Huayna Potosi Climber's Log

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tahai

tahai - Jan 21, 2005 4:44 pm

Route Climbed: Normal Route Date Climbed: June 2000  Sucess!

Beautiful mountain and great climb! We started at Refugio Zongo and hiked to our high camp at 5.300m (above Campo Rocca). The next day we started at 1:00am and reached the summit at about 11:00 under perfect weather conditions. Awesome views of the Condoriri Massiv from the summit.

For additional information, many pics and a 180° panorama from the summit check out my website under www.karsten-rau.de .

ripper333 - Oct 20, 2004 10:46 pm

Route Climbed: normal route Date Climbed: august 1998

spent 2 weeks trekking around bolivia , lake titicaca, condoriri national

park etc. before taking on the mountain. spent a nite

at the hut than to a high camp at 18,000. a chilly nite

with no sleep but a killer full moon made up for it!

left about 2 or so for the summit. bright sunny day.

knife edge sketchy ridge to the true summit was

exciting.climbing in south america i have to say has been

life changing. the people encountered along the

way on this trip were truly incredible souls.

jasonconnell

jasonconnell - Jun 22, 2004 8:03 pm

Route Climbed: Normal Date Climbed: June 8th 2004

Nice climb, had the mountain nearly to ourselves. Last 200M sucked! Nasty SA ice crap.


Pictures

roadsidefire

roadsidefire - Apr 14, 2004 4:23 am

Route Climbed: Normal East Face Date Climbed: June 2003  Sucess!

Last 200m of ice climbing was definitely the high light. The week in Huaraz also helped.

YKnot

YKnot - Jan 22, 2004 1:57 am

Route Climbed: normal route Date Climbed: May 14, 2001  Sucess!

Fellow gringo David Schensted and I climbed Huayna by the normal route, round trip from La Paz in a single day. We had intended to do the impressive looking Via de los Franceses, but spent too much time eating breakfast and driving in circles through El Alto; so it was way too warm by the time we got to Campo Argentina. The weather was clear, windless and very warm. Dave was so strong on the final summit slope that I suspect he would have carried me to the top if that had been necessary. Our hardy cache of Pacena took the edge off the always gripping drive back to La Paz.

knolf - Jan 20, 2004 4:20 pm

Route Climbed: Normal Date Climbed: 28th December 2003  Sucess!

Climbed the normal route.Summited after 3 attempts because of heavy snow fall. The climb was quite hard because of the conditions ( weather, snow, .... ). Would like to do more climbing in Bolivia .... in the climbing season !

Nyle Walton

Nyle Walton - Oct 31, 2003 12:22 pm Date Climbed: May 2, 1958

The cheap fast way to climb to twenty thousand feet.  Sucess!

It appears that my climb of Huayna Potosi predates all the others in the summit log by almost half a century. I feel like a pioneer.

After hitchhiking for over four months from Salt Lake City south along the Pan American Highway, Karl Nelson and I reached La Paz. From Desaguadero on the Peruvian-Bolivian border at Lake Titicaca, we got a ride into La Paz in a U.S. Army deuce-and-a-half truck. It belonged to the U.S. Geodetic Survey Mission to Bolivia. With our eyes on Huayna Potosi looming on the eastern horizon, we borrowed a mountain tent from that organization and together with two members of the Club Andino de Bolivia, one Peter Toussaint (now deceased) and Col. (now General retired) Ramon Acero, launched an attempt on the mountain.

The club's van delivered us to the mountain's base at fifteen thousand feet on May 1 (May Day). Two miners from Milluni, off for the holiday, served as "sherpas" to carry our loads to the snout of the glacier. From there we toted the loads abit higher to the first level spot on snowvunder a spectacular ice cliff at 17,500 where we pitched our tents.

The next morning Karl refused to leave his sleeping bag. He had altitude sickness. Peter, Ramon, and I put on our crampons and attacked the ice pitch above the camp. The day was cloudless and we made excellent progress. On the broad plateau below the summit pyramid, Ramon vomitted his breakfast and fell behind. Together Peter and I traversed eastward to a corniced ridge that led ever more steeply past rock outcrops to the final peak. We stood on top of Huayna Potosi at one in the afternoon. Meanwhile Ramon recovered and followed our tracks to join us on the summit a half hour later.

Meanwhile clouds had risen to hide all but the highest summits of the Cordillera Real. After hand-shaking congratulations and poses for photographs, we remained on the sharp corniced peak for half an hour before undertaking a cautious and then a long glissading descent back to camp. The low sun in the west illuminated Illimani to the south as we completed the final thousand feet down to our awaiting tents where we aroused Karl from his sleeping bag (see photos and images).

Two days later, the Club Andino had a ski meet on Mount Chacaltaya where we celebrated our success and danced mambos and cha-cha-chas with the chicas inside the lodge over 17,000 feet above the sea. Proud Peter showed off his mountaineering prowess to the girls by abseiling off the lodge platform to the ski slope below it.

A week later, Karl and I continued our hitchhiking journey southward. We got to Mendoza, Argentina, before I came down with hepititus, probably from virus in food I had eaten in Bolivia. I spent a week in a hospital and then flew back home to Utah via Santiago and Mexico City. Meanwhile Karl got his draft notice as he was about to embark for Cape Horn from Puerto Montt, Chile, and had to fly back to San Francisco to join Uncle Sam's army.

In just over six months we had traveled through Mexico, Central America and down the Andes from Colombia to Argentina for a total expenditure of around three hundred dollars each, transportation, food and lodging all included. The climb of Huayna Potosi was the crowning achievement of the trip and cost us practically nothing. Nineteen fifty eight was my golden year of adventure travel.

Pedro Hauck

Pedro Hauck - Oct 20, 2003 10:30 pm

Route Climbed: normal Date Climbed: july 2003  Sucess!

carefull with the weather changes, but, easy summit.. a classical bolivian climb!

sdmarcus

sdmarcus - Jun 24, 2003 4:01 pm

Route Climbed: Normal Esat face Date Climbed: JUne 10 2003  Sucess!

Gorgeous mountain from all aspects. Nice steep pitch the final 200 meters provided a little variety.

sdmarcus

sdmarcus - Jun 24, 2003 3:59 pm

Route Climbed: Normal Esat face Date Climbed: JUne 10 2003  Sucess!

Gorgeous mountain from all aspects. Nice steep pitch the final 200 meters provided a little variety.

gilles debray - May 29, 2003 8:11 am

Route Climbed: normal route Date Climbed: May 28, 2003  Sucess!

"We just summited Huayna Potosi this morning, we contacted Bolivian Journeys by internet, a bolivian company highly recommended, now we know why, the whole organization was good. Luis Palli our guide did a great job. Contact Bolivian Journeys at: www.bolivianjourneys.org"



Vinny

Vinny - May 12, 2003 5:21 pm

Route Climbed: via noraml Date Climbed: May 12, 2003

We camped 2 nights at the dirty but not too busy Campo Roca 5000m. It was my first time climbing at such an altitude. Robin and I were stymied by illness- estomagos gringos- maybe something we ate, but we took turns not feeling quite right.

I puked my way up the easy part to 5500m before realizing it wasn't going to happen.

Great weather and snow conditions allowed 6 summiters (including one solo Chamoniard) the day previous, but all in all 50% success rate over 2 days due to altitude problems alone. Most people seemed to be using guides.

La proxima vez!



days later I was admitted to hospital with a Respiratory infection (4strains), gastro-enteritis (actually salmonella) and resultant severe dehydration. I recommend the health srevices of clinica del sur should you need ém. Also beware petty theft (we had a backpack stolen when our guard was down) or course. Be forewarned! Besides sanitation, Bolivia is wonderful! Enjoy it!

brankoi

brankoi - Nov 3, 2002 12:48 am Date Climbed: May 20, 1998

Route Climbed: La vía de los Franceses Date Climbed: May 20th, 1998  Sucess!

Branko Ivanek (Slovenia) and Stefan Helfenstein (Schweiz) did the "La vía de los Franceses" on Huayna Potosí East Face, AD+, 55deg., 300m from the bergschround in the straight push from Zongo Pass (4770m). We were up and down in 22 hours.


They took two hours from Campamento Argentino to the base of the Route for there are several crevasses and we had to climb 10m high serac (80deg.)


Photo

Mathias Zehring

Mathias Zehring - Sep 27, 2002 9:47 am

Route Climbed: normal route Date Climbed: June 11th 1998  Sucess!

with a guided tour from germany. After a very cold night at Argentino camp it was very convenient at the mountain with almost no wind. In this El Nino year there was so few snow that most of the final ridge could be walked easily in the rocks just beneath the snow ridge.

Wyoming Bob

Wyoming Bob - Sep 15, 2002 8:09 pm

Route Climbed: Normal Route Date Climbed: August 1, 2001  Sucess!

Climbed with group from Colorado Mountain School. Two three person rope teams, all summited. See report for text and photos if interested.

spyder550 - Aug 13, 2002 1:13 pm

Route Climbed: Normal Route Date Climbed: 9 August, 2002  Sucess!

Very easy climb until last 100 meters. It is somewhere near 50 degrees but at altitude it can be tiring. Mountain is very popular so stay away if you aren't into crowded areas. Great, easy, high altitude climb otherwise.

ClimbLer - Jun 30, 2002 8:17 pm

Route Climbed: normal route (south-east buttress) Date Climbed: August 20-21, 2001

We left La Paz and reached the base of Huayna Potosi within two hours. during the drive to the mountain, clouds began to quickly form over the summit and by the time we had parked, the mountain was completely covered by the growing storm. we proceeded to climb up a prominant ridge that ran up next to the large, fractured glacier that flows at the base of the Southern face. from the ridge we ascended a short class 4 wall at 16,000 ft. Above the ridge however, visibility dropped to about 15 feet with winds reaching 40 mph. The route led up and over the wall onto a sloping snow field that wrapped around a fairly prominent rock arete. As the arete tapered off, the route led over a small shoulder upon which the high camp sat at 17,500 ft.

The night exhibited strong winds with gusts up to 50 mph and unfortunatly, 3 feet of fresh snow. These conditions immediatly halted all attempts for the summit that morning and forced us down without ever allowing us a clear view of our initial objective.

All the more reason to return to Bolivia and make another attempt at the mountain.

jonas - Feb 13, 2002 5:08 am

Route Climbed: normal route Date Climbed: april and may 2001  Sucess!

The first time I did was my first time ever wearing crampons and firs time above 5300m. My guide and I started out from La Paz at midnight reached Bc. 0130 and we left at app.0230 I don't know what time we summited but it was a little late 09-1000 I think. Nothing could be seen due to fog.We were back at Bc by 1300.

I returned a week later with a friend and we spend the night a little lower than Plaza Argentinadue to "sleep low climb high" reached the summt early and the view was spectacular. Originally we wanted to do another line but there was too much snow. It would have been possible later in the season.

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