/adventuresports/?p=28078 Gasherbrum IV

Gasherbrum IV (Northwest Ridge on the left)

Great success for Luka Lindic and Ales Cesen in the Karakoram: According to the website “Altitude Pakistan”, the two Slovenian climbers reached on Tuesday the North Summit of Gasherbrum IV, which is about 20 meters lower than the 7932-meter-high Main Summit. It took Luka and Ales three days to ascend via the Northwest Ridge. It was only the fourth ascent of the route, which had been opened by the Australians Greg Child and Tim Macartney-Snape and the American Tom Hargis in 1986. “Altitude Pakistan” reports that heavy snowfall made the descent of the two Slovenians even harder. They arrived at Base Camp yesterday. “happy, exhausted and emaciated”.

Extremely challenging

Initially, 28-year-old Lindic and 34-year-old Cesen had wanted to climb through the G IV-West Face (also called “Shining Wall”), but gave up their plan due to the difficult conditions in the wall. The almost-eight-thousander Gasherbrum IV, the sixth highest mountain in Pakistan, is considered technically extremely demanding. In 1958, the Italian climbers Walter Bonatti and Carlo Mauri had made the first ascent via the Northeast Ridge.

For acclimatization on an eight-thousander

Lindic (r.), Cesen and Prezelj (l.) in Courmayeur in 2015

Lindic (r.), Cesen and Prezelj (l.) in Courmayeur in 2015

For acclimatization (!) for G IV, Lindic and Cesen had scaled the 8051-meter-high Broad Peak on 29 June. It had been the first summit success on an eight-thousander in the Karakoram this season. Both belong to the young generation of very strong Slovenian climbers. In 2015, they were awarded the Piolet d’Or, the “Oscar of mountaineering”, along with their compatriot Marko Prezelj for their first ascent of the North Face of the 6,657-meter-high Hagshu in northern India.

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Summit successes in the Karakoram https://blogs.dw.com/adventuresports/summit-successes-in-the-karakoram/ Wed, 27 Jul 2016 22:26:35 +0000 http://blogs.dw.com/adventuresports/?p=28024 Nanga Parbat

Nanga Parbat

The Karakoram remains unpredictable. The climbing season in Pakistan is slowly but surely coming to an end – and the number of summit successes is manageable. On Nanga Parbat the Spaniard Ferran Latorre, the Frenchman Hélias Millerioux and the Bulgarian Bojan Petrov reached the highest point at 8,125 meters. “Seven intense days, but it was worth it,” tweeted Latorre (see also the video below). It was the 13th eight-thousander for him, he climbed all of them without bottled oxygen. Now only Mount Everest is still missing in the collection of the 45-year-old. Ferran wants to tackle it in spring 2017. Bojan Petrov has scaled so far eight of the 14 highest mountains in the world. Nanga Parbat was after Annapurna and Makalu his third eight-thousander this year.

Avalanche on K2

The season on K2, with a height of 8,611 meters the second highest mountain on earth, will probably remain without any summit success. After an avalanche had completely destroyed Camp 3 at 7,315 meters four days ago, the commercial expeditions began to strike their tents on the “King of the Eight-thousanders”. Thank goodness the climbers were still below Camp 3, when the avalanche swept down.

An 8000er for acclimatization

Gasherbrum IV

Gasherbrum IV

Eight summit successes were reported from the 8,034-meter-high Gasherbrum II. On Broad Peak, so far only the two Slovenians Luka Lindic and Ales Cesen have reached the highest point at 8,051 meters – very early in the season and as acclimatization (!) for an even more ambitious goal: climbing the West Face of the 7932-meter-high Gasherbrum IV. The “Shining Wall” has been climbed only twice: for the first time in 1985 in Alpine style by the Austrian Robert Schauer and the Pole Wojciech Kurtyka and in 1997 by a Korean team. Lindic and Cesen belong to the young generation of very strong Slovenian climbers. In 2015, they were awarded the Piolet d’Or, the “Oscar of mountaineering”, along with their compatriot Marko Prezelj for their first ascent of the North Face of the 6,657-meter-high Hagshu in northern India.

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Luka Lindic is yearning for Latok I https://blogs.dw.com/adventuresports/luka-lindic-is-yearning-for-latok-i/ Thu, 18 Jun 2015 21:29:56 +0000 http://blogs.dw.com/adventuresports/?p=25209 Luka Lindic

Luka Lindic

“That was far below my limit”, says the Slovenian Luka Lindic when I ask him about the first climbing of the North Face of the 6515-meter-high Hagshu in the Indian Himalayas. After all, Luka and his two Slovenian friends Marko Prezelj and Ales Cesen have been awarded for this climb with this year’s Piolet d’Or, the “Oscar for climbers”. “Sometimes you find such a logical line. It’s normal to follow it. We didn’t find any extreme difficult terrain”, Luka remembers. Looking for his personal limits, the 27-year-old climber will travel to the North of Pakistan this summer. In early July, Luka will set off to the Karakoram, together with his compatriots Luka Krajnc, Martin Zumer and Janez Svoljsak. “We will stay on Choktoi glacier for a month. And if the conditions will allow it and if we feel good, we would like to try Latok I.”

North Ridge? North Face?

Latok group and Ogre (r.)

Latok group and Ogre (r.)

Lindic does not reveal what exactly his young Slovenian team is planning. There are still some challenges on the 7145-meter-high granite mountain Latok I , that top climbers from all over the world have often tried but failed till now – e.g. the extremely steep North Ridge. Since the legendary first attempt in 1978 by the Americans Jeff and George Henry Lowe, Michael Kennedy and Jim Donini, who were forced back by a storm about 150 meters below the summit, more than 20 attempts to master the route failed. The US climbers Kyle Dempster and Scott Adamson announced another try this summer. The North Face of Latok I is still unclimbed too. Actually, the Huber brothers Alexander and Thomas had planned to try the wall in summer 2014, but had cancelled the project due to the uncertain situation in Pakistan.

8000ers in mind

Luka climbing the Hagshu North Face (© Marko Prezelj)

Luka climbing the Hagshu North Face (© Marko Prezelj)

Luka Lindic is considered one of the most talented and versatile climbers in Slovenia. But the mountaineer who is studying logistics in Styria (Stajerska) does not regard himself as being an upcoming star. “I just want to make good progress all the time, that’s important for me”, Luka says. In March 2014, he and Luka Krajnc first succeeded in free climbing the difficult route “Rolling Stone” through the 1000- meter-high Grandes Jorasses North Face above Chamonix in France. In fall 2014, the award-winning coup on Hagshu followed. “8000-meter-peaks are also in my mind”, says Lindic. “I believe, there is still a lot to do, especially in Alpine style.” I am sure we will hear a lot from Luka. Perhaps as early as this summer.

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