Watch:
Stephan
Siegrist
leads
tribute
ice
route
in
Kandersteg

02/23

Mario climbing on the rock

02/23

@Mario Heller / Thomas Ulrich

Mario Heller / Thomas Ulrich

Ashleigh Maxwell

Three decades after the first ascent, alpinist Stephan Siegrist leads an expedition to retrace the steps of the climbers who first topped the classic Swiss ice route Crack Baby (IV WI6; 350m).

Climbing on the ice cliff
Watch the film: Stephan Siegrist and Michael Gruber climb Crack Baby

On Feb. 15 1993, Swiss climbers Xaver Bongard and Michael Gruber topped out a long-admired 350m ice line on Kandersteg’s impressive Breitwangflue wall. Still considered one of Switzerland’s most beautiful ice climbs, Bongard and Gruber’s 11-pitch route has become an extreme classic in the Alps and a revered project for the international climbing community. The summer before opening the route, Bognard had made headlines opening The Grand Voyage (VII 5.10 A4+; WI3) on Pakistan’s 6286m Great Trango Tower ­– a route widely considered the hardest high-altitude, big-wall climb at the time. Then, just one year after opening Crack Baby, Bongard was killed in a BASE jumping accident in Lauterbrunnen. Among the many admirers he left behind was young aspiring alpinist Stef Seigrist, who looked up to the 30-year-old as a mentor and friend. In his new film, Siegrist takes Gruber back to the Breitwangflue to pay tribute to Bongard. For Gruber’s first attempt at the route since opening it 30 years ago, the pair dust off some of the original gear to get the job done in style.

“Sometimes
you
think
you
should
throw
the
old
stuff
away
but
then
the
old
memories
come
back.”

Stephan Siegrist

  • People in snow
  • Climbing on the ice cliff
  • Mario climbing on the rock
  • climbing