Become a Member

Get access to more than 30 brands, premium video, exclusive content, events, mapping, and more.

Already have an account? Sign In

Become a Member

Get access to more than 30 brands, premium video, exclusive content, events, mapping, and more.

Already have an account? Sign In

Brands

News

David Lama, Hansjörg Auer, Tom Livingstone, Ales Cesen and Luka Strazar Win 2019 Piolets d’Or

The late alpinists Lama and Auer are each honored for their respective solo ascents---the former on Lunag Ri, Nepal, the latter on Lupghar Sar West, Pakistan, while Livingstone, Česen and Stražar are recognized for their first ascent of a new line on the north ridge, north face and south face of Latok I, Pakistan.

Lock Icon

Unlock this article and more benefits with 40% off.

Already have an Outside Account? Sign in

Outside+ Logo

40% Off Outside+.
$4.99/month $2.99/month*

Get the one subscription to fuel all your adventures.


  • Map your next adventure with our premium GPS apps: Gaia GPS Premium and Trailforks Pro.
  • Read unlimited digital content from 15+ brands, including Outside Magazine, Triathlete, Ski, Trail Runner, and VeloNews.
  • Watch 600+ hours of endurance challenges, cycling and skiing action, and travel documentaries.
  • Learn from the pros with expert-led online courses.
Join Outside+

*Outside memberships are billed annually. Print subscriptions available to U.S. residents only. You may cancel your membership at anytime, but no refunds will be issued for payments already made. Upon cancellation, you will have access to your membership through the end of your paid year. More Details

In 2019 the International Jury of the Piolets d’Or has chosen to honour three innovative ascents: a famous face on an iconic mountain of the central Karakoram; a previously untouched face on a little-known peak of the western Karakoram; an ascent of one of the highest remaining unclimbed summits in Nepal. Perhaps unusually, two of these were bold solo climbs. All three summits were close to or a little above 7,000 meters. They are the three “Ls”: Latok, Lunag and Lupghar.

The Piolets d’Or celebrates and awards ascents rather than specifically the climbers that made them, though naturally it is those climbers who are presented with awards. Tragically, both authors of the solo ascents—Hansjörg Auer and David Lama—are no longer with us. However, at the Ladek Mountain Festival, where the awards will be presented this September, it will be family and friends who accept the accolades on their behalf.

Also Read

Lama, Roskelley And Auer Likely Reached Summit Of Howse Peak Before Deaths

Latok I – A Climbing Timeline

Piolets D’Or Releases Long List Of Significant Climbs From 2018


Lunag Ri (6,895m), First Ascent via West Ridge, 1,500m, 90°

David Lama (Austria), Solo, October 23-25

Lunag Ri from the southwest. (A) Main summit (6,895m). (B) Southeast top. (1) Line of Anker-Lama attempts in 2015 and 2016. (2) Line of Lama’s solo ascents. (H1) High point with Anker in 2016. (H2) High point of 2015 attempt and 2016 solo attempt. Photo: ©David Lama/American Alpine Journal.

Lunag Ri is the culminating point of the Rolwaling’s Lunag Massif, which straddles the Nepal-Tibet border. Before 2018 it was one of the highest unclimbed peaks in Nepal and there had been at least four serious attempts to reach its lofty summit. An attempt from the southeast, and another from the north, both finished on a subsidiary southeast top. In 2015 Conrad Anker and David Lama reached a point on the west ridge around 300 meters below the summit, finding the ridge more complex and difficult than expected. They returned in 2016, only for Anker to be evacuated by helicopter after suffering a stroke. Lama subsequently made a bold solo attempt, surpassing his previous high point by around 50 meters.

[Also Read Interview: David Lama On His Lunag Ri Solo]

In 2018, when Anker confirmed he would no longer go on this sort of expedition, Lama decided to decline other offers from strong partners and to go it alone. In the intense cold of late October, the Austrian climbed difficult mixed terrain, ice and snow, with two bivouacs, to reach the crux technical climbing on the steep headwall. Surmounting this, he made an airy traverse on to the spectacular diving-board summit. Lama descended by rappel, mostly along the line of his route. It was a climb that would remain “engraved in my memory for the exposure, the difficulty, the cold and the loneliness, and for a successful conclusion to a personal project.”


Luphgar Sar West (7,157m), West Face, 1,000M, M4 55°

Hansjörg Auer (Austria), Solo – In A Day, July 7

The rarely-attempted Lupghar Sar massif in the Hispar Muztagh of the Western Karakoram comprises three peaks on a high east-west summit ridge. The west summit was first climbed in 1979 by Germans via the southwest ridge, which featured dangerously rotten rock—a characteristic of this summit. It was repeated the same year, and again in 1980, by Japanese, the first of these expeditions continuing east for more than one and a half kilometres along the sharp ridge to the Central (Main) summit. These were full scale sieges and neither the West or Central peaks were seriously attempted again until 2018.

[Also Read Interview: Hansjörg Auer On His Solo First Ascent On Lupghar Sar West (7,157 Meters)]

After extensive acclimatization and scouting of both face and complex approach, Hansjörg Auer left base camp and navigated the wild Baltbar Glacier to a bivouac at 6,200 meters below the left side of the west face of Lupghar Sar West. The next day he made a rapid ascent of the west face to reach the steep upper section of the northwest ridge at 6,900 meters. Although he had planned a second bivouac, he decided to cache his gear and head for the top. Very loose mixed terrain and a highly exposed, narrow, corniced crest led to the highest point. Auer managed to descend to base camp by the evening of the same day. Although the technicalities were not high, this was bold, committing and precarious climbing, with a taxing descent of the same route, completely alone at high altitude and in a remarkably fast time.

The western end of the Hispar Muztagh with: (A) Distaghil Sar (7,885m), (B) Lupghar Sar West (7,175m), showing the 2018 route on the west face, (C) Momhil Sar (7,414m), (D) Trivor (7,728m) and (E) Khunyang Chhish (7,852m). Lower right inset: Hansjörg Auer on the Baltbar Glacier, and his line on the west face of Lupghar Sar West. Photo: ©Hansjörg Auer/American Alpine Journal.

Latok I (7,145m), North Ridge/face And South Face, 2,500M, ED+

Aleš Česen – Luka Stražar (Slovenia) – Tom Livingstone (U.k.), August 5–9

Photo: Tom Livingstone.

In 1978 four Americans attempted the “Walker Spur of the Karakoram,” the north ridge of Latok I from the Choktoi Glacier. Jim Donini, Michael Kennedy, George and Jeff Lowe spent 21 days climbing over 100 pitches and had probably surmounted all the difficulties, when a combination of wind, cold and Jeff Lowe’s rapidly deteriorating condition due to altitude sickness forced a retreat. It remains one of the finest and most notable near misses in the history of alpinism. Despite literally dozens of subsequent attempts over the next 40 years, no one came close to reaching their high point of nearly 7,000 meters. The first and to date only ascent of the mountain was made in 1979, when a Japanese team reached the summit from the south.

[Also Read Interview: Tom Livingstone On Latok I]

Tom Livingstone met Luka Stražar at an international winter gathering in Scotland. Together with Aleš Česen they travelled to the north side of Latok I, where Česen confided, “we think there is a better way to the summit than the full north ridge.” American Josh Wharton, who traveled to the Choktoi four times to attempt the north ridge, envisaged a line that would climb the right flank of the ridge, then slant up to the (west) col between Latok I and II. From there his proposed route crossed onto the south side of the mountain, where easier terrain would lead to the top. This was the route eventually followed by the Anglo-Slovenian trio, who climbed generally good ice runnels and névé on the right side of the ridge to around 6,400 meters, at which point they angled up right to reach the west col at 6,700 meters. From there they followed south-facing snow slopes in generally stormy weather to the summit, which they reached on their fifth day. Descending approximately the same line, the team regained base camp three days later, having made only the second ascent of this prestigious mountain in the Panmah Muztagh, and the first from the north.

Seen from the north, (A) Latok I (7,145m) and (B) Latok II (7,108m). (1) The 2018 Russian attempt on the north ridge, reaching the summit ridge at approximately 7,050m. (2) Anglo-Slovenian route to make the second ascent of Latok I, passing through the west col to finish via the southern slopes. Photo: ©Sergey Glazunov/American Alpine Journal.

Also Read

No Summit No Cry: Michael Kennedy on the 1978 American Expedition to Latok I

Interview: Alexander Gukov Talks Latok I, Responds to Livingstone

Also Watch

VIDEO: Hansjörg Auer – No Turning Back

VIDEO: Impossible is Not Forever – Latok I