3#09 Becky Coles of Project Alpine Spirit
“I love getting out there and stripping everything away so that life becomes very simple.”
00:00 - Introduction
03:08 - Welcome from (temporarily) damp Sheffield, moving between North Wales, Yorkshire and the Highlands
05:10 - Being the 40th woman to gain the Winter Mountaineering and Climbing Instructor qualification (and only 6% of the holders are women)
07:10 - A PhD in Glacial Geomorphology from the University of Sheffield, “you can’t drive through Drumochter without admiring the drumlins”, using skills to map unexplored routes and peaks across the world, a career dilemma
12:00 - Turning to guiding and “solving the puzzle” of matching clients with suitable ways to achieve their goals
15:40 - Working alongside inspiring peers: Tania Noakes “she was pretty hard to keep up with and replicate!”, being a woman in the outdoor instruction world
20:30 - “I’m probably not the right person to ask, because in some way it suited me. You need to ask the people that were put off and aren’t here.”
21:30 - Project Alpine Spirit, so far has completed 72 of the 82 Alpine 4000m peaks (the most recent being Mont Maudit) “It takes you to places you otherwise wouldn’t go.”
23:15 - Juggling multiple lists and defining the Alpine 4000ers, being inspired by Victorian women climbers
25:50 - Derailed by pneumonia and shingles, “The 10 that are left are the really hard ones”
29:37 - Surprise (and not surprising) hits of the 4000ers: perfect conditions on the Matterhorn, the Schreckhorn and other Oberland peaks adjacent to the Eiger…
36:26 - “Some are quite isolated, and it’ll be a three-day mission just to go in to get one peak, and then others like the Monte Rosa traverse where you can do 18 in four days.”
37:00 - Further ranging expeditions, “If I’d had endless money I probably would have signed up to a commercial trip and been guided, but I discovered that in the UK we have lots of access to mountaineering grants...”
39:00 - “There are plenty of peaks that aren’t super technical and were within my skills to attempt, and that took me to remote places in Nepal, Central Asia, the Wakhan Corridor into Afghanistan and onto South Georgia as well.”
40:15 - What does it feel like to make a first ascent? “Nobody has seen this view from this exact spot before. It is quite special.”
44:18 - “I hate the packing, but I love getting out there and stripping everything away so that life becomes very simple.”
45:04 - Greatest Mountain Memory: the big expeditions “where everything comes together”, a first ascent in the far west of Nepal (Lasarmula, see: https://www.sidetracked.com/a-mountain-affair/)
47:30 - All the time, money, freedom… where do you go and what do you do? Another first ascent in Greenland or Pakistan