Graubünden or the Grisons is Switzerland’s largest and easternmost canton. By mean elevation, it is the second highest, with more than a thousand summits, of which 460 rise above 3,000 metres. Until recently, nobody had climbed all of the (permitted) three-thousanders – until, that is, the feat was achieved by Fadri Ratti, a protestant priest.
The idea of climbing all Graubünden’s three-thousanders originated with another local mountaineer, Ruedi Fischer, who compiled a list (four peaks are out of bounds, as they lie within the borders of the Swiss National Park). Fischer himself, however, was unable to complete the set, as were two other climbers who attempted to scale all the peaks during the summer of 2002.
A native “Bündner” now aged 58, Pastor Ratti (right) has officiated at the Protestant church in Felsberg, a community west of the canton’s capital of Chur, for more than two decades. But it took him longer still – forty-two years – to climb all the canton’s three-thousanders. He climbed about two-thirds of the mountains alone, preferably in winter on skis.
Some of the summits are technically demanding: there is the 3,332-metre-high Torrone Orientale, for example, which now needs a snowy winter to facilitate an ascent – the glacier that used to serve as an approach ramp has melted away. For the more challenging peaks, Ratti climbed with a guide, Rolf Trachsel, whom he got to know on Gasherbrum I.
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For ever and for ever ... mountains of the Grisons Image by courtesy of Alpine Light & Structure |
Back at his workplace, Pastor Ratti’s love of the outdoors has helped him deal with a worry common to most churches in Europe – a dwindling congregation. As a qualified hiking guide, he has been able to conduct marriage services on mountaintops and baptise children on alpine meadows.
In surmounting all his canton's higher mountains, Ratti has achieved a first. But statistics on height and speed are of little interest to him, writes Anita Bachmann, who interviewed him for the Swiss Alpine Club’s bimonthly journal. “Nobody ever asks me whether I have seen animals on my tours, or what the mountains smell like” he is reported as saying – adding that they smell of mushrooms in autumn and alpine roses in early summer.
References
Summarised from an interview with Fadri Ratti in Die Alpen 06/24 by Anita Bachmann, Ein Rekord der anderen Art: 460 Bündner Dreitausender in 42 Jahren (German language).
Photo of Fadri Ratti: courtesy of Anita Bachmann/Die Alpen.
2 comments:
Very impressive! That's the second Ratti to make it on to this blog, I believe. The previous one being Pope Pius XI who climbed the Matterhorn.
Thanks for reading, Iain: yes, the coincidence of names is extraordinary - I thought best not to mention it in the summary, as the author of the underlying article said nothing about it. The climbing histories of the two Rattis have very different vibes, though - on the one hand, a relative short phase of very ambitious alpine climbs on the biggest mountains, on the other a life-long exploration of the "home peaks"....
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