Top 17 Alpinism Quotes & Sayings

Explore popular Alpinism quotes.
Last updated on November 5, 2024.
Traditional alpinism is to go where the others are not going and to be self-reliant.
Skiing is the pleasurable part of alpinism - way more pleasurable and fun than alpine climbing.
It's really impressive what those like Messner and Walter Bonatti have done - they are a big part of the history of alpinism.
Many would argue that alpinism is art, not sport.
Definition: Alpinism is the art of going through the mountains confronting the greatest dangers with the biggest of cares. What we call art here, is the application of a knowledge to an action.
There are three elements of mountaineering - difficulty, danger, and exposure. Difficulty is the technical aspect of it. Danger, it is best to avoid, but some people like to increase danger to a point where their success is dependent only on luck. And exposure, which is what truly defines Alpinism, is what you face in wild nature.
Traditional alpinism is slowly disappearing. It is becoming sport, indoors on small walls with holds where you cannot really fall.
I'm a storyteller. I do this for the next generations. They have to know what traditional alpinism is all about. — © Reinhold Messner
I'm a storyteller. I do this for the next generations. They have to know what traditional alpinism is all about.
I can respect the gulf that separates alpinism from a running race and still appreciate that the physiology that accounts for endurance is the same if you are running a foot race in the city park or front pointing up the second ice field on the north face of the Eiger.
The challenges of adventure, rock climbing and alpinism trained me well for dealing with the slow neurodegenerative malady I'm experiencing.
Alpinism means you go by yourself with your own responsibility, knowing that you could die. But Everest now is more like ski tourism: preparing the piste, helping people go up, setting oxygen bottles near the summit.
The people in Nepal don't care about alpinism; they just care about money. — © Ueli Steck
The people in Nepal don't care about alpinism; they just care about money.
Alpinism places unique demands on its practitioners.
Look, I do not control alpinism. But maybe I was too successful. Many in the mountaineering scene - journalists, second-rate climbers, lecturers, so-called historians - had a problem with me for many years.
Mountaineering is over. Alpinism is dead. Maybe its spirit is still alive a little in Britain and America, but it will soon die out.
Within alpinism's narrow framework we seek transcendence and relentlessly pursue what remains hidden from us on flat ground: our true selves.
For me, the value of a climb is the sum of three inseparable elements, all equally important: aesthetics, history, and ethics. Together they form the whole basis of my concept of alpinism. Some people see no more in climbing mountains than an escape from the harsh realities of modern times. This is not only uninformed but unfair. I don’t deny that there can be an element of escapism in mountaineering, but this should never overshadow its real essence, which is not escape but victory over your own human frailty.
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