Jerzy Kukuczka - Eight-thousanders

Eight-thousanders

Kukuczka is widely considered among the climbing community to be one of the best high-altitude climbers in history. He ascended all fourteen mountains in just under eight years, a shorter time than any climber before (Reinhold Messner included, whom it took 16 years) or since. In the process, Kukuczka established ten new routes and climbed four summits in winter. He was one of an elite group of Polish Himalayan mountaineers who specialized in winter ascents. He established 9 new routes on the eight-thousanders, 4 of which were winter routes (compared to 6 new routes of Messner's, none of them during winter).

  1. 1979 — Lhotse - West Face, Normal Route.
  2. 1980 — Mount Everest - South Pillar, New Route.
  3. 1981 — Makalu - Variation to Makalu La/North-West Ridge, New Route, Alpine Style, Solo.
  4. 1982 — Broad Peak - West Spur, Normal Route, Alpine Style.
  5. 1983 — Gasherbrum II - South-East Spur, New Route, Alpine Style.
  6. 1983 — Gasherbrum I - South-West Face, New Route, Alpine Style.
  7. 1984 — Broad Peak - Traverse of North, Middle and Main Summits, New Route, Alpine Style.
  8. 1985 — Dhaulagiri - North-East Spur, Normal Route, First Winter Ascent.
  9. 1985 — Cho Oyu - South-East Pillar, New Route, First Winter Ascent, Second Summit Team.
  10. 1985 — Nanga Parbat - South-East Pillar, New Route.
  11. 1986 — Kanchenjunga - South-West Face, Normal Route, First Winter Ascent.
  12. 1986 — K2 - South Face, New Route.
  13. 1986 — Manaslu - North-East Face, New Route, Alpine Style.
  14. 1987 — Annapurna I - North Face, Normal Route, First Winter Ascent.
  15. 1987 — Shisha Pangma - West Ridge, New Route, Alpine Style, Ski Descent.
  16. 1988 — Annapurna East Summit - South Face, New Route, Alpine Style.

He climbed all summits except for Mount Everest without use of supplemental oxygen.

Kukuczka died attempting to climb the unclimbed South Face of Lhotse in Nepal on 24 October 1989. Leading a pitch at an altitude of about 8,200 meters on a 6 mm secondhand rope he had picked up in a market in Kathmandu (according to Ryszard Pawłowski, Kukuczka's climbing partner on the tragic day, the main single rope used by the team was too jammed to be used and the climbers decided to use transport rope instead), the cord either was cut or snapped from a fall, plunging Kukuczka to his death.

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