Escape from Lucania Read online




  ALSO BY DAVID ROBERTS

  TRUE SUMMIT: What Really Happened on the Legendary Ascent of Annapurna

  A NEWER WORLD: Kit Carson, John C. Frémont, and the Claiming of the American West

  THE LOST EXPLORER: Finding Mallory on Mount Everest (with Conrad Anker)

  ESCAPE ROUTES: Further Adventure Writings of David Roberts

  IN SEARCH OF THE OLD ONES: Exploring the Anasazi World of the Southwest

  ONCE THEY MOVED LIKE THE WIND: Cochise, Geronimo, and the Apache Wars

  MOUNT MCKINLEY: The Conquest of Denali (with Bradford Washburn)

  ICELAND: Land of the Sagas (with Jon Krakauer)

  JEAN STAFFORD: A Biography

  MOMENTS OF DOUBT: And Other Mountaineering Writings

  GREAT EXPLORATION HOAXES DEBORAH: A Wilderness Narrative

  THE MOUNTAIN OF MY FEAR

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  Copyright © 2002 by David Roberts

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  Designed by Karolina Harris

  Map copyright Jeff Ward

  Manufactured in the United States of America

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Roberts, David, 1943-

  Escape from Lucania; an epic story of survival / David Roberts.

  p. cm.

  1. Mountaineering—Yukon Territory—Lucania, Mount—History. I. Title.

  GV199.44.C22 Y848 2002

  796.52′2′097191—dc21 2002073349

  ISBN 0-7432-2432-9

  eISBN-13: 978-0-743-23867-0

  Credits: All photos by Bradford Washburn except as noted.

  To Bob and Brad—Still fast and light in their nineties

  CONTENTS

  PROLOGUE

  ONE MAROONED

  TWO FAST AND LIGHT

  THREE SHANGRI-LA

  FOUR OVER THE TOP

  FIVE DONJEK

  SIX RABBIT’S FEET

  SEVEN FRESH MILK FROM A REAL COW

  EPILOGUE

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  INDEX

  ESCAPE FROM LUCANIA

  PROLOGUE

  OPPOSITE me, upright in their adjoining armchairs, sat the two ninety-year-olds. Bald on top, with wisps of white hair crowning his ears, the aquiline nose and jutting chin proclaiming a lifetime of adamantine purpose, Henry Bradford Washburn, Jr., wore a brown dinner jacket over his red-plaid shirt, gray slacks, and canvas-and-rubber boots of the same make he had favored as a youth. His folded glasses were tucked into his shirt pocket. To Washburn’s right, his hairline checked in mid-recession, black strands still mingled with gray, the creases around his eyes etched deep in his round face, Robert Hicks Bates wore a green-checked jacket, threadbare gray sweater, and gray slacks that might have come from the same surplus store as his friend’s.

  Both men looked frail, and both were a little hard of hearing. Approaching those armchairs, both men had walked with a slight stoop. Neither, I was sure, had gained a pound since his college days; perhaps they had each shrunk half an inch since their prime. The calm of a winter’s afternoon reigned in the living room of Bates’s second-floor apartment in this retirement community in Exeter, New Hampshire. A drab gray light flooded through south- and west-facing windows. Bob’s wife of forty-seven years, Gail, served us tea and pound cake.

  I watched the men talk as much as I listened to them. Brad’s forehead wrinkled as he stabbed the air with his right index finger to emphasize a point. Bob sat with his hands clasped like a preacher, his eyes squinting almost shut as he grinned in memory. Brad’s pronouncements came in cadenced, gravelly tones. Bob spoke in a soft, oddly high-pitched voice, delivering qualified comments on Brad’s categorical judgments. Everything about the pair bespoke the comfort in each other’s presence of two men who had been best friends for more than six decades.

  As they chatted, I slipped into a reverie. Floating back sixty-four years in time, I saw Brad, at twenty-seven, lying head-to-toe with Bob, then twenty-six, as the pair shared a single sleeping bag in a wind-lashed tent at 14,000 feet in the heart of a glaciated wilderness in the Canadian Yukon. At that moment in 1937, there were no other human beings within eighty miles. A freak of nature had intersected with the men’s intense ambition to land them here, on this high subarctic ridge where no one had ever been before, reduced to that cramped bivouac in a single bag. Most mountaineers, ensconced in such a predicament, would have dreaded the life-and-death struggle that was about to ensue. But in my mind’s eye, as they lay there cooking a dinner of Ovaltine, while the gale rattled the canvas that sheltered them from insupportable cold, both Brad and Bob had the blithe, insouciant look on their faces of pals sharing a fine adventure.

  In that lonely camp, the men were five miles east of and 3,000 feet below the summit of Mount Lucania, one of the most remote peaks on the continent. In 1937, moreover, Lucania was the highest unclimbed mountain in North America. It had been attempted only once before, by a strong party in 1935 that, turning back from another summit ten miles away, had declared Lucania “impregnable.” That gauntlet thrown before their feet was the challenge that had brought Brad and Bob to the Yukon. Neither man, however, could have foreseen the insidious handicap with which fate would shackle them before allowing them to clutch at their prize.

  During the 105 years since a team led by an Italian nobleman, the Duke of the Abruzzi, made the daring first ascent of 18,008-foot Mount Saint Elias, the fourth-highest peak in North America, there have been scores of truly extraordinary climbs pulled off in the wilds of Alaska and the Yukon. Because of its peculiar circumstances, however, the 1937 Lucania expedition remains unique. As I sat in Bob Bates’s living room, half-listening to the two old cronies reminisce, I mused that if I had to choose the single boldest deed in all that glorious history of northern ascent, I would vote for Bates and Washburn’s assault on Mount Lucania.

  I had first met Brad thirty-nine years before, Bob a year or two after that. Both men had gone to Harvard in 1929, where they had met at the beginning of their sophomore year. At nineteen, Brad had under his belt a remarkable record as a teenage climber in the Alps; with a famous French guide, he had made a major first ascent on the Aiguille Verte above Chamonix. Bob, on the other hand, had done little more than hike in New Hampshire’s White Mountains before college.

  At the time, the Harvard Mountaineering Club comprised the most ambitious collection of undergraduate mountaineers of any college or university in the country. Their specialty was remote, unclimbed peaks in Alaska and Canada. HMC climbers had done noteworthy things in the late 1920s, but it would be Bates and Washburn’s generation—a small cadre of friends who pulled off first ascents in the great ranges all through the ’30s and ’40s and even into the ‘50s—that changed the face of American mountaineering.

  When I went to Harvard myself in the fall of 1961, joining the HMC a few weeks after I arrived in Cambridge, the legacy of Bates and Washburn’s crowd hung over the club. As ambitious in our own way as they had been in the 1930s, we too turned our sights toward unclimbed routes in Alaska and Canada. Nor was the presence of the earlier generation merely a matter of disembodied legends looking sternly down upon us from the hallowed rafters of their achievements. A number of the renowned oldsters attended our meetings
and served on the HMC’s Advisory Council. Henry Hall, who had founded the club in the basement of his family’s Coolidge Hill house in 1924, and who the next year had participated in the epochal first ascent of Mount Logan in the Yukon (the second-highest peak in North America), was unfailingly present at every meeting, piping up in his Boston Brahmin tones during slide shows to correct an undergraduate’s misidentification of some obscure peak in the Selkirk Range.

  As the founding director of Boston’s Museum of Science, however, Washburn was too busy to attend our meetings. Thus I did not meet him until halfway through my sophomore year. Seven of us HMCers had decided to climb Mount McKinley. At the age of nineteen, invited by a pair of seniors who were vastly more experienced than I, I felt overwhelmed but flattered by their vote of confidence. At the same time, the prospect of climbing North America’s highest mountain scared the hell out of me.

  Only one of our seven had been on an expeditionary mountain before. With ambitions tempered to match our experience, we pondered making the second ascent of McKinley’s southeast spur.

  Sometime during the winter, Washburn got wind of our plans and invited us over to his house on Sparks Street in Cambridge. By 1962, at the age of fifty-two, he had ceased to climb seriously, but during the previous three decades he had turned a hobby—making large-format black-and-white aerial photographs of Alaskan mountains—into an oeuvre so magisterial that he would come to be acclaimed, with the Italian Vittorio Sella, as one of the two greatest mountain photographers of all time.

  Hardly bothering to introduce himself, Brad pulled us into his kitchen, where he slapped down photos of McKinley on the tabletop. Over the years he had made many flights around the mountain, which he had been the first man to climb three times. Brad waved off our notions of the southeast spur and insisted that we survey the north face, called the Wickersham Wall after a Fairbanks judge who had attempted the mountain in 1903. The tallest precipice in North America—14,000 feet from the base to the north summit—the wall was still unclimbed. A team of Canadian veterans was planning a rather circuitous assault on the Wickersham, far out on its western edge, for the next summer; but Brad bade us look at a direct route up a shallow arête that split the huge face like a vector.

  We peered at the photos, then, nervously, at each other. Washburn’s ambitions for us seemed wildly grandiose: the route looked terrifying. Sensing our unease, he laid a pair of photos side by side, then unfolded a stereo viewer and plopped it down athwart the pictures. When we looked through the viewer, the mountain leapt out in three dimensions. “You get god-awful avalanches off the Wickersham,” Brad said, “but that rib’ll divide ’em right and left. I guarantee you it’s a safe route. You better grab it before someone else does.”

  In thirty-five days, we hiked in to the mountain from the Denali Highway, climbed the Wickersham by its beautiful central arête, traversed over the north and south summits and down the West Buttress, circled back to base camp on the Peters Glacier, and hiked out. We had had a rollicking good time, and the route proved well within our abilities. The only close call came fording the flood-swollen McKinley River on the way out, only two hours before we reached the road.

  During five days in July, however, as we holed up at 17,000 feet in a blizzard, our bush pilot became worried about us. He flew through the storm and then spotted our tracks thousands of feet below our camp, disappearing, he said, into avalanche debris. (The slides had struck long after we had passed that way, but our pilot had had no way of knowing that.) He put out a distress call. We made national headlines, and newscasters Huntley and Brinkley reported us missing and feared dead. In the midst of the furor, reporters interviewed Washburn. As confident as he had been in his kitchen on Sparks Street, he told the reporters not to worry—those boys knew what they were doing.

  Thinking back on that blithe affirmation thirty-nine years later, I wonder why Brad was so confident in us. He had had little firsthand idea of just how competent we really were, and big mountains are always dangerous. It seems to me now that he was identifying with us. In the same situation as we, high on the Wickersham Wall—as he had proved on Mount Lucania way back in 1937—Brad himself would not have worried, so sure was he of his own talent and resourcefulness.

  From that first expedition onward, during the next thirteen years, as I returned to the northern ranges every summer, Brad served as my Alaska mentor. He gave me carte blanche to install myself in the back closet of his top-floor sanctum of an office at the Museum of Science and browse to my heart’s content through his thousands of Alaskan images. It was in those vivid, exquisitely sharp photos of faces and ridges seldom seen from the ground that I discovered the routes of my most difficult expeditions, to Mounts Deborah, Huntington, and Dickey. Always Brad offered his candid appraisal of a route I had set my hopes on. Not once did he say, “I think that’s too hard [or too dangerous] to try.”

  On those climbs, we carried Brad’s photos to help us with route finding. The prints were so sharp that we could recognize features—a fin of rock here, a curling lip of snow there—that were as small as two or three feet in width on the ground. On Mount Dickey in 1974, my two companions and I climbed the last thousand feet of the 5,000-foot southeast wall in all-out blizzard. It could have been a matter of life or death to keep to our planned route, for on the summit ridge two weeks earlier we had planted a cache, complete with tent, sleeping bags, and food, which we now absolutely needed to find.

  Yet in the whiteout, able barely to see a hundred feet, we had to admit that everything looked the same—a relentless 50-degree incline of ice and snow seamed with outcroppings of black schist. Leading our rope of three, I kept pulling a crumpled Washburn photo out of my parka pocket and scrutinizing its details. Thanks to that picture, we hit the summit ridge within fifty yards of our cache.

  Even after I stopped climbing hard, I cherished my protégé-mentor relationship with Brad. Once I had started writing for a living, I turned Brad into a subject, publishing three articles about various aspects of his life and work. And in 1991, he and I collaborated on a large-format picture book, called Mount McKinley: The Conquest of Denali, in which a detailed history of deeds on the great mountain served as a platform for a lavish portfolio of Brad’s magnificent photos of North America’s highest peak.

  Bob Bates never became as close a friend of mine as Brad did, but I felt in a sense that I knew the man even before I came to Harvard. The year after Lucania, Bates co-led the first American expedition to K2, the second-highest mountain in the world. The team made a gallant attempt, reaching nearly 26,000 feet before turning back. Then, in 1953, at the age of forty-two, Bates again co-led a K2 expedition, which ended tragically in the death of Art Gilkey, who was first crippled by thrombophlebitis and then swept away in an avalanche as his teammates desperately tried to haul him down the mountain.

  Still in high school, I had read K2: The Savage Mountain, the now classic account of the 1953 expedition that Bates co-authored with Charles Houston. The book told such a gripping story that certain scenes were etched for good in my memory. As boys my age kept Willie Mays’s over-the-shoulder catch in the 1954 World Series blazed on their eyelids, a touchstone of immortality, so I saw Pete Schoening’s “miracle belay,” when with one ice axe and brute tenacity he stopped the intertwined falls of six teammates who would otherwise have plunged to their deaths.

  Meeting Bates for the first time in the early 1960s, I expected a larger-than-life hero, only to be struck by the self-effacing modesty that anchored the man’s character. The limelight only made him uncomfortable: he conveyed the hearty zest for life, oblivious to fame or recognition, that had driven him to decades of expeditioneering. Unlike Brad, who turned his back on serious climbing after 1951, Bob kept it up well into his fifties. In 1985, at the age of seventy-four, Bob participated in an arduous overland expedition to Ulugh Muztagh, an all-but-unknown peak on the border of Tibet and Xinjiang Uygur in China.

  In 1994, Bob published a memoir of his life as
a climber, traveler, and teacher, called The Love of Mountains Is Best. Not a true autobiography, the book is as modest as its author, unfolding in chapter after chapter of old-fashioned adventure yarns. In our modern era of climbers as sponsored athletes, of intensely rivalrous national expeditions to Everest and K2, of film and book deals firmed up long before the team reaches base camp, Bob’s narrative has a wonderfully anachronistic quality.

  Since I had first learned about Brad and Bob’s Lucania expedition, sometime in the 1960s, I had realized what an extraordinary saga their 1937 journey promised in the telling. Yet oddly enough, neither man had published an account of the trip that did it justice. Only a month after the two men had returned to New England, Life magazine had come out with an eight-page story about Lucania that handsomely showcased the great photos Brad had managed to bring back. The next year, Brad’s understated article about the expedition led off the 1938 American Alpine Journal, the journal of record of our mountaineering fraternity. Fifty-six years later, Bob had devoted a characteristically unassuming chapter of The Love of Mountains Is Best to the adventure.

  About five years ago, Brad started talking to me about how he wished to do a book about Lucania. I concurred at once, hoping my enthusiasm would spur him to a valedictory effort. In the back of my mind, however, I nursed a qualm: that both Bob and Brad had gone at life with such unrelenting optimism, had applied such classically American can-do savvy to everything they undertook, that the true dramatic curve of the story of their greatest exploit ran the risk of being subsumed beneath a kind of aw-shucks panache.

  It would take, I thought, a third-person observer to do justice to Lucania—a mountaineer thoroughly familiar with Alaska and the Yukon, who knew just how far “out there” Brad and Bob had been that dangerous summer, and a writer who need run no risk of immodesty in bringing to light each brilliant or gutsy deed in that tightrope trek through uncertainty. Brad himself wanted me to tackle the story, and Bob warmed to the project. The result is the collaboration embodied in this book.