My friend Bob from the athletic club just looked at me with
a blank stare and said,” I don’t know who that is.” “Reinhold Messner,
the mountain climber?” I repeated. “Maybe I should but I’ve never heard
of him.” Bob lives in the woods on the Olympic Peninsula. He’s hiked and trekked around the
world. It just seemed he would know the most famous mountaineer since Sir
Edmund Hillary.
Now that I think of it, though, sports circles are pretty
tight. On the inside, the tiniest detail is food for discussion amongst
the initiated. But still there are people who don’t know Jeff Gordon, David Beckham,
Derek Jeter, Kobe Bryant or, dare I say, Russell Wilson. Regardless, Reinhold
Messner is coming to Seattle next week for an appearance on behalf of his
sponsor Adidas and the Mountaineers. His climbing achievements are
historic. First to climb Mt. Everest without supplemental oxygen (for you
non-clumbers that’s carrying bottled oxygen and a respirator to breathe more
freely above 26,000 feet, which most high altitude climbers do.) ; first to
solo climb Everest without supplemental oxygen and first to climb the world’s
14 highest peaks over 8,000 meters (26,000 feet). He’s a prolific writer with
over 60 books in his vitae. He was a member of European Parliament. With over
100 first ascents to his credit, Messner even had the admiration of my friend
Ed Hillary. And that is saying something.
Messner’s talk here next week will be a reunion of sorts. In
the 80’s and 90’s, I was fortunate to step into that inner circle of climbers,
thanks to my kindred spirit, Lou Whittaker, the dean of guiding in America. Tent mates on my first adventure to Mt. Everest were both members of that elite
club. John Roskelley, who like Messner, is a recipient of the Piolet d’Or
(the Golden Ice Axe), alpinism’s most coveted prize, and one of this country’s
most accomplished mountaineers; and Jim Wickwire whose climbing achievements
including the first American ascent of K2, the world’s second highest and
judged by many to be the most difficult of the big ones, have been chronicled
in feature films, documentaries a Broadway play, numerous books and National
Geographic. Jim and John are northwesterners and have become close friends over
the years. Jim will introduce Messner before he speaks and will be the emcee
for the night. John, on the other hand, will have a dialogue with
Reinhold to cap off the evening.
First contact with Reinhold for me was when I created an
event called the Mountain Summit. It stemmed from the mainstream US media
paying more attention to the climbing world. I brought the mountain
friends I had made and the media that I worked with together in a gathering to discuss issues such as access to mountain wildernesses. It was in no way on the same scale but similar to the world
gatherings in Davos, Switzerland. The event moved around, even to Tokyo, and
drew major media such as TIME magazine, National Geographic, USA Today, the New
York Times and many more. Even Robert Redford took notice of what we were
doing and asked to host the event at Sundance.
Climbers from all over the world came to the Mountain
Summit. I thought if Doug Scott and Chris Bonington (ever heard of those
names?) could come, why not Reinhold Messner. So I decided to invite him.
Reinhold is Italian (Messner a venuta!) and lives in a South Tyrolian castle that he bought for $15,000. The
locals said a crazy man has bought a wall of stone. Believe me, it is not a pile
of rocks. A castle with a phone seemed a bit odd even then but he answered.
“Messner” he said, with sort of an echo. He was very gracious and, after I
dropped a few of the right names, he agreed to participate in one of our
meetings. Once there, he jumped in with both feet and he was hooked. He
returned several times and brought his wife Sabine with him. He always
came prepared to make us think. At the Mountain Summit, he introduced the
concept of the “White Wilderness”, which are the blank spots on the map. There
is nothing there and man should keep it that way was his mantra. The White
Wilderness holds more meaning now than ever.
I like Reinhold. He’s thoughtful, opinionated, interesting
and even funny if you give him half a chance. He’s bigger than life and one of those people
that you would like to meet but never expect to. And suddenly there he is and
he’s just what you hoped he’d be. Mostly, he’s a lover of the mountains.
He respects them as I do. He echoes Ed Hillary’s call for limiting access to
mountains like Mount Everest, which I helped Hillary promote. Reinhold and I
connected. We talked about writing which both of us like to do. He’s
written every word in those 60-plus books. He told me that writing was the best
way for him record the details of his adventures and doing that made him better
at it. I couldn’t agree more.
His trip here is being tagged onto his keynote address to the
American Alpine Club in New York the day before. I hope and expect that you
will read or hear about his visit before the weekend is over. Coverage of his
talk will likely be buried under an avalanche of Super Bowl reporting. If you
have tickets to hear Reinhold, consider yourself lucky. The event has long been sold out. I
guarantee that I will be there listening to three people that I have great
respect and admiration for and hoping that their messages of freedom and
conservation of the mountains of the world will be heard loud and clear. Messner, Roskelley and Wickwire, three names I will never forget. All three have helped changed the world of the outdoors and my world, as well.