kabuto
Banned
- Messages
- 2
- Location
- Fort Worth, Texas
I just finished Wade Davis's recent book Into the Silence, sort of a history of the early, 1920s Mount Everest exhibitions (George Mallory, et al.), along with a good dose of WWI history, the Great Game, Tibet vs China, and so on.
Those guys, with one exception, climbed on the mountain wearing tweed coats and similar standard late Edwardian men's attire (but up to 8 layers of it), including felt hats in some cases. On later expeditions they supplemented this with gaberdine wind suits.
Many fingertips and toes were lost to frostbite.
The one exception was the eccentric expedition member George Finch, an Australian, who had a goose down outfit custom made for him (and also pioneered the use of oxygen tanks on the mountain).
Those guys, with one exception, climbed on the mountain wearing tweed coats and similar standard late Edwardian men's attire (but up to 8 layers of it), including felt hats in some cases. On later expeditions they supplemented this with gaberdine wind suits.
Many fingertips and toes were lost to frostbite.
The one exception was the eccentric expedition member George Finch, an Australian, who had a goose down outfit custom made for him (and also pioneered the use of oxygen tanks on the mountain).