Yahoo Suche Web Suche

  1. amazon.de wurde im letzten Monat von mehr als 1.000.000 Nutzern besucht

    Bei uns finden Sie zahlreiche Produkte von namhaften Herstellern auf Lager. Wähle aus unserer Auswahl an Büchern aus der Kategorie Biografien & Erinnerungen.

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Der erste Kletterer, der die 915 Meter hohe Wand El Capitan im Alleingang erklommen hat, ohne Seile oder Sicherheitsausrüstung. Erfahren Sie mehr über seine Leistung, seine Trainings und seine Herausforderungen auf dieser faszinierenden Felsenklettern-Auszeit.

  2. 28. Sept. 2018 · National Geographic. 22.9M subscribers. Subscribed. 43K. 5.5M views 5 years ago #FreeSolo #360Video #NationalGeographic. Immerse yourself in the experience of free solo climbing Yosemite’s...

    • 7 Min.
    • 5,5M
    • National Geographic
    • Overview
    • Training For the Climb of His Life
    • THE MOON LANDING OF FREE-SOLOING
    • AN ABILITY TO CONTROL FEAR

    The climber is the first person to reach the top of Yosemite’s 3,000-foot El Capitan wall without ropes.

    Watch Alex Honnold’s journey toward his rope-free climb of Yosemite National Park's El Capitan in Free Solo, the Oscar-winning film by E. Chai Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin, Sunday March 3 at 9/8c on National Geographic.

    This story was originally published on June 4, 2017. It was updated with additional photos on October 3, 2018.

    YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK, CALIFORNIA—Renowned rock climber Alex Honnold on Saturday became the first person to scale the iconic nearly 3,000-foot granite wall known as El Capitan without using ropes or other safety gear, completing what may be the greatest feat of pure rock climbing in the history of the sport.

    He ascended the peak in 3 hours, 56 minutes, taking the final moderate pitch at a near run. At 9:28 a.m. PDT, under a blue sky and few wisps of cloud, he pulled his body over the rocky lip of summit and stood on a sandy ledge the size of a child’s bedroom.

    Watch Alex Honnold's journey toward his rope-free climb of the world's most famous rock wall—Yosemite National Park's El Capitan—in Free Solo, a stunning, intimate, unfliching film by E. Chai Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin. Find the film in theaters starting September 28, 2018.

    1 / 5

    1 / 5

    Honnold has been practicing for the daring climb for more than a year, training on routes throughout the Yosemite Valley and other locations around the globe.

    Honnold has been practicing for the daring climb for more than a year, training on routes throughout the Yosemite Valley and other locations around the globe.

    Photograph by Jimmy Chin

    Read Alex's first interview about his epic climb.

    Trained in a climbing gym in Sacramento, Honnold, 31, burst onto the international scene in 2008 with two high-risk, rope-free ascents—the northwest face of Yosemite’s Half Dome and the Moonlight Buttress in Utah’s Zion National Park. Those free solos astonished the climbing world and set new benchmarks in much the same way that Roger Bannister redefined distance running when he broke the four-minute mile in 1954.

    “What Alex did on Moonlight Buttress defied everything that we are trained, and brought up and genetically engineered to think,” said Peter Mortimer, a climber who has made numerous films with Honnold. “It’s the most unnatural place for a human to be.”

    But those pioneering climbs pale in comparison to El Capitan. It’s hard to overstate the physical and mental difficulties of a free solo ascent of the peak, which is considered by many to be the epicenter of the rock climbing world. It is a vertical expanse stretching more than a half mile up—higher than the world’s tallest building, the Burj Khalifa in Dubai. From the meadow at the foot of El Capitan, climbers on the peak’s upper reaches are practically invisible to the naked eye.

    “This is the ‘moon landing’ of free soloing,” said Tommy Caldwell, who made his own history in 2015 with his ascent of the Dawn Wall, El Capitan’s most difficult climb, on which he and his partner Kevin Jorgeson used ropes and other equipment only for safety, not to aid their progress.

    With free-soloing, obviously I know that I’m in danger, but feeling fearful while I’m up there is not helping me in any way.

    (What Caldwell and Jorgeson did is called free climbing, which means climbers use no gear to help them move up the mountain and are attached to ropes only to catch them if they fall. Free soloing is when a climber is alone and uses no ropes or any other equipment that aids or protects him as he climbs, leaving no margin of error.)

    The route Honnold chose to reach the top of El Capitan, known as Freerider, is one of the most prized big wall climbs in Yosemite. The route has 30 sections—or pitches—and is so difficult that even in the last few years, it was newsworthy when a climber was able to summit using ropes for safety.

    •Nat Geo Expeditions

    Book your next trip with Peace of Mind

    Search Trips

    It is a zigzagging odyssey that traces several spidery networks of cracks and fissures, some gaping, others barely a knuckle wide. Along the way, Honnold squeezed his body into narrow chimneys, tiptoed across ledges the width of matchboxes, and in some places, dangled in the open air by his fingertips.

    Freerider tests nearly every aspect of a climber’s physical abilities—strength of fingers, forearms, toes, and abdomen, as well as flexibility and endurance. Environmental factors, like sun, wind, and the potential for sudden rainstorms, are also factors that Honnold had to carefully calculate.

    • 2 Min.
  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Alex_HonnoldAlex Honnold - Wikipedia

    On June 3, 2017, he made the first-ever free solo ascent of El Capitan by completing Alex Huber's 2,900-foot (884m) big wall route, Freerider (5.13a VI), in 3 hours and 56 minutes. The climb, described as "one of the great athletic feats of any kind, ever," [5] was documented by climber and photographer Jimmy Chin and documentary ...

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Free_SoloFree Solo - Wikipedia

    Free Solo is a 2018 American documentary film directed by Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin that profiles rock climber Alex Honnold on his quest to perform the first-ever free solo climb of a route on El Capitan, in Yosemite National Park, in June 2017.

    • Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi, Jimmy Chin, Shannon Dill, Evan Hayes
  5. 13. Dez. 2018 · Free solo climber Alex Honnold prepares to achieve his lifelong dream: scaling Yosemite's 3,200-foot El Capitan without a rope.

  6. With California’s Yosemite Valley far beneath him, Alex Honnold free solos— which means climbing without ropes or safety gear—up a crack on the 3,000-foot southwest face of El Capitan ...