Alpine Warriors
- Lowest Price Guarantee
- Low stock - 1 item left
- Get notified when the item is in stock.
Pairs well with
General Info | |
---|---|
Topic |
Alpine Climbing
|
General Info | |
---|---|
Topic |
Alpine Climbing
|
Winner of the 2015 Banff Mountain Film and Book Festival award for Mountaineering History
After the Second World War a period of relative calm began in Josip Broz Tito’s Yugoslavia. During the next thirty years citizens could travel freely if they had the money. Most did not, but alpinists did.
Through elaborate training régimes and state-supported expeditions abroad, Yugoslavian alpinists began making impressive climbs in the Himalaya as early as 1960. By the ’70s, they were ascending the 8000ers. These teams were dominated by Slovenian climbers, since their region includes the Julian Alps, a fiercely steep range of limestone peaks that provided the ideal training ground.
After Tito died in 1980, however, the calm ended. Inter-ethnic conflict and economic decline ripped Yugoslavia apart. But Serbian strongman Slobodan Miloševic misread the courage and character of several Yugoslavian states, including Slovenia, and by 1991 Slovenia was independent.
The new country continued its support for climbers, and success bred success. By 1995, all of the 8000ers had been climbed by Slovenian teams. And in the next ten years, some of the most dramatic and futuristic climbs were made by these ferocious alpinists. Apart from a few superstars, most of these amazing athletes remain unknown in the West.
Specifications
30 day price match anywhere in Canada. Read our guarantee
And operated since 1993. Read our story
Sign up and save
Subscribe to get special offers, hear about upcoming events in our store and nerd out on climbing news. Know someone who has never shopped at our online store? Refer a friend and share a discount redeemable online!