Adrian Ballinger 3

///Interviews

//Interviews

Debbie Gabriel

18 Oct 18

10 Mins With: Adrian Ballinger

Debbie Gabriel

18 Oct 18

With the news that the world’s second highest peak, K2, has finally been skied from the top this summer by Polish ski mountaineer Andrzej Bargiel, about two decades after Everest was first skied, the number of the world’s fourteen 8,000m+ peaks not yet skied from the top is fast diminishing.

This autumn American big-mountain climber Adrian Ballinger, who has already skied two 8,000m+ peaks (one of them twice), his long-time girlfriend and professional rock climber Emily Harrington and two other professional climbing athletes will attempt an ascent and summit of Lhotse (fourth tallest peak in the world), then a straight and steep 2,000m ski down, all on “no-fall” terrain, in a straight line called the “dream line” through the Lhotse Couloir, a feat never achieved before.

10 Mins With: Adrian Ballinger

So no one has skied Lhoste before?

You are correct. The key is the couloir (steep gully) that goes from the summit to Camp 4. This section has never been skied. A number of great ski mountaineers have tried, and Jamie Laidlaw got the closest, skiing the bottom part of the couloir from about 8,000m. But this leaves 500m above, and this is the most challenging part.

What’s your previous experience of this type of very extreme skiing?

I have made complete ski descents of Manaslu (the eighth tallest mountain in the world; this was the first time it was skied from the summit) and Cho Oyu (the sixth tallest mountain in the world; I’ve skied it twice). I believe these are the most successful ski descents of 8,000m peaks of any American.

I have also attempted to ski Makalu (the fourth tallest mountain in the world, attempted it twice; our 2015 team skied it from higher than anyone else to this point, approx 7,900m). Lhotse I’ve attempted to ski already but conditions were poor and Everest (same season as Lhotse ski attempt, same poor conditions).

Emily has skied Cho Oyu (complete ski descent) and attempted to ski Makalu (skied from approx 7,900m). Hilaree has skied Cho Oyu and attempted to ski Makalu and Lhotse, and Jim has skied parts of Cho Oyu, Makalu and Everest.

What are the major challenges you feel you face?

The physical challenge will be huge, of course. But the biggest challenge will come from the hazard of skiing a line this steep and exposed at altitude. Gauging avalanche conditions can also be very difficult on peaks this big.

It’s quite a rarity for the snow to be skiable on Lhoste – how confident are you that it will be?

Getting the right conditions is a big challenge. It’s also why we are attempting this expedition in the autumn. Up to this point, all Lhotse ski attempts have been done in the spring, when guided teams are on Everest and Lhotse and make the work of the expedition much easier. But all of my successful Himalayan high-altitude skiing has been done in the autumn (because most snow falls in Nepal and Tibet during the summer monsoons, not during the winter). While that makes autumn a much more difficult season to climb in, there is a good chance we will have more snow in the couloir. While this makes for a potential avalanche hazard, it also may make the line more skiable.

10 Mins With: Adrian Ballinger

Finally, what drives you to try this?!

A love of climbing and skiing big mountains with friends!