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The Alpine Journal 2021
Vol 125
£26.00
In Stock
Usually dispatched within 24 hrs. Free delivery to UK for orders £25 and over
| Cordee Code: | CNJ221 |
|---|---|
| Page Size: | 135 x 216 mm |
| No of Pages: | 430 |
| Publisher: | The Alpine Club |
| ISBN13: | 9781739953508 |
| Published Date: | November 2020 |
| Edition: | 2021 |
| Binding: | Hardback |
| Illustrations: | Colour & B&W photos |
| Weight: | 850g |
| Product Type: | Book |
| Countries: | Austria |
2021 Edition of the Apine Club Journal
The long shadow of Covid 19 kept many of the worlds mountaineers close to home in 2020, but there were stillextraordianry acheivements further afield inclusing the first winter ascent of K2 and a remarkable first ascent on Baruntse from the bold Czechs Mara Holecek and Radoslav Groh. Those unable to reach the Greater Ranges found pleny to explore in the Alps, which saw the largest numberof new routes in recent years. This years Alpine Journal has reports on all of it.
The year was also marked with the loss of two giants of British mountaineering, Doug Scott and Hamish McInnes, both honourary members of the Alpine Club, as well as controversial Italian legend Cesare Maestri, recalled by Alan Heppenstall. Peter Foster decribes the climbing life of C F Meade, Leo dickinson shares his picturesque life of as a documentary filmaker and Nicholas Hurndall Smith takes on the mantle of the illustrious Leslie Stephen.
With mountains increasingly under the media spotlight as climate change alters theri very fabirc, Julian Attwood has a detailed prescription for how the mountains of Wales could be retrunrned to their former glory, locking up carbon and improving biodiveristy. Alton Byers reports on how another mountain environmnet has done better than you might imagine.
With reports, reviews, art and comment from around the globe, the Alpine Journal has everything the dedicated alpinist needs to inspire and reflect.
The long shadow of Covid 19 kept many of the worlds mountaineers close to home in 2020, but there were stillextraordianry acheivements further afield inclusing the first winter ascent of K2 and a remarkable first ascent on Baruntse from the bold Czechs Mara Holecek and Radoslav Groh. Those unable to reach the Greater Ranges found pleny to explore in the Alps, which saw the largest numberof new routes in recent years. This years Alpine Journal has reports on all of it.
The year was also marked with the loss of two giants of British mountaineering, Doug Scott and Hamish McInnes, both honourary members of the Alpine Club, as well as controversial Italian legend Cesare Maestri, recalled by Alan Heppenstall. Peter Foster decribes the climbing life of C F Meade, Leo dickinson shares his picturesque life of as a documentary filmaker and Nicholas Hurndall Smith takes on the mantle of the illustrious Leslie Stephen.
With mountains increasingly under the media spotlight as climate change alters theri very fabirc, Julian Attwood has a detailed prescription for how the mountains of Wales could be retrunrned to their former glory, locking up carbon and improving biodiveristy. Alton Byers reports on how another mountain environmnet has done better than you might imagine.
With reports, reviews, art and comment from around the globe, the Alpine Journal has everything the dedicated alpinist needs to inspire and reflect.