As he swung back to the rock wall, he held out his feet as “a pair of buffers” and the speed at which he was then flying did the rest: both his legs snapped just above the ankles. Bonington came down to assist him and the two managed to struggle only some few score metres down to spend nine hours of the fast descending night in the open at around 7,200 metres above the sea. If that was bad, the worst was yet to come.
Nature was waiting for just something to go wrong and she moved in with a blizzard that was to rage over the next four days. Meanwhile, another accident led to Bonington hurting himself. Owing to the intense pain in his chest, he suspected broken ribs. And so it was confirmed several days later by two American doctors in Askole.
With great difficulty, the injured duo regained a lower camp from where Anthoine and Rowland had watched Scott swinging into the void. Thereafter darkness and the following snowstorm prevented any more to be known. Both feared the worst for the climbers, but were yet waiting for them.
On the eighth day after the fateful abseil, Scott was in Base Camp where a team of Balti porters prepared a makeshift stretcher to carry him three days down the Biafo Glacier to Askole.
The opening part of the book dealing with the history of exploration and mountaineering paints a wide and interesting canvas, a veritable tour de force for those unacquainted with the subject. The fast clip of the narrative makes The Ogre a one-sitting book. Indeed, the pace picks up in the last part dealing with the accident and the crawl to safety, leaving one feeling as if one just sat through a nail-biting film. The vivid narration leaves the reader almost breathless and, in the end, relieved to see Scott on the stretcher.
If Shipton had a view on the philosophy of mountaineering, Scott finds the lonely peaks “as places for spiritual renewal.” According to him, Anthoine felt that “Every year you need to flush out your system and do a little suffering.” Altogether, The Ogre quite captures the soul of mountaineering, the only extreme sport where the protagonists do not play out their struggle on TV screens and within reach of an ambulance service.
As you proceed through The Ogre, the realisation comes on strong that this lot, with their considerable mountaineering expeditions, were suited to the crises from which they so gloriously came through. For four days in a raging blizzard and without any food, the badly injured duo is assisted down the mountain across granite slabs and the crevassed glacier by their two good mates and you cannot miss the intensely moving camaraderie. The superhuman will to survive is equally admirable.
However, in the gloaming of dusk, with Base Camp just “around the corner”, Scott finds his will faltering. Yet he makes it to the safety of tent and sleeping bag. In the eight-day crawl on his knees Scott eats through four pairs of outer trousers and ends up with badly bruised and swollen knees.
Scott’s admiration for the Balti porters who bore him down and around the crevasses and rocky moraines of the Biafo Glacier is understandable. He notes that there seems to be no leader in the group that is tasked to bring him within reach of a helicopter. There are only strong individuals. Where they would normally have walked with their 25 kilogramme loads, they cannot do so with a stretcher and a route is picked after a quietly murmured discussion. There is never an error and not a raised voice.
Scott’s gratitude to the Baltis resulted in the raising of $10,000 to give the people of Askole — the village from where his porters came — a clean drinking water supply. Until this installation in 1990, child mortality from dysentery was very high. The supply works to this day.
The Ogre is much more than the book to read as a masterpiece of adventure travel writing or mountaineering. In fact, the part dealing with the descent to safety should be made essential reading for those in management training courses where they claim to ‘prepare leaders’. It shows what one really needs to face the rigours of life.
The reviewer is a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and author of nine books on travel
The Ogre: Biography of a Mountain and the
Dramatic Story of the First Ascent
By Doug Scott
Vertebrate, UK
ISBN: 978-1911342793
192pp.
Published in Dawn, Books & Authors, January 27th, 2019