Alex Lowe
Alex Lowe | |
---|---|
Born | Stewart Alexander Lowe December 24, 1958 Frederick, Maryland, United States |
Died | October 5, 1999 | (aged 40)
Nationality | American |
Occupation(s) | Mountaineer, climber |
Website | http://alexlowe.org |
Stewart Alexander Lowe (24 December 1958 – 5 October 1999) was an American mountaineer. He has been described as inspiring "...a whole generation of climbers and explorers with his uncontainable enthusiasm, legendary training routines, and significant ascents of rock climbs, ice climbs, and mountains all over the world...".[1] He died in an avalanche in Tibet. The Alex Lowe Charitable Foundation honors his legacy.[2]
Biography
Lowe was widely admired by his peers for excelling in every aspect of mountaineering, from rock- and ice-climbing to ski descents. Dave Hahn once remarked, "There's Alex Lowe up here, and then there's the rest of us down here. The guy's just really that much better than everybody else." Conrad Anker said, "We're all at this one level, and then there's Alex." Lowe himself said "The best climber in the world is the one having the most fun!"[3]
Lowe improved his upper body strength as a result of a daily exercise regimen that included 400 chin-ups and hundreds of dips. In an article for Active Lifestyle, Gordon Wiltsie, a photographer who climbed with Lowe in Antarctica and Canada's Baffin Island, said, "he'd hog the pull-up bar to knock out 400 pull-ups in sets of 40 and 45. He disliked downtime and knew where to do pull-ups in many airports. Even on expeditions, when rest is hard to come by and much appreciated, Lowe was an oddball. He'd cop pull-ups on a ship's rigging en route to Antarctica, or do dips in a snow pit he dug at base camp." In that article, Wiltsie said, "At Baffin Island, after hauling supplies to a high point on a climb, we went back to camp beat and tired, but Alex proceeded to do pull-up after pull-up. He even brought an exercise device on climbs." He was known jokingly as "Lungs With Legs" and "The Mutant" for his incredible strength and stamina.[4]
Rescue on Denali
In June 1995, Lowe helped the National Park Service rescue several Spanish climbers on 20,320-foot (6,190 m) Denali in Alaska. On 9 June, the group had been trapped for four days at 19,200 feet (5,900 m). Before a rescue team could assemble, one of the climbers fell 4,200 feet (1,300 m) to his death from the mountain's Upper West Rib. The surviving climbers were all suffering from hypothermia. Lowe, Mark Twight and Scott Backes were lifted by military helicopter to a plateau above the Spaniards, scaled down a 400-vertical foot, 50-degree slope of ice and rock, to reach them and determined that one needed immediate evacuation. Amid snowy conditions, he at first dragged, then carried him on his back up the steep slope at high altitude.[5][6]
Death on Shishapangma
In September 1999, Lowe, Conrad Anker and David Bridges (a two-time US national paragliding champion) traveled to the 26,291-foot (8,013 m) Himalayan giant Shishapangma, the fourteenth highest peak in the world, as part of the 1999 American Shishapangma Ski Expedition.[7]
Plans called for Lowe and Anker to be part of the team that would ski down, to become the first Americans to ski down from the summit of an 8,000-meter peak; while Bridges was part of a three-man film team that was to shoot an NBC documentary of the expedition for The North Face. Lowe commented:
It's been a passionate goal of mine to ski off an 8,000 meter peak. I guess there's a lot of people sort of looking to do this and try to ski off Everest. But for me, it's got to be an aesthetic and quality run. And Shishapangma has the best ski line of any of the 8,000 meter peaks. It's just an absolutely straight shot right down the Southwest Face. That's going to be a good one.[8]
On 5 October, they split into two teams as they searched for a route up the mountain. Lowe's group (Lowe, Anker and Bridges) were crossing a flat glacier when a large serac broke loose 6,000 feet (1,800 m) above and tumbled downhill. The 500-foot (150 m)-wide avalanche swept over the three men. Anker was thrown 100 feet (30 m) by the windblast, and suffered a lacerated head, two broken ribs, and dislocated shoulder, but emerged from the snow, and led a 20-hour rescue attempt in the large debris field measuring up to 20 feet (6.1 m) deep. Neither body was found at the time, but almost seventeen years later on 27 April 2016, climbers Ueli Steck and David Göttler, came across the remains of the two climbers emerging from the glacier.[9]
Memorial fund
Lowe was survived by his wife Jennifer and three sons, Max, Sam, and Isaac. The Alex Lowe Charitable Foundation was established in his honor to provide direction and financial support to humanitarian programs in mountain regions around the world. Their work includes the Khumbu Climbing Center for indigenous people of Nepal.[10]
Jennifer Lowe-Anker published a memoir, Forget Me Not in 2008, that recounts her life shared with Lowe, his death and the life she continued with Anker. Forget Me Not won the National Outdoor Book award for literature in 2008.[11]
Climbing achievements and recognition
In 1995, Lowe received the American Alpine Club's Underhill Award for outstanding mountaineering achievement, the highest honor in U.S. mountaineering. He climbed for nearly 10 years with The North Face professional climbing team, which included in the later years mountaineer Jon Krakauer, author of the bestseller Into Thin Air. After Lowe's death, Outside Magazine posthumously declared him "the world's best climber," adding, "No matter how jaw-dropping his routes, Lowe's real genius grew out of the way he combined physical accomplishments with an indomitable spirit."
Alex Lowe Peak
Formerly known by its elevation as Peak 10,031, Alex Lowe Peak, south of Bozeman, Montana in the Gallatin National Forest was officially named after him in September 2005.[12][13] In spring of 1997, Lowe had climbed the northern couloir with friend Hans Saari; and the two had made the first ski-descent from the summit, down what they named "Hellmouth Couloir."
Climbing and skiing resumé
Notable climbs
- First ascents
- Rakekniven, Queen Maud Land (Antarctica), January 1997
- Great Sail Peak, Baffin Island, 1998
- New routes
- Mount Hunter's Moonflower Buttress, Alaska
- Kwangde Nup, Nepal, 1989
- Kusum Kanguru, Nepal, 1990
- Northwest Chimney, Grand Teton, Wyoming, 1991
- Peak 4810, Ak-Su region, Kyrgyzstan, 1995
- Great Trango Tower, Pakistan, 1999, NW face, new route
- Other climbs
- Matterhorn (Alps, Switzerland)
- K2, Pakistan, China, 1986 (attempt)
- Mount Everest, South Col Route, Nepal, 1990 and 1993 (attempt of its Kangshung Face in 1994)
- Gasherbrum IV, Pakistan, 1992 (attempt)
- Khan Tengri, Kyrgyzstan (August 1993), solo ascent in 10 hours and 8 minutes (broke the former speed climbing record by four hours)
- Aconcagua, Argentina, 1993 and 1994
- Annapurna IV, Nepal, 1996 (attempt)
- Mount Rundle, Canadian Rockies, spring 1996, "Troubled Dreams", first free ascent of one of the most difficult mixed climbs in the Canadian Rockies
Skiing
- First descents
- Hellmouth Couloir, Alex Lowe Peak (formerly Peak 10,031), Montana, 1997
- Northwest Couloir, Middle Teton, Wyoming, 1992
- Enclosure Couloir, Grand Teton, Wyoming, 1994
See also
References and notes
- ^ Bisharat, Andrew (2 May 2016). "Climbing Partner Remembers the Legendary Alex Lowe".
- ^ http://alexlowe.org/. Retrieved 20 February 2022.
{{cite web}}
: Missing or empty|title=
(help) - ^ americanalpineclub.org, pdf version of AAJ 2000, p. 441 (the motto of In memoriam: Alex Lowe 1958-1999, pp. 441-443, by Gordon Wiltsie).
- ^ "Bodies of elite climber, cameraman buried in 1999 found". CBS News. Retrieved 6 May 2018.
- ^ Richard Mackenzie (9 March 2012). "The Life and Death of Mr. Invincible". Archived from the original on 2021-12-19. Retrieved 6 May 2018 – via YouTube.
- ^ "BBC News - World - Cyber reports of mountain tragedy". news.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 6 May 2018.
- ^ "Climbers Alex Lowe and David Bridges' bodies found in Tibet after 16 years". 2 May 2016. Retrieved 20 February 2022.
- ^ "Tales from Alex Lowe". www.mountainzone.com. Retrieved 2016-05-03.
- ^ Heller, Seth (29 April 2016). "Alex Lowe's and David Bridges' Remains Found on Shishapangma". Rock and Ice. Rock and Ice. Retrieved April 30, 2016.
- ^ "The Believers", Conrad Anker, December 2005, Outside Magazine.
- ^ "2008: Outdoor Literature Category", noba-web.org
- ^ everestnews.com "Alex Lowe Peak": A Mountain Honoring a Mountaineer [with photograph, localization and the climbing history of the peak] (retrieved March 27, 2010).
- ^ alexlowe.org/peak.shtml Archived 2009-07-11 at the Wayback Machine "Alex Lowe Peak": A Mountain Honoring a Mountaineer. Retrieved March 27, 2010.
External links
- Outside magazine, December 1999 Rock Star. Alex Lowe's genius was his style and spirit (Obituary, with list of major ascents). Retrieved March 27, 2010.
- Outside magazine, December 1999 Brightness Falls. Fellow climbers remember, and say good-bye (retrieved March 27, 2010)
- alexlowe.org, page of Alex Lowe Charitable Foundation (retrieved March 27, 2010)
- everestnews.com "Alex Lowe Peak": A Mountain Honoring a Mountaineer [with photograph, localization and the climbing history of the peak] (retrieved March 27, 2010)
- Alex Lowe, note in britannica.com (retrieved March 27, 2010)
- Video Tribute to Alex Lowe
- Beyond the Edge: National Geographic Adventure Blog: Alex Lowe’s Son Reflects on Finding Closure Posted by Max Lowe of Nat Geo Young Explorers on May 11, 2016