The 2015 Piolets dOr winners were announced on Tuesday, and three first ascents will be honored, . The ceremony will take place April 9 to 12 in Chamonix, France, and Courmayeur, Italy.
American climbers Alex Honnold and Tommy Caldwell will take one prize home for the first full traverse of the Fitz Roy range in Patagonia in February 2014. Working from north to south, the pair climbed seven peaks over five days: Aguja Guillaumet, Aguja Mermoz, Cerro Fitz Roy, Aguja Poincenot, Aguja Rafael Ju獺rez, Aguja Saint-Ex繳pery, and Aguja de lS. , they notched close to three miles of climbing and 13,000 feet of vertical gain, including some free- and simul-climbing on 65-degree ice.
Im pretty psyched, Honnold told Rock and Ice about winning a Piolet dOr. Ive joked before that if I ever won a Piolets dOr, I would just retire from climbing. Of course, I said that before I ever alpine climbed, so it seemed like some impossible thing.
Three Slovenian climbersAles Cesen, Luka Lindic, and Marko Prezeljwill be recognized for opening a new 4,400-foot route on the north face of Indias Hagshu last September. The Russian team of Alexander Gukov and Alexey Lonchinsky round out the recipients for climbing a new 5,314-foot route, named Shy Girl, on the southwest face of Thamserku in Nepal.
In the past, the Piolets dOr havent been announced until the awards ceremony, , but the 2015 committee wanted to move away from emphasizing competition and instead focus on celebrating the passion, spirit, and values of alpine climbing, . We want to get the word winners out, spokesperson Liv Sansoz told Rock and Ice. Winners implies losers, and thats not what we are about. We are trying to celebrate the spirit of modern alpinism and its values.