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Icebreaker Athlete Justin Lichter Completes Himalaya Traverse

“I just completed an unsupported trekking traverse of the Himalayas this past week.  The hike was over 2,600 kilometers and a whole lot of elevation gain and loss, at least the equivalent of summiting Mt. Everest over 20 times. I hiked from the easternmost 8,000 meter peak to the westernmost 8,000 meter peak averaging about 40km per day and hiking for the past three months.

Thanks to Icebreaker merino I  was able to wear the same baselayers for the entire trip only washing them out in creeks and rivers, never even using soap!  Three months, 10-15 hour hiking days through hot and humid and cold and snowy, and using only 2 shirts and 1 pair of boxers!”

- Justin Lichter, Icebreaker Athlete

start of hike (2)Justin LIMG_0065IMG_1292IMG_0689end of hike

Introducing Lydia Bradey – Icebreaker at Altitude!

“I was actually really bad at sports at school, but it is my love of the mountains and nature, as well as the people with whom I share these passions, that motivates me to explore wild places, and to climb.

In 1988, I became the first woman in the world to climb Mt Everest without supplementary oxygen. Twenty years later, I guided a group up Everest, reaching the summit for the second time on May 24, 2008. To date, I am still the only New Zealander to have climbed Everest without oxygen and the only New Zealand woman to have climbed it twice.

I currently live in Lake Hawea, near Wanaka with my partner Dean Staples, who is also a mountain guide. Together we hold eight ascents of Everest, and he was the first Kiwi to climb Everest from both the north (Tibetan) and the South (Nepali) sides… but I promise that we don’t talk about Everest all the time!

In late 2010, I travelled to Nepal with international guiding company Adventure Consultants to guide a group to the summit of Ama Dablam. This peak is 6956m and is referred to as the “Matterhorn of the Himalayas” due to its towering ridges and sheer faces.

Just before I left for Nepal, I was endowed with some gorgeous pieces of Icebreaker to wear on the journey. One in particular became the centre-piece of my whole Himalayan wardrobe. My GT260 Quantum Hood in Belize is singularly the most technical yet beautifully designed long sleeved top I have ever worn.

As a climber and high altitude Mountain Guide, I need to carry heavy kitbags of climbing equipment when travelling, which limits what I am able to carry as day to day wear. Yet as well as climbing some of the highest mountains in the world, I need great garments for a variety of other tasks:

In Nepal, we met with officials in the Nepalese Ministry of Tourism (and needed to look smart!), we dined out with our clients in Kathmandu, we packed loads for yaks, we trekked into the base camp at the bottom of the mountain and we drank tea in dirt-floored tea-houses. My Quantum Hood looked clean and elegant in basically any situation, even when it had brushed against the occasional yak on the trek in!

Per Thellersen from Denmark, our climbing Sherpa Sange and I made up the small advance party of three which reached the summit of Ama Dablam on November 4th 2010 in perfect weather. The following day, six others climbed to the top.

Although the members of our group were from different countries, almost everyone was wearing an Icebreaker! One of our strong Sherpa team also wore an Icebreaker, and had done so on several Everest summits, an ascent of Kanchenjunga and two ascents of Makalu, respectively the third and fifth highest peaks in the world. He surely needs a new Icebreaker!

Sherpa climbers do an incredible amount of physically intense and sometimes dangerous work at high altitude. In bitingly cold winds, they carry very heavy loads for the team and forge ahead to fix ropes for the climbers to make a safe ascent. This year the summit pyramid was hard blue ice and even after the ropes had been fixed, extreme care and strenuous work was required to climb to the top. But the view from the summit – right in the face of Everest, Barunste and Makalu – has to be one of the most amazing views in the world!”

- Lydia Bradey – Mountaineer, Mountain Guide and Motivational Speaker http://www.lydiabradey.com/

Per Thellersen climbing the steep headwall on Ama Dablam. Per Thellersen collectionAma Dablam, 6956m, Khumbu Valley, Nepal. Credit Lydia BradeySange at our Puja ceremony before climbing. Credit Lydia BradeyPer climbing between Camp 1 & 2 and then above C2 looking at its unlikely perch on the tower! Credit Lydia BradeyPer climbing between Camp 1 & 2 and then above C2 looking at its unlikely perch on the tower! Credit Lydia BradeySange, Per and Lydia summit Ama Dablam 6956m, 4 November 2010, Mt Everest and Lhotse behind. Per Thellersen collection

Himalayan Back Country Skiers and Film Makers: Fresh Snow and Fresh Icebreaker in Kashmir

Adventure seekers love Icebreaker, and Icebreaker loves adventure seekers.  For that reason we were ecstatic to get involved when Anthony Bonello and his team at b4apres got in touch with us about their backcountry ski film that was being shot in the Himalayas.  To be exact they are based out of the Gulmarg Ski Resort in Kashmir.  Spending a good portion of the winter season in the cold and snow, these film makers are creating a documentary showcasing the beauty and culture of Kashmir in hopes to dispel the stigma that this is a dangerous place to travel.

Icebreaker could not think of a better way to help these extreme skiers and artists out than to provide them with some Icebreaker Merino socks, leggings and tops to keep the warm while hiking the mountains, packing film gear, scoping fresh powder lines and interviewing the locals.  Their film promises to impress and the team here at Icebreaker wish them all the best.

Here is a synopsis from Anthony on the film and their project:

b4apres Media’s debut film is a cultural documentary as seen through the eyes of skiers. We will travel into the mountains surrounding the Gulmarg Ski Resort, Kashmir in order to capture the aesthetic beauty of the landscape and the livelihoods of a people eager to dispel the stigma that Kashmir is a dangerous place to travel.

We intend to single out the colorful and iconic local characters within the skiing culture of Gulmarg and convey their passion for the mountains. By allowing the Kashmiri people to show where they are from and significantly, where they are going, the essence of what Kashmir means to its people and what it can mean to the rest of world will be articulated. As foreigners with relatively little experience or understanding of Kashmir, we believe expressing the temperament of post-war Kashmir is best left to the locals.

With its fertile valleys and glaciated mountains, that form the very beginning of the Great Himalaya Mountain Range, the region has a distinct allure for skiers/snowboarders and travelers. With the world’s highest gondola rising to 3980m above sea level, the skiing potential is boundless. We intend to explore the mountains surrounding Gulmarg in search of the ultimate ski run.

To follow the trials and tribulations of making a film in India that is largely dependent on mother nature, check out b4apres.com

Watch the Gulmarg Ski Teaser video here