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February 16, 2023 1 Comment
We'd been the first to leave the Carrel Hut on the Italian Lion Ridge of the Matterhorn at 3am. We were a team of three, which always slows down roped climbing. We were stoked to get a good hour of climbing and route finding in the dark before other teams (of two) inevitably caught up.
Most were guided ascents, with guides leading the clients. Team by team they would pass us on the way up. At one point I'd looked up and saw climbers on a flat section of the ridge as it trended left. There was a mild looking rock face between us, situated just below the ridge directly above us. To me it looked as though they had cut the face rather than continuing up the ridge, so I decided to follow them. This was almost a fatal decision, as the face gradually developed into a mix of ice and loose broken rock. We hadn't put our crampons on yet either - the route up til now, and the rest of the climb afterwards, was pure rock with no snow or ice. To make matters worse I could no longer find any nice rock to place gear and attach our rope to the mountain.
Suddenly we were climbing unprotected, even worse roped together, up terrain that was terrifyingly unstable. We couldn't securely stand on the ice without crampons, but the rock was so loose and fractured that it wasn't much better. And since we were roped together it only took one person slipping to drag all three of us off the mountain. But the end of this dreaded face was thirty metres away. We were almost up to the safe ridge, where I had seen those climbers previously.
We carefully and smoothly worked our way up to where I could put the other two on belay and finally secure ourselves. The rest of the climb, while it got steeper, was far safer as there were bolts leading to the summit. We climbed swiftly and summitted at 9:30am. I remember being warmer than how I look in the photo, but I still remember the joy of finally making it.

Byron wears the Mont Guide Hoodie

Rest assured we avoided that dreaded face on the descent, and made it down to a bivy site on a grass meadow at 9:30pm, completing our long, memorable day.
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December 15, 2025
We were probably twenty electrolyte tablets deep each, feeling more like science experiments than cyclists. Add in sketchy tarmac with trucks roaring past, hogging the whole shoulder, and you had a section that demanded laser-sharp focus…
October 31, 2025
I had brought my Mont Helium 680 with me. A luxurious bag rated to -12°C for warm sleepers, it is perfectly suited to Tasmania’s cooler months. Ice crusted the ground and tent the next morning and checking my temperature sensor I was surprised to see that the temperature had dropped to -7.7°C overnight. That is remarkably cool for late October in Tassie!
October 20, 2025 2 Comments
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Margaret Emery
March 03, 2023
Fantastic! What an achievement.
It sounds terrifying.