{"id":147555,"date":"2021-01-15T10:55:31","date_gmt":"2021-01-15T10:55:31","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/codengine3.ch\/?product=import-placeholder-for-200229"},"modified":"2021-01-15T10:55:35","modified_gmt":"2021-01-15T10:55:35","slug":"alpinist-71","status":"publish","type":"product","link":"https:\/\/pizbube.ch\/en\/shop\/alpinist-71\/","title":{"rendered":"ALPINIST 71"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>\nAlpinist Magazine Issue 71 &#8211; Autumn 2020  <\/p>\n<p>Features:  <\/p>\n<p>Terra Arcana<br \/>\nIt seems only natural that climbers drawn to the mountains are also drawn to<br \/>\nart that depicts them. In this brief survey of artists who recreate in the<br \/>\nlandscapes they render, Mailee Hung considers the articulation of the<br \/>\nunknowable in climbing and landscape art. Featuring art by Jeremy Collins,<br \/>\nLizzy Dalton, Rhiannon Klee Williams, Craig Muderlak, Renan Ozturk and Rachel<br \/>\nPohl.  <\/p>\n<p>The Line of Shadow<br \/>\nIn 2016 alpinist Brette Harrington received a message from her partner, Marc-<br \/>\nAndre\u0301 Leclerc, containing a photo of an unclimbed crescent line on Torre<br \/>\nEgger in the Southern Patagonian Icecap. Years later, Harrington traveled to<br \/>\nthe massif with Quentin Lindfield Roberts to complete an ascent of the line<br \/>\nthey named MA&#8217;s Visio\u0301n.  <\/p>\n<p>Beyond the Field Notes<br \/>\nBorn in 1939 in Pittsburgh, poet Ed Roberson nurtured a &#171;burgeoning curiosity<br \/>\nfor the world&#187; from a young age. On his first major mountain- eering<br \/>\nexpedition, he made the second ascent of Nevado Jangyaraju III in Peru.<br \/>\nHerein, Sarah Audsley interviews Roberson about how his notes from the field<br \/>\ncame to shape some of his prize-winning work.  <\/p>\n<p>Mountains of Grief<br \/>\n&#171;When the mountain community&#8230;grapples with the accidental death of one of<br \/>\nits members,&#187; Anna Callaghan writes, &#171;only one thing is certain: it&#8217;s going<br \/>\nto happen again.&#187; Through interviews with several climbers who&#8217;ve lost loved<br \/>\nones to the mountains, Callaghan explores the ways in which people across the<br \/>\nclimbing community are banding together to address grief and support the<br \/>\nbereaved.  <\/p>\n<p>Departments:  <\/p>\n<p>Sharp End<br \/>\nOf monuments and mountains.  <\/p>\n<p>Letters<br \/>\nOur readers write.  <\/p>\n<p>On Belay<br \/>\nAlong the Tennessee Wall, a trio of difficult roof cracks known as the Triple<br \/>\nCrown had yet to be climbed by a woman when Kathy Karlo first visited the area<br \/>\nin 2014. Years later, in the aftermath of a painful experience, Karlo returns<br \/>\nto the Tennessee Wall to heal\u2014and to make a historic ascent.  <\/p>\n<p>Tool User<br \/>\nWhat&#8217;s a glass instrument measuring four feet long and filled with mercury<br \/>\ndoing in your rucksack? Caroline Schaumann and Bruce Willey reveal the history<br \/>\nof the glass barometer.  <\/p>\n<p>The Climbing Life<br \/>\nErin Connery shares a mysterious ascent. Stephen Kurczy visits Seneca Rocks.<br \/>\nErin Smart becomes an IFMGA guide. Matthew Shipton reveals ancient<br \/>\nmountaineering stories. And Miranda Oakley seeks out moments of peace in the<br \/>\nwadis.  <\/p>\n<p>Full Value<br \/>\nAlpinist Scott Coldiron had little interest in ice climbing until an incident<br \/>\nin 2008, when he suddenly found himself stuck on an icy slope with a broken<br \/>\ncrampon and no easy way down.  <\/p>\n<p>Wired<br \/>\nIn the face of ongoing uncertainty and the threat of climate change, Dine\u0301<br \/>\nclimber Len Necefer journeys to the peaks to find new ways to meld his<br \/>\nancestral cultural ceremonies and the mountain sports he loves.  <\/p>\n<p>Local Hero<br \/>\nKhamsang Wangdi Sherpa was an essential member of numerous high-altitude<br \/>\nascents in the 1950s and 60s. Herein, Deepa Balsavar and Nandini Purandare<br \/>\nrecount some of the accomplishments of this unsung hero.  <\/p>\n<p>Off Belay<br \/>\nStuck indoors? Try Mountains &#038; Monsters, Alpinist&#8217;s first adventure<br \/>\nroleplaying game, where the only dangers (and dragons) you&#8217;ll face are in your<br \/>\nown imagination.<\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Alpinist Magazine Issue 71 &#8211; Autumn 2020 Features: Terra Arcana It seems only natural that climbers drawn to the mountains are also drawn to art that depicts them. In this brief survey of artists who recreate in the landscapes they render, Mailee Hung considers the articulation of the unknowable in climbing and landscape art. 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