Читать книгу Edge of the Map - Johanna Garton - Страница 9
8000-METER SPECIALIST
Оглавление—Bruce Barcott, writing for Outside magazine in 2001
WHAT DOES IT TAKE TO become one of the world’s premier high-altitude mountaineers? If Christine Boskoff is any example (and she certainly is), the answer is speed, stamina, brains, experience, and the ability to persevere with a smile. “Christine takes pain very well,” says Peter Habeler, the legendary Austrian climber who guided with Boskoff on Everest in 1999. “She can suffer without moaning, which few Westerners can or want to do anymore.” Her ability to endure in the Death Zone has led the 34-year-old Wisconsin native to the top of the world’s highest mountains. In the past six years she’s ticked off six of the fourteen peaks above 8,000 meters (Everest, Cho Oyu, Gasherbrum II, Lhotse, Shishapangma, and Broad Peak), in addition to becoming the only female expedition leader among the elite guide services operating on Everest. “She’s got great inner confidence and experience,” says American climber Charlie Fowler, who scaled Tibet’s 26,291-foot Shishapangma with Boskoff last fall. “I haven’t seen anybody stronger.”
Five years ago Boskoff was stuck in an Atlanta cubicle, engineering flight simulators for Lockheed Martin. Off-hours she built her endurance engine by working the crags near town, whipping off ten-mile runs, and scrambling up frozen waterfalls during the Southeast’s brief ice-climbing window. A spring 1993 mountaineering trip to the Bolivian Andes whetted her appetite for more substantial peaks, including the Himalayan massifs. “I’d quit my job every time a big expedition came up—Broad Peak in ’95, then Cho Oyu in ’96,” she says. Eventually, she abandoned her office post altogether for a less tethered career; she moved to Seattle to help take over the Mountain Madness guide service in 1997, a year after the company’s founder, Scott Fischer, died on Everest.
This spring, Boskoff will be back on Everest as a guide for Mountain Madness, which may yield her second summit on that peak. She’ll then attempt K2’s dangerous SSE Spur with Fowler. A view from the 28,250-foot pinnacle would put her halfway to becoming the first woman to climb all fourteen 8,000-meter peaks. Thing is, she’s so modest about her ability, male climbers who approach her at climbing crags have no idea who they’re flirting with. One day last year at Skaha Bluffs, in British Columbia’s Okanagan Valley, she was besieged by a crew of twentysomething lads trying out their best lines on the attractive alpinist.
“What do you do for a living?” one asked her as she limbered up a 5.10 line. “Oh,” said Boskoff, who had recently topped out on Mont Blanc and the Matterhorn, “I run a travel business.”