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The Hard Earned Joys of Ski Mountaineering

“All men dream: but not equally. Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their minds wake up in the day to find it was vanity, but the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they may act their dreams with open eyes, to make it possible.”

― T.E. Lawrence, Seven Pillars of Wisdom

The Italian winter of 2020-2021 saw one of the greatest snowfalls in recent history.  For those of us in the plains below, it was endless rainfall; but up above among the peaks; it was light snowflakes which make the powder of skiers’ dreams.

Passo Giau Covered in Snow.

Except, in a cruel irony; the Italian government had closed all the ski resorts to protect their population from the dangers of a virus which had gripped the world. 

In terms of the lives and livelihoods lost from the virus; the story of a lost season of epic skiing doesn’t quite reach the threshold of a tale of woe and suffering.

Luckily, this isn’t a story of woe (but there is some very real-physical- suffering).

Necessity is the mother of invention.  And with epic snowfall, closed borders, and regularly updated decrees from the Italian government on what we couldn’t do; we had to find a new way to experience our beloved mountains in winter.

Since fate has a way of bringing you what you need; I conducted training with the Alpini– or Italian mountain troops- who taught me the basics of Ski mountaineering, or Ski-Alpinismo as they call it in Italy.

An Alpini Eagle’s Wings Catch the Snow.

Ski mountaineering also known as ski-touring is the act of climbing up a mountain with specially modified equipment in order to ski down them.  On the bottom of the skis are “seal skins” which allow you to move uphill without sliding back down, and your heels are free to allow a more fluid movement.  When you are ready to go down, you take off the seal skins and lock your heel in.

Simple right?  Well sort of.  Like all things, the devil is in the details.  I had been interested in ski mountaineering for many years, but in the Pacific Northwest, where my lifelong passion for the mountains was solidified, the skills and equipment necessary to participate appeared too high. 

Those of us in America at the time accepted that in-depth knowledge of avalanche conditions (a science and art that can take a lifetime to acquire) and expensive equipment from Europe was required.  Plus, if the desire to ski came upon me; I could always go to a resort, which would whisk me-effort free- to the top of the mountain with none of the costs and risks.

Thus, the dream to ski-mountaineer remained unrealized; to lie where all the other adventurous dreams of the day burned. 

Until there were no resorts.  Then the dream became a need.  And, thanks to the Alpini, I now had some of the necessary skills.  We decided that every free weekend that month; we would head to the mountains.

As a family, we drove up to the breathtakingly beautiful mountain village of Arabba in the Dolomites.  In a normal winter, it is a world renowned way point in the classic Sella Ronda ski tour. 

Snow covers the road signs in the Passo Campolongo

This wasn’t a normal winter.  The snow was piled so high; it felt like we were driving through a white tunnel as we approached.  The lifts were closed. The village quiet.  The slopes empty.

With our friend, John, my wife and I rented our ski-alpinismo equipment.  Then we promised to meet before dawn of the following day.

At 0530, in the darkness of the winter night, Lisa and I got dressed and sleepily struggled to put together our equipment.  Then we trudged outside and met John.

Together we stepped into our gear and began climbing the empty slope.  Alone, among the trees, we saw the beginning of the sun lightening the valley below us.  Slowly, the sun began to share its warmth with us.

The Sun Creeps out to warm the Valley.

Lisa, a member of the ski patrol, quickly mastered the technique to glide as much as possible on the skis while climbing. 

John heads up, led by the light.

Technique mattered, because this was hard work.  Our heart rates soared as we trudged uphill.  The suffering alleviated by the tremendous natural beauty around us.  It was, according to John, our own “Private Dolomites.”

This being Europe, once we reached the top, a small mountain rifugio, or cabin, was improbably open.  I can only imagine the lady who served us was hoping the government would soon allow the the resort to open.  We had cappuccinos and strudel, filled with the pleasure of hard physical work finally accomplished.  Then we headed down.

The snow was perfect and all too soon we reached the bottom where we had started hours before. 

Lisa and I were addicted.  After a spirited fondue dinner with another couple, we agreed to go again with them the very next day. 

Derek, Cassandra, and Lisa push through the powder.

As before, in the winter darkness, we met and began to climb uphill.  The mountains on that side of the valley were steeper and the wind stung our face with its bitter cold.  At times our skis would slip and we worried we might fall down the face.  We climbed higher and struggled at the limits of our stamina.

The wind bites us.

When we were ready to ski down, our frozen fingers had trouble preparing our equipment for the descent. 

But once again, we were filled with joy as we took long swooping curves on empty slopes of fresh powder.  We had in the parlance of ski mountaineering, “earned our turns”, and as result the descent was even sweeter.

Lisa and I headed out another time that month to ski-tour.  Under blue skies we found ourselves surrounded by beautiful rock faces and snow covered peaks that stretched to the horizon.

Snow covered peaks stretch out endlessly.

At the end of the month, in the iconic Olympic ski town of Cortina; we arranged ski lessons for our two oldest daughters.  With lifts closed, I carried the girls up the hill after each run. 

Then in one of the serendipitous twists of fate, we met Prince Hurbertus-the father of our daughters’ instructor.  He is an Olympic skier who represents Mexico at international competitions  in a Mariachi spandex suit.  We had followed him since our first child was born in Mexico City.

Prince Hubertus, also known as Andy Himalaya and Royal Disaster welcomes the next generation Mexican Olympic Skier.

We commiserated with him on the lost ski season of epic snow. 

Except for us, it hadn’t been lost.

We had been introduced to the hard earned joys of ski mountaineering; where hours of laborious climbing were rewarded by fleeting minutes of floating velocity.

We had a new passion and will still be ski mountaineering even when the resorts reopen.

The dreams of the day made possible.

The eternal pleasures of hard physical work accomplished.

Roland Minez is a co-founder of Pushing Horizons.


Disclaimer: All views expressed are that of the author. As an REI Associate, Pushing Horizons earns from qualifying purchases.

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Adventures Among the Relics of War

The Italian Dolomites are filled with both the most stunning mountain scenery in the world and the remnants of man’s unending willingness to struggle violently against other men.

The wheel of fate had brought us to Italy and we always intended to experience it in all of its full-throttled glory.  Roman ruins, Renaissance cities, fast cars, faster mopeds, and succulent pasta dishes washed down with endless bottles of red wine are the hallmark of this overwhelmingly immersive country. 

Of course, for those drawn to the vertical world of mountains, there are also other attractions.  The pink hued Dolomite mountains are some of the most stunning in the world.  This chain branches off from the greater Alps; but due to the mysteries of geology, it is only in eastern Italy that this mountain range becomes a series of iconic imposing colorful rock faces.  The French Climbing Guide Gaston Rebuffat said of the Dolomites, “one ray of sunshine is enough to give them life, the effect…make them shimmer, take on color and charm for all their verticality.” Their beauty defies description.

The Pink tinged rock faces of Tre Cime.

But man covets that which is beautiful and tribes fight other tribes for reasons of fear, greed, and honor, as Thucydides so memorably put it thousands of years ago.  The Dolomites has been an arena of violent competition as long as there have been humans.  The prehistoric mummy “Iceman Otzi” discovered in the glaciers of northern Italy bears wounds inflicted by other humans.  Scientists believe he died, not by wild animals or natural causes, but by an arrow shot at him.  Otzi was only the first recorded casualty of conflict. For millennia warriors and armies of increasing fame and infamy passed through these mountains.  It seems like every valley of this mountainous region is watched over by an imposing castle meant to block the advance of rival forces.

A representation of Otzi, the prehistoric Iceman, at the South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology.

More by happenstance  than by a plan, we have sought to experience the great mountains around us.  Although the Veneto region has been made immortal by the great trading city of Venice, it is also the gateway to the high country.  In a series of day trips, we have taken our small girls up to walk among this wonderland.  Sometimes, Lisa and I have escaped to try our hand at harder physical endeavors.  Time and again, in our travels, we have discovered the remnants of war.

Amidst the larger First World War, a hundred and five years ago, on 23 May 1915, Italy declared war on the Austro-Hungarian Empire.  The Italian or Alpine front was a series of battles between Italy and the Austro-Hungarian Empire, that quickly devolved into a struggle of attrition among the peaks of the region.  The tyranny of altitude, cold, and logistics imposed its own logic on the geopolitical desires of the Italian leadership who hoped to recover territory they believed rightfully theirs.  

Tre Cime

With another family, we hiked to the incredible Tre Cime or three Peaks.  British travelers in the nineteenth century described the peaks as “Egyptian Colossi.”  The otherworldly allure of these mountains has drawn Hollywood to use it as the location of an Ice planet in the Star Wars’ films.  After hustling small children into backpacks, we began following our friends’ fearless dog in the imposing shadows of the great peaks. 

Fearless scout.

We slipped and struggled through spring snow before coming to a pass that opened up to a panorama of rock and ice.  The children played in the snow, seemingly unaffected by the altitude or the climb that had brought us to that location.  Above us, incongruities in the rock on Mount Paterno attracted our eyes.  We climbed up to find hewn into the rock fighting positions where soldiers could observe the valley below us. 

Gingerly navigating the slippery snow.

Immediately after the declaration of war, Italian forces were meant to seize the high ground from their unprepared and surprised opponents.  However, the inevitable friction of war delayed the offensive giving the Austrians time to prepare their defenses.  Repeated assaults in the area and on the nearby Monte Piana led to an estimated 14,000 casualties.

An Austrian captain wrote at the time, “the Italians have justly baptised this mountain ‘Mount Pianto’ [Mountain of Tears].  It has already cost our side and the Italians so much blood and will cost even more, that I do not know if its possession can justify such a great sacrifice……In any case that’s not my concern; my task is to obey.”

Peering through the Italian machine gun firing positions, which they had seized on Mount Paterno, we could see an uninterrupted view on the low ground below.  It was their forward most outpost and from it they made it a killing field for the Austrians. 

The view from the Italian Positions.

We hiked back down from the high ground.  While our children played; the adults shared a celebratory bottle of prosecco.  We felt like the encircling rock cathedrals were for us alone.

A well deserved glass of Prosecco

Amidst our adventures, it slowly dawned on us that ironically, war had created architectural wonders which allowed adventurers, many years later, to reach deep into the wild and appreciate nature’s greatness.

The route of 52 tunnels.

Lisa and I had procured a babysitter, and early one morning we drove out to hike one such man made wonder in the wilderness; the 52 tunnels of Mount Pasubio.  On a clear day, Pasubio’s limestone ridge line dominates the lowlands around Vicenza, where we live.  It’s high ground used to mark the border between Austria Hungary and Italy; thus its strategic importance in the First World War.

The view of the Veneto plains from the side of Mount Pasubio.

All through 1915, the Italians slowly and painfully occupied the mountain range.  However, on 15 May 1916 a surprise Austrian offensive almost swept the Italians completely off Pasubio; the last defensible terrain before the Veneto plains.  Almost.  The Italians remained on the rocky summit and the ensuing battle became what one Austrian veteran described as the “witches’ cauldron.”

Lisa studies the military engineering.

In order to sustain their forward positions, the Italians built a series of tunnels through the mountain which allowed them to travel unmolested by Austrian Artillery.  The resulting incredible 52 tunnels cut through rock can still be explored today.

The tunnels open up to incredible vistas.

Lisa and I brought our headlamps and hiked 9 miles along the path so laboriously built over a hundred years before.  Sometimes we would scramble through wet tunnels with no natural light that cork screwed in the heart of the mountain only to pop out into the gorgeous sunny day with endless views of the terrain below us.  The path was littered with the mementos that soldiers always place to mark an achievement and ensure their sacrifices are not forgotten.

A unit carved its insignia into the rock, not to be forgotten.

In a similar but more manageable walk with our children, we hiked Mount Cegnio on Father’s Day.  It was here that the Sardinia Grenadier Brigade entered history with their heroic defense of the Asiago plateau. Our eldest daughter Marie found a rusty piece of metal in one of the tunnels, which she was convinced came from the era of those battles. 

Marie inspects her historical artifact.

Throughout the Dolomites, both sides had to wrestle with how to maneuver through the imposing mountains.  In order to aid the movement of troops amidst the vertical rock faces, a series of ladders, bridges, and cables were installed and are known as Via Ferrata or the “Iron Road.”  Their existence from World War One, has created an entire sub genre in climbing.  Naturally, Lisa and I had to try our hands at the sport.

Lisa analyzes the route up.

Via Ferrata is addictive.  Hanging off cables hundreds, if not thousands, of feet above the ground below, one feels a tremendous thrill.  It was taxing enough for us in our ultralight clothing and modern climbing equipment. It was hard to imagine soldiers trudging up the same impossibly steep terrain with hobnailed boots, wearing woolen uniforms, and carrying their weapons, ammunition, and food.  They must have always been fearful of being observed by their enemies in the exposed terrain.

With a group of friends, we tried our hands at what is considered one of the finest Via Ferrata routes in the Dolomites.  This route, known as the Bolver Luigi, rises straight up the iconic Pale Dolomite Rock around the old world mountain town of San Martino di Castrozza.

Navigating the Via Ferrata route above San Martino.

We would catch glimpses of the beauty amidst the swirling clouds before being swallowed by them.  The day became an epic with pounding hailstones, a thrilling glissade down the snowy backside, and a lightning storm.  10 miles and 7 hours later, after reaching an altitude of 10,000 feet, we hobbled back into town with a greater appreciation of those who had built the route in the first place, long before.

The clouds close in the sheer rock face.

The mountains are neutral and impassive to human ambitions; whether they be the objectives of climbers or states.  Time has washed away the reasons of fear, greed, and honor which had led men to fight among the beautiful Dolomite mountains.  Only the relics of war remained. 

A memorial to the Fallen in Asiago.

Chamonix: Mountain Temple

A small town in the French Alps on the border with Italy and Switzerland is a living shrine to all things Mountain.

“Crested Butte is for spectators; Chamonix is for participants” 

Marc Twight.
A climber scrambles up the sheer face of Le Brevent.

The Mont Blanc Massif, or mountain range, towers over the town of Chamonix in France.  Unlike other supposed mountain towns, one has only to crane one’s neck to see the perpetual white snow of the high mountains above them, gigantic blocks of ice jumbled on the glacier flowing down towards the town.  

Chamonix

However close to the mountains one is in Chamonix, this is no wild country.  Unlike climbing trips I have taken in the United States or the Himalaya you do not need to carry your food and water, or camp, on a long approach before seeing any mountains at all.  Here, cable cars reach out in all directions in what appears to be impossible engineering feats to spirit adventurers into the high country.

In fact, despite- or perhaps because- of its proximity to the highest peak in Western Europe, Mont Blanc, the town has all the comforts of French culture and civilization.  One can walk its cobblestone streets past well stocked wine bars, patisseries full of warm croissants, and grocery stores selling runny cheese. Tourists from all around the world jostle each other to capture the ambiance of the Alps.

The mountains have made Chamonix.  As a small poor village of alpine herders and hunters, it was discovered by early wealthy English adventurers who were interested in exploring Mont Blanc.  A Swiss naturalist Horace Bénédict de Saussure began visiting Chamonix in 1760 to observe the great mountain.  He offered a reward to the first who could reach its summit. Twenty years later in August of 1786, a local guide-Jacques Balmat and doctor Michel-Gabriel Paccard completed the first ascent of Mont Blanc.  The great British mountaineer Eric Shipton wrote many years later that it was “an astounding achievement of courage and determination, one of the greatest in the annals of mountaineering.”  It is considered the start of Mountaineering as we know it.

Statues of Jacques Balmat and  Michel-Gabriel Paccard stand eternal vigil towards the summit of Mont Blanc.

From that point, Chamonix’s destiny as the starting point for mountain adventures was made.  Although the summit of the great mountain is shared by France and Italy, it is known the world over by its French name, Mont Blanc (the White Mountain.)  In 1916, the town even lobbied to successfully change its official name to Chamonix-Mont Blanc to solidify the connection. In 1924, the very first winter Olympic games were held in Chamonix,

It is that storied history which imbues the town with its ethos.  Make no mistake, although tourists throng the streets of Chamonix, they are not its reason for existence.  Chamonix is “for participants” according to the punk climber and American iconoclast Marc Twight. Like no other place on earth, climbers, alpinists, trail runners, and skiers are the heroes.  Murals dot the walls of the town with images of great climbers from the past who dared all. Streets and schools are named after great climbing exploits, especially the first ascent of Annapurna.

“Always look for difficulty, not danger. Go forward, try, dare. In audacity there is enchantment” proclaims a mural celebrating famed mountain guide Gaston Rebuffat.

Annapurna, in the Himalayas, was the first 8000 meter peak to be successfully summited.  The pioneering French team was led by the now controversial Maurice Herzog and made up of Chamonix mountain guides.  Their feat did not come without a cost. Herzog lost all of his fingers and most of his toes to frostbite. He later became the mayor of Chamonix.

We arrived in Chamonix after driving through the epic tunnel that bores through Mont Blanc and connects Italy to France. We stood in awe of the mountains above from the balcony of our small apartment near the center of the town.  This was not the first time I had visited Chamonix. While a high school student in Paris, I had visited the town with my family in both winter and summer and those visits, as much as anything else, solidified my life long love affair with the mountains.

The sun begins to set on the Mont Blanc Massif above Chamonix.

It had taken twenty years to return, but I was back with a family of my own and we were determined to be “participants” in the great mountain arena.  We took our young girls on repeated hikes in the mountains that invariably ended with them being carried by us in backpacks and eating delicious crepes at secluded mountain lodges.

The descent to the Mer de Glace glacier.

Sometimes we would be passed by noted trail runners, like Timothy Olson, preparing for the Ultra Trail du Mont Blanc (UTMB).  We yelled our encouragement and patted him on the back as he ran by. The 106 mile UTMB race gains over 32 thousand feet in elevation and crosses the borders of France, Switzerland, and Italy before ending in Chamonix.  The winner will take approximately twenty hours to finish it. In preparation for a much more modest upcoming triathlon, I would go for long bike rides and runs in the shadow of the peaks around us.

Not one of those peaks were without their own epics of triumph and tragedy.  While riding my bike just outside of the town, I looked up at the towering Aiguille du Dru above the “mer de glace” glacier.  Aiguille means needle in French, and it accurately captures the sharp jagged profile of the mountain. In 1962 two Americans, Royal Robbins and Gary Hemmings, pioneered the “American Direct” route straight up the pinnacle of the Dru.

The Aiguille du Dru

Gary Hemings had been kicked out of the Air Force Academy and ended up in Europe climbing mountains and sometimes living under bridges in Paris.  In 1966, two German climbers were stuck on a ledge on the mountain. French military rescue teams were unable to reach them and one French soldier died in the attempt.  Hemings had offered his service and been refused, but he returned with a team and rescued the Germans. The French press crowned him a hero and dubbed him “Le Beatnik.” Tragically, before the end of the decade he would die of a self-inflicted gunshot among the Teton mountains in Wyoming.  The author James Salter tried to capture his haunted free spirit in the novel, Solo Faces.

The Aiguille du Dru from the Mer de Glace glacier.

No institution better represents Chamonix than the Compagnie des Guides.  Founded in 1821, it is the world’s oldest mountain guiding association. The poor herders and hunters who lived in Chamonix came together to lead those who wanted to go into the high country.  The cemetery and memorial in town are filled with members of the Compagnie des Guides who hold the same family names, like Simond and Charlet, and who had perished as guides in the mountains over multiple generations.

Noteworthy guides from years past.

The Compagnie des Guides was truly a family affair and for many years limited to those born in Chamonix.  Then in 1930 an extraordinary man named Roger Frisson-Roche,who had been born in Paris, passed the grueling selection process to become the first “foreigner” accepted into its select company.  His was a storybook life; climber, entrepreneur, explorer, journalist, and writer. His novel Premier de cordee (First on the Rope) would define climbing in France for at least a generation.  During World War Two while a journalist with American Forces in North Africa he was captured by the Germans and later fought with the French resistance as a Mountain soldier.

We so happened to be visiting Chamonix during their annual Festival des Guides.  This tradition, first started by Frisson-Roche, was a time for the Guides to celebrate the camaraderie of their profession.  We joined them in a small village outside Chamonix called Argentieres, where we were treated to a helicopter demonstration by the elite Gendarmerie Mountain Rescue unit, as well as live music and prodigious amounts of melted cheese and red wine.

The guides assemble for their annual ritual.

Early the next morning the guides assembled in the uniform of their fore-bearers, woolen jackets, knicker-bocker pants, long socks with ropes and ice axes slung across their backs.  They gathered at the cemetery in town to pay homage to their dead. Then both old and young guides marched together from the cemetery to the chapel. In a semicircle around the chapel, they remembered those guides who had died in the preceding year and welcomed the few who had made it through the selection process to become guides themselves.  A young woman poignantly told the crowd how proud she was to join this esteemed association and believed her father, who had perished in an avalanche years before, was looking down at her.

Young and old guides alike share in the camaraderie of the moment.

On the margins of the events, other guides helped children practice on a climbing wall and, this being a French event, served wine and beer to the audience.  In the brilliant sunshine, guides and guests alike slapped each other’s backs and told stories of climbs past and future sharing the aura of those who have witnessed that which is majestic.

Lisa ascends a rock face in the Aiguille Rouges.

We too felt the pull to test ourselves on the great faces that surrounded us.  After finding a babysitter, Lisa and I early one morning took a cable car up into the high country to climb among the rock faces of the Aiguille Rouges.  Belaying each other up the multi-pitch routes, feeling the rock in our hands, we looked across the valley to the stunning views of the Mont Blanc. At some other time, should fate allow it, we would return to climb the storied peak.  But right then, we were happy to be participants in this living shrine to man’s connection to mountains.

Belaying surrounded by beauty.

Roland Minez is a co-founder of Pushing Horizons.


Disclaimer: All views expressed are that of the author. As an REI Associate, Pushing Horizons earns from qualifying purchases.

Riding in the Shadow of Legends

“I take my gear out of the car and put my bike together.  Tourists and locals are watching from sidewalk cafes. Non-racers.  The emptiness of their lives shocks me.”  
Tim Krabbe, The Rider.

Bicycle Racing revels in suffering.  It takes a certain kind of masochist to enjoy the endless miles across undulating terrain against merciless opponents; sometimes in repetitive stages over many weeks.  No one captures the ethos of those who choose to race better than author Tim Krabbe in his novel, The Rider, about a single day of cycling in an anonymous 70’s amateur race in the South of France.  The protagonist and his opponents push to the limits of their endurance in a fight to the finish line. 

The history of cycling is replete with legends of such stoic heroes.  The rider flying off a cliff during a speedy descent, only to climb out of the canyon, bruised and bloody, to ride to victory.  The nicknames of the greatest suggest a ruthless will to win; the Cannibal, Badger, and Pirate.  None are more famous than Il Campionissimo or the “Champion of Champions” Fausto Coppi.  The great post World War Two Italian cyclist was a World Champion, two time winner of the Tour de France, and five time winner of the Giro d’Italia.  The latter two races are multi-stage epics whose distances covered and altitude gained are difficult for laymen to truly comprehend. To this day, the annual Giro d’Italia names the highest peak in the race Cima Coppi in his honor.  

Fausto Coppi lives on in a bar in Asolo, Italy.

The most iconic climb of the Giro is arguably the Passo del Stelvio on the forbidding alpine border between Lombardy and South Tyrol.  The Austro-Hungarian Emperor built the road in the nineteenth century in order to secure his restive Italian provinces. The vestiges of WWI combat between Italians and Austrians still litter the terrain.  

At 2,760 meters, it is the highest motorable pass in Italy, and the second highest in Europe.  That is, of course, when it is open at all. Four times in its history, the Giro has used the summit of the Stelvio Pass as a stage finish.  Yet, on four other occasions, it had to cancel the Stelvio stage due to inclement weather. It is an endless stream of hairpin switchbacks at a relentless grade to a snow capped summit.  When the opportunity presented itself, I had to try and climb it.  

The Stelvio Road.

As a family we traveled to the South Tyrol region last Labor day.  The beautiful mountains, picturesque villages filled with onion domed churches, and a blend of germanic and Italian culture make it an intoxicating getaway.  Beer and Espresso. Pasta and Strudel. It is a wonderful place. We tucked our children in bed in a farmhouse above a herd of cows. My wife and I lazily explored what we could do in the region. It is then that we found out the next day, August 31, the Stelvio pass would be hosting a cycling event open to all; Stelvio Bike Day.  For only a handful of days a year, the road is closed to cars so cyclists can test their will against its flank. In hurried negotiations, we decided I would attempt it the next day.

Bright and early, we drove to the starting point in a small village in the plain below the high Alpine peaks.  Thousands of other cyclists surrounded us, ready to try and tick off a bucket list climb. I set up my bike, kissed my family, and pedaled off in a sea of other enthusiasts.

In high spirits at the beginning of the climb.

There should be no mistake and no illusions.  Although this is the hardest climb I have ever attempted, none of us riding that day can rightfully compare ourselves to those legends who had ridden the path to achieve victory in a professional bike race.

The first year the Stelvio was showcased in the Giro d’Italia was 1953.  That year Fausto Coppi hoped to win his fifth Giro. At that time, only one other man had ever won five Giros.  However, by the time the Giro had reached the penultimate Stelvio stage, Coppi was far behind his competitor and friend, non-Italian Hugo Klobet.  It is said that the day before the stage, Coppi told Klobet, “The Giro is yours, You are the strongest.”  A deal was allegedly hatched, neither would attack the other, Koblet would take the race and Coppi would take the stage.

The pack thinned as I rode up and away from the villages, soon surrounded by pine trees.  The ascent was relentless. Although the gradient was a reasonable 5%, there was no flat or dipping terrain in order to rest the legs.  Raging whitewater fed by the melting glaciers above, flowed down beside us.  

Coppi’s Italian teammates and most importantly the boss of his sponsoring company didn’t like the deal Coppi had made.  They insisted the race could still be won. About four kilometers into the stelvio stage, Coppi’s teammates began to attack in a bid to break Koblet.

A critical refueling stop.

Surrounded by beautiful mountains, I had stopped to refuel on a strudel and espresso, before continuing the climb.  Soon the famous 48 hairpin turns began, where I imagined the assault on Koblet began. It was hard to stay in the saddle and continue to pedal up the increasingly steep gradient of 8%-9%.  I climbed almost the rest of the way out of the saddle. 

An endless stream of cyclists test themselves on the Stelvio.

After Koblet chased down another of Coppi’s teammates, Coppi counterattacked.  According to a member of Coppi’s team, “He came past us like a motorbike. I’d never seen anything like it.  He disappeared into the distance.”

The names of great cyclist were spray painted on the road beneath me, as I continued to pedal up.  We left the tree line and entered into true alpine country, exposed to the elements. The road was a mesmerising line that seemed to stitch its way up the impossibly steep slope above us, and my own personal suffering began in earnest.   

The road to the Stelvio Pass.

Coppi’s mistress, Giulia Locatelli waited on the side of the road.  Known as the “White Lady” their adulterous love affair would scandalize Italy and led the Pope to refuse to bless the Giro when Coppi rode it.  As Coppi passed Giulia on the Stelvio, he asked her if she would be at the finish. She shouted yes, and a further inflamed Coppi sprinted over the summit.  

Cyclists grind up the Stelvio.

My breathing ragged from the effort and altitude, my legs heavy, I pushed on to what appeared to be the summit.  Glacial snow and gray skies crowned the Stelvio pass. An army of fellow cyclists crowded around the pass celebrating their achievement with long steins of beer and bratwursts.  I called my family to tell them I made it. Among the chaos, a simple sign proclaimed the pass to be the Cima Coppi.

The Cima Coppi.

Coppi himself flew down the other side of the pass and took the Maglia Rosa, or Pink Jersey, awarded to the winner of the Giro.  

I rode down to my family who were playing in an idyllic Alpine hotel in the shadow of the mountain.

Coppi won his fifth Giro.  The Stelvio, afterwards, would be an integral part of future races.  Koblet and Coppi would never speak to each other again.  

I had no opponent save my own doubt.  Nor was I the victor of a classic race.  Over 5,800 feet had been gained in approximately 25 miles.  The suffering had ended. I stretched my sore legs and celebrated the end of a hard climb with a cold beer, surrounded by my daughters, happy to have rode in the shadow of legends.

Daddy and Daughter enjoy a well earned nap.

Roland Minez is a co-founder of Pushing Horizons.
Disclaimer: All views expressed are that of the author.