Tuesday, September 16, 2014

Uetliberg, Switzerland


2014 September: Climb Uetliberg in Zurich, Switzerland

Uetliberg - Zurich's own little mountain

- Elevation: 869 m (2851 ft)
- Parent peak: Bürglen
- Range: Albis

Uetliberg is a mountain in the Swiss plateau, marking the end of Albis mountain chain on the western side of Lake Zurich. It offers a panoramic view of the entire Zurich city and the Lake. At the top is a hotel/restaurant named Uto Kulm and an observation tower (rebuilt in 1990). Nearby is a TV-tower.

There are many ways and paths to reach the summit. The easiest is by train from Zurich - which is what I do today. The Uetliberg Station is the terminus of the Uetliberg railway line, and is linked to Zürich Hauptbahnhof (Zurich Main Station) by S-Bahn Zürich service S10. Trains usually run every half-hour, taking 20 minutes ... but when I time it, it is 25 minutes.

By the way, Uetliberg is more than just its summit. There are many walking trails; for example you can walk from the summit towards the Felsenegg and beyond. It is a great place for hikers !

By the way, if you don't like to walk on snow, avoid visiting Uetliberg during winter.

Trailhead

If you are at the Uetliberg railway station, the trailhead to climb Uetliberg is on the east side of the station.

The trailhead is at an elevation of 814 m, hence the elevation gain to Uetliberg summit is merely 55 meters ... easy!

Time & Distance

Google Earth gives 550 meters from the railway station to the summit. But entries on the web say it is 650 meters.

Time-wise, for me, it is 8 minutes one way - leisurely walk.

Pictures

1) Uetliberg railway station, 814 meters above sea level ~~~ It is the terminus of the Uetliberg line.



2) The path from Uetliberg railway station to the summit of Uetliberg ~~~ This view is towards the railway station.



3) Cute lamp posts along the path from Uetliberg railway station to the summit of Uetliberg.



4) Uto Kulm hotel/restaurant at the Uetliberg summit



5) Uto Kulm hotel/restaurant at the summit



6) Uto Kulm hotel/restaurant at the summit



7) A cute bench at the Uetliberg summit



8) Observation tower at Uetliberg summit ~~~ It is free to climb it.



9) I'll be climbing the tower to the observation deck which is 31 meters above ground. As the Uetliberg is at 869 meters above sea level, hence the observation deck is at exactly 900 m.



10) Climbing the observation tower and looking down at the picnic area.



11) A nearby TV tower



12) There is a 360 panoramic view from the observation deck. I took the following picture of Zurich and Lake Zurich (Zürichsee). To get a panoramic view, click on this link:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/61/Pano-Zurich-City-From-Uetliberg-View.jpg


Thursday, September 11, 2014

Mont Blanc, France


2014 September: Climb Mont Blanc, France - 3-day trip

Mont Blanc

At 4810 meters, Mont Blanc is the highest mountain in the Alps in Europe. Climbing Mont Blanc has always been at the top of my to-do list. But for one reason or another, it is postponed to now. However if I had known there is such a fantastic walk along the ridge to the summit (see photo #24 and #25, I would have climbed it much earlier !

Company

The trip was organized by World Expedition.

Pre-climb Schedule

According to World Expedition's schedule, this is how it was planned:
  Day 1 - from Nid D'aigle tram station to Tête Rousse Refuge
  Day 2 - from Tête Rousse Refuge to Goûter Refuge
  Day 3 - from Goûter Refuge to summit, then descend all the way back to hotel

If the mountain guides stick to this schedule, then the climb should be quite straight forward, not too difficult.

However in the fine prints, it was stated that due to weather condition, in day 2, the mountain guides may go from Tête Rousse Refuge all the way to the summit.

This happened in in my trip. The mountain guides said day 2's weather was good. So we went from Tête Rousse Refuge all the way to the summit, an ascent of 1643 meters. Now, that was tough. The guides turned out to be correct, because on day 3, the wind was too strong. No one was able to summit. So we were lucky to scale up the summit on day 2 !

But I can tell you, you need to be fit to ascend 1643 meters in one day in high altitude + heavy mountaineering boots + crampons !!!

Timeline

Day 1 - Mont Blanc ascent
  09:30 Meet at Mercure Chamonix Centre Hotel (5 climbers + 3 mountain guides)

  09:40 Car leaves for rental shop to pick up hired gears for the other climbers (I have my own gears), then to Les Trabets which is near Les Houches
  11:50 at Les Trabets cable car station

  12:22 Cable car departs
  12:30 at Bellevue cable car station; then walk to tram station
  12:33 at Bellevue tram station (of Tramway du Mont-Blanc)

  13:05 Tram departs
  13:20 at Nid D'aigle tram station, 2380 meters

  13:21 Start walking to Tête Rousse Refuge
  13:49 Lunch

  14:15 Resume walking
  15:32 at Tête Rousse Refuge, 3167 meters

Day 2 - Mont Blanc ascent/descent
  05:00 Breakfast at Tête Rousse Refuge
 
  05:40 Walk to Goûter Refuge
  07:45 at Goûter Refuge, 3817 meters

  08:46 Walk to Mont Blanc summit
  12:23 at Mont Blanc summit, 4810 meters

  12:35 Descend Mont Blanc summit
  14:20 at Goûter Refuge

Day 3 - Mont Blanc descent
  07:00 Breakfast at Goûter Refuge

  07:33 Walk to Nid D'aigle tram station
  09:02 Wait near Tête Rousse Refuge for Louis and his guide who went to Tête Rouse to retrieve his umbrella

  09:19 Resume walking to Nid D'aigle tram station
  10:14 at Nid D'aigle tram station (of Tramway du Mont-Blanc)

  10:51 Tram departs
  11:10 at Bellevue tram station; then walk to cable car station
  11:14 at Bellevue cable car station

  11:16 Cable car departs
  11:28 at Les Trabets (which is near Les Houches)

  11:31 Car leaves for Mercure Chamonix Centre Hotel
  11:42 at hotel

Pictures

1)  First thing is to buy a new pair of mountaineering boots and crampons:
    - The boots are La Sportiva Men's Nepal EVO GTX.
    - Crampons are 12-point Black Diamond Serac.
Altogether, they weigh 2.5 kg (1.25 kg per foot) !!!  I spent countless hours walking with the boots to get used to their weight.



Then it is off to a quaint little town called Chamonix in France. This is where the Mont Blanc climb starts.

2)  In the Chamonix town centre there is a bronze monument of Horace-Benedict de Saussure (right) and Jaques Balmat (left). In 1760 Saussure offered a reward to the first man to reach the summit of Mont Blanc, at the time unscaled. In 1786, two Chamonix men, Dr Michel Paccard and Jacques Balmat, attained the summit. And in 1787 Saussure himself successfully made the third ascent. In the monument, Balmat is pointing directly to ... have a guess ...



3)  ... This is what Balmat is pointing to, Mont Blanc, the snow capped mountain at the centre of the photo ... and I can't wait to climb it !!!



Day 1

In the morning, 5 climbers + 3 mountain guides meet at Mecure hotel at Chamonix. There should be 6 of us climbers. One guy dropped out due to injury during an acclimatisation climb yesterday, hence only 5 are here today.

4)  (Click on the below map to enlarge it.)
Three days are scheduled for the climb:
- Day 1 is a 8km drive from Chamonix to Les Houches (left edge of the map).
- Then take cable car to Bellevue 1794 meters (centre of the map).
- Then take a cogwheel tram to Nid D'aigle (French for Eagle's nest), 2380 meters. In the map, it is where the red line ends.
- Then hike up to Tête Rousse Refuge 3167 meters (not shown on the map).
- Day 2 was meant to climb to Goûter Refuge, 3817 meters.
- Day 3 was meant to summit Mont Blanc, 4810 meters ...
... but on day 2, we didn't stick to this schedule, more on this later.



5)  We catch an aerial cable car at this station at Les Trabets which is near Les Houches.



6)  We get off the cable car here at Bellevue 1794 meters ...



7)  ... then walk a short distance to a tram station - the smallest station I've ever experienced ... but quite a picturesque setting.



8)  Hop on to this cogwheel tram. (A cog railway is a steep mountain railway having 3 rails, the middle rail is fitted with a rack that engages a pinion on the locomotive to provide traction.)



9)  The tram takes us to Nid D'aigle (French for eagle's nest), 2380 meters. The hole in the hill on the right side of the pic is the tunnel for the tram.
From here we are on our own legs.



10)  We are hiking up to Tête Rousse Refuge. Here, it is more than 2400 meters above sea level, well above the tree line, hence the lunar landscape look. The guy on the left is taking a photo ...



11)  ... of an Alpine Ibex which is a wild goat that lives in rough terrain in the mountains of the European Alps. This one is a female. (Male has much larger curved horns.)



12)  The mountain guides set a cracking pace ... Tête Rousse Refuge is now in sight.



13)  We reach Tête Rousse Refuge, 3167 meters, just when it is about to rain ... that explains why the guides were in such a hurry - they sensed something that we didn't !  We'll stay here for the night.
For the record, it is 2 hrs 11 mins (including 26 minutes of lunch) to ascend 787 meters, quite a good effort.



14)  Dinner time at Tête Rousse Refuge - Of the 5 of us, 3 were advised by the mountain guides not to continue with the summit attempt as it will be too tough for them. That leaves just Louis (right edge of the photo) and me to continue for the next 2 days.
(Clockwise around the table from the left: Neil, Mark, me, Quyen and Louis)



Day 2

Of the 3 mountain guides, Nicholas becomes my guide, Gaylon is Louis' guide, and Pierre takes the other 3 down the mountain via a different route.

15)  For Louis and I, the plan was to climb from Tête Rousse Refuge to Goûter Refuge. As can be seen from the photo, it is an almost vertical climb all the way to Goûter!!! If you are afraid of height, Mont Blanc is not for you. The guy who dropped out due to injury during the acclimatisation climb was afraid of height too. Just as well as he'll not be able to make it through this stretch.
(By the way, there are 2 Goûter Refuges. In the photo, the solid line points to an old hut. The dotted line points to a new hut.)



16)  It is almost a vertical climb for most of the way to Goûter Refuge. Fortunately there are steel cables to help you.



17)  Climbers are all wearing crampons even though there is no ice nor snow. Crampons grip onto the rocks better. Helmet is also required as it is easy to bump your head against the rocks.



18)  Not only are my legs tired, my arms are also tired from the constant climbing on all fours.



19)  Finally, Goûter Refuge is in sight, 3817 meters. The guy in the photo is Nicholas, my mountain guide. For the record, from Tête Rousse to Goûter is 2 hrs 10 mins, an ascent of 650 meters.



The planned schedule is to stay at Goûter Refuge for the night and go after the summit tomorrow. But as today is a perfect blue sky day, so after an hour's rest at Goûter, the mountain guides push us onto the summit. I am quite tired at this stage, so I curse them for making life difficult for me. However it turns out to be the right decision because the next day, the wind is so strong no one is able to summit. So we are lucky to have such far sighted guides   :-)

20)  The little dots that are like ants are mostly people returning from the Mont Blanc summit. They had left Goûter around 5:30am and had reached the summit already.



21)  Mont Blanc is in sight. These people have already summitted and are having a well earned rest.



22)  Me !



23)  The highest point in this photo is not the summit. The summit is further to the left, under the sun.



24)  Mont Blanc is the peak on the left. We will walk on the ridge all the way to there.



25)  Mont Blanc summit is just behind the tip. It is worth paying a million dollars just to walk on a ridge like this, don't you think so ?



26)  Made it !!!  4810 meters. It took us 3 hrs 37 mins from Goûter to reach here, an ascent of 993 meters. It is unusual that the summit is not marked by a cairn or post, so you just have to trust me that this is the top of the Alps.



27)  At the summit - Nicholas my mountain guide is at the centre. Louis is on the right.


All together, today's ascent is 1643 meters from Tête Rousse Refuge to here in 6 hrs 43 mins which includes 1 hr rest at Goûter Refuge. As a comparison, my Queensland's Mt Bartle Frere climb was 5 hrs non-stop for an ascent of 1600 meters. I am now 4 years older, at high altitude, in heavy boots and crampons, so today's effort is pretty good.  ( Photos and an account of the Queensland Mt Bartle Frere climb can be found in http://mntviews.blogspot.com.au/2010/08/bartle-frere-queensland-australia.html )

There is a light breeze, otherwise not too cold. I wear a merino wool short sleeve t-shirt, then 3 thermal long sleeve underwears, that's all. Plus a gortex jacket to stop the wind. At the lower part of the body, just a pair of thermal long johns inside a pair of hiking trousers.

The guides say most of the time it is very windy and cold here. Usually they'll stop for 2 seconds to take a photo, then descend straight away. We are so lucky with such a perfect day that we linger around for quarter of an hour, soaking up the atmosphere, enjoying the view, and most of all elated at our success in conquering the Alps.

28)  View from the summit.



29)  From the summit looking towards where we came from. We'll descend this way too.



30)  Descending



31)  Descending - Don't you just love to walk on a ridge like this !!!!!



32)  On the way back to Goûter Refuge, we have to ascend this little peak called Aiguille du Goûter. Aiguille is French for needle.



33)  Goûter Refuge - It looks like a 5-star hotel, but it is not comfortable to sleep inside ... about 20 bunk beds per small room. We'll stay here for the night, but there is no way you can get a good sleep with so many people in a room. We are meant to be up at 7am the next day for breakfast. But there are people up at 4am so as to be ready for their breakfast at 5am so they can start the climb to the Mont Blanc summit at 5:30am. Not to worry, I'm in a good mood - I've already climbed Mont Blanc !!!



Day 3

An easy day ... we descend from Goûter Refuge all the way back to the hotel.

34)  On our way down to Tête Rousse Refuge, we need to pass this Grand Couloir. Couloir is French for corridor, and this stretch is also referred to as the “corridor of death” ... because rocks falling from further up the slope regularly killed people crossing here. You can see a steel cable running through the middle of the pic ... well, my guide hooks up a pulley on the cable, ties us in a rope through the pulley, and walks us though the corridor as fast he can. I'm alive now to write this blog ... phew !!! We went through here yesterday too. But it was around 6am in the morning. The ice locked in the rocks and hence the chance of being knocked off by a falling rock is smaller. But right now it is 9am, a bit more dangerous as some of the ice starts to melt.



Post Script

After the climb, what better place to relax than to spend a week in beautiful Switzerland !

First stop is at CERN in Geneva. CERN is where the world's largest particle accelerator is. Its LHC, Large Hadron Collider, runs for 27 km, 16.5 miles, in a circular tunnel 100 metres beneath the Swiss/French border in Geneva. There is a guided tour where physicists show you some of CERN's facilities, and show you how the Higgs boson was discovered in CERN not too long ago. (The Higgs boson is also referred to as the God's particle as it is theorized to be the elementary particle that gives rise to all other particles, like electrons for example.)

35)  On the opposite side of the road to CERN's main complex, is this dome structure called "Globe of Science and Innovation". It was donated 10 years ago by the Swiss government for CERN's 50th anniversary in 2004. It doesn't look too flash outside, but ...



36)  ... but inside the dome is a futuristic set up of displays ...



37)  ... and movie shows on sub-atomic particles to galaxies and the universe. If you like this type of highbrow stuff, CERN is the place to visit.



Tuesday, September 9, 2014

Aiguille du Midi, France


2014 September: Aerial cable car to Aiguille du Midi, France

Chamonix and Aiguille du Midi

One of the main attraction of Chamonix, a small quaint French town, is Aiguille du Midi - a mountain top that you can see clearly from Chamonix. At the summit, there is a breathtaking 360 degree panoramic vista of the Mont Blanc Massif.

And why am I in Chamonix? ... Because later on I will be climbing Mont Blanc !  Photos and write up of that climb is in http://mntviews.blogspot.com.au/2014/09/mont-blanc-france.html .

Aiguille du Midi is 3842 meters above sea level. How high is that? Well, it is comparable to the island mountains on the Pacific west coast. For example:
  - 3724m for New Zealand's Mt cook
  - 3776m for Japan's Mt Fuji
  - 3952m for Taiwan's Yushan (Jade Mountain)


How difficult is it to climb Aiguille du Midi?

Haha ... unlike climbing Mt Cook, Fuji and YuShan, no effort at all !

There is an aerial cable car called Téléphérique de l'Aiguille du Midi which starts at Chamonix and will take you to the top. It was built in 1955 and held the title as the world's highest cable car for about two decades. The cable car consists of two sections:
  - The lower section is from Chamonix to Plan de l'Aiguille.
  - Then change to another cable car to go to the upper station at 3776m.
Afterwards, take a lift to the top viewing platform at 3842m.


Connections at Aiguille du Midi

- The Vallée Blanche ski run begins at the upper station.

- The nearby Cosmiques Refuge is the starting point for one of the routes to the Mont Blanc summit (I won't be climbing Mt Blanc from here. I'll be using a different route).

- From the upper station, another cable car (summer only) called the Vallee Blanche Aerial Tramway, crosses the Glacier du Géant to Pointe Helbronner 3462m at the Italian side of the Mont Blanc Massif. Pointe Helbronner is served with a cable car from La Palud, a village near Courmayeur in Italy's Aosta Valley.


Pictures

1)  Looking at Aiguille du Midi (centre of the photo) from Chamonix ~~~
Aiguille is French for a mountain peak. It also means a needle, an appropriate name for this peak.
Mont Blanc is the round snow dome on the right.



2)  Zooming in on Aiguille du Midi



3)  On the aerial cable car to Aiguille du Midi, you get this nice view of Chamonix.



4)  Upper station



5)  Closer to the upper station



6)  At the bottom of this pic is a tunnel ... that is where we get off the aerial cable car. When we walk out of the tunnel, we realize we are not at the top yet ... need to take a lift to get there. You can see the viewing platform at the bottom of the white bottle - that will be as high as we can go.



When you reach the top viewing platform, you are presented with a breathtaking 360 degree panoramic vista of the Mont Blanc Massif. The following is a testament of the views.

7)  Mont Blanc is the round dome and the highest point at the centre of the photo. At 4810 meters, Mont Blanc is the highest mountain in the Alps. I'll be at its summit 2 days later !!!  Photos and trip report of that climb are in my blog: http://mntviews.blogspot.com.au/2014/09/mont-blanc-france.html .



8)  Zooming in onto Mont Blanc ... the jagged peak to the left of Mont Blanc is Mont Maudit.



9)  Plenty of hikers around - and they are like little ants   :-)



10)  The large sloping area running through the centre of the photo is Glacier du Géant (Geant Glacier).
The peak just to the left of the Geant Glacier is called Dent du Géant 4013 meters.
Further to the left, the highest peak there is called Grandes Jorasses, 4208 meters.



11)  There is a glass viewing platform called "Pas dans le vide" (Step into the void). You are given soft slippers to wear on the glass - to protect it from being scratched by your shoes.



12)  Even the birds find this place interesting !



Afterwards, you can spend your time in a cafe and a gift shop. In summary, if you are in Chamonix, make sure you get to Aiguille du Midi !  Wear a warm jacket, it can be quite cold up there.


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