CLIMBING.....Britain's
James Pearson climbing the multi-pitch peak of Mount Kinabalu.
By : NURHAFIZAH YUSOF
MOUNT Kinabalu, Malaysia’s
tallest at 4,095 metres (13,435 feet), is arguably the easiest mountain to
climb. Eighty-year-old grandmas and very young children have walked up to the
granite peak. Yet it has attracted some of the world’s best runners among the
600 to its toughest mountain race every year. Now it offers some of the most
challenging routes to rock climbers.
Five of the world’s top rock
climbers spent two weeks on the Sabah mountain last month to chart 24 routes
for rock climbers. They are graded from 5 to 9A in climbing difficulty with 9A
being the most difficult.
And it is the difficulty of
the climb that excites rock climbers.
“We would find the hardest
possible way to climb,” said Caroline Ciavaldini, 27, who won last year’s world
cup at Chamonix in the French Alps. “Mountaineers will seek the easiest way up
the mountain.”
That in essence separates
the rock climber from the mountaineer.
PROUD....From
left, Daniel Wood, James Pearson, Caroline Ciavaldini and Yuji Hirayama.
Ciavaldini of France was
joined by three other champions: America’s Daniel Woods, 23, Britain’s James
Pearson, 26, and Japan’s Yuji Hirayama, 43.
All of them are bowled over
by the granite peak which they say is the dream of every climber.
Despite its height, it
doesn’t have a snow cap and “it’s just perfect for climbers,” said Yuji, who
has won many championships and broke the world record for speed climbing at El
Capitan The Nose in Yosemite, America, in 2008.
Ciavaldini described it as '5-star
granite'. “You can’t find it elsewhere,” she said. “It’s so amazing and it
inspires us to climb. I’ve never seen such a good granite rock before.”
But strong wind, rain and
the high altitude posed problems for them. They found it difficult to breath at
4,000 metres where their climb started at Sayat Sayat. The rain and humidity
made the rock slippery and they had to make sure that they were not blown off
by the wind.
At one point, Yuji fell 9m
but was saved by a harness he had on. This was his fourth climb of the
mountain.
Yet all of them have found
Mount Kinabalu to be safe. “There are no snakes or scorpions,” said Ciavaldini.
The Sabah Tourism Board
hopes to promote rock climbing on Mount Kinabalu as another tourist attraction.
(Insight Sabah)
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