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- Newsgroups: rec.climbing
- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!spool.mu.edu!agate!pasteur!euler.Berkeley.EDU!jmorton
- From: jmorton@euler.Berkeley.EDU (John Morton)
- Subject: Salathe
- Message-ID: <1992Nov17.030037.3411@pasteur.Berkeley.EDU>
- Sender: nntp@pasteur.Berkeley.EDU (NNTP Poster)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: euler.berkeley.edu
- Reply-To: jmorton@euler.Berkeley.EDU (John Morton)
- Organization: University of California, Berkeley
- Date: Tue, 17 Nov 1992 03:00:37 GMT
- Lines: 47
-
- I don't remember anything in this group to suggest that the word
- has got round that John Salathe died last summer.
-
- Since I am announcing this I will supply a few facts for those who
- know nothing about him (it's all from memory, correct me if you
- feel like it):
-
- Salathe was a Swiss blacksmith who took up rock climbing in about 1946
- after a brush with a near-fatal stomach ailment. He attributed his
- survival to a religious revelation which included dietary restrictions
- that were a regular topic of discussion and humor among his partners.
- I think he ate only fruits and nuts, maybe vegetables too.
-
- During his climbing career (which lasted about ten years), he lived
- on the San Francisco Peninsula, and was therefore involved with the
- Bay Area Sierra Club rock climbing sections. He climbed with all the
- leading lights of this group and pioneered a number of famous routes
- in California, as well as some obscure ones. He was in his late
- forties when he started doing this stuff.
-
- Salathe's most well-known accomplishments are the Lost Arrow Chimney
- (w/ Ax Nelson), N. Face of Sentinel Rock (w/ Al Steck) and the SW Face
- of Half Dome (don't remember the partner for this one). These are
- all in Yosemite Valley. He is also known locally for his bold
- (and free!) ascent of The Hand, a rather fearsome route at Pinnacles
- Nat'l. Monument.
-
- The other contribution for which Salathe will be remembered is the
- invention of forged tool steel pitons which could be driven repeatedly.
- A few people have examples of these historic items, which hopefully
- will make their way into some kind of museum, rather than be dispersed
- as at the Access Fund auctions. Steck has his bolt kit.
-
- Salathe quit climbing after doing his famous routes; that must have
- been about 1954. I met him once in about 1963 I guess, when he came to
- Yosemite and visited with the admiring locals. His mind was on the
- angels, and he had utterly no concept of the advances in Yosemite
- climbing (e.g. Sentinel N. Face in 4 hrs. - he said, "You mean 4 _days_?")
-
- I believe many of the intervening years were spent in the old country,
- but at some point he wound up in a home somewhere near Indio, California.
- Some of his old climbing friends visited him there, and that is where
- he died at the age of 92.
-
- John Morton University of California
- jmorton@euler.berkeley.edu Mechanical Engineering
- {decvax,cbosgd}!ucbvax!euler!jmorton Machine Shop
-