'Lilliane Barrard' (1948-86) and 'Maurice Barrard' (1941?-86) were a French couple who made a brief celebrity career climbing at high altitude, mainly in the
Himalayan and
Karakoram ranges, and emphasising 'Alpine', 'fast and light' style ascents.
Early life
The couple met while climbing in South America, having previously worked mainly in teaching.
Billing themselves as the 'World's Highest Couple', they successfully climbed
Gasherbrum II (8,035 m/26,360 ft) in 1982 and
Nanga Parbat (8,125 m/26,658 ft) in 1984. Although narrowly failing to make the summit of
Makalu (8,462 m/27,765 ft), they nevertheless put the finances together to attempt
K2 (8,616 m/28,268 ft) in 1986 with a small team consisting of themselves, Polish climber
Wanda Rutkiewicz and French climber Michel Parmentier.
K2
The start to the Barrards' K2 expedition was a not a promising one: Maurice and Liliane "had left their entire expedition budget--thousands of dollars plus airline tickets and passports on the backseat of a taxi!"
[1] Everything was sorted out in due course, and the Barrards, Rutkiewicz and Parmentier arrived at the K2 motel at about the same time as
Alan_Rouse's British expedition, then headed to Base Camp.
[2]
The Barrards' expedition ascended the mountain very slowly, spending nights at 6300, 7100, 7700, 7900, and 8300meters (20,669; 23,294; 25,262; 25,919; and 27,250 feet, respectively) on the climb. The spent their last night before their summit attempt bivouaced with a tent but no sleeping bags. The Barrards, Rutkiewicz, and Parmentier all summited successfully by 11:00am on
June 23,
1986. Wanda Rutkiewicz received credit for the first female ascent of K2, almost simultaneous with Lilliane Barrard.
[3] Both women summited K2 without using supplemental oxygen.
The four climbers descended only as far as their bivouac site from the night before, near the Bottleneck (a treacherous terrain feature at around 8,300 m/27,250 feet). The Barrards and their group had run out of fuel for their stoves (which are necessary to melt snow for water in order to prevent dehydration at high altitude). Parmentier descended first, to try and borrow some stove fuel from a nearby pair of
Basque climbers,
Mari Abrego and
Josema Casimiro. The others descended after him. Rutkiewicz caught up with Parmentier; the Barrards lagged behind. The Basque climbers had also run out of gas, and accompanied Parmentier and Rutkiewicz back to the French Camp Three, at 7800m/25,600 feet.
[4]
Rutkiewicz and the Basques continued down the mountain, and Parmentier waited for the Barrards to reach Camp Three.
[5] The weather was deteriorating. A French climber climbing with an
Italian expedition,
Benoit Chamoux tried to convince Parmentier to come down, without success, and left him a radio before turning around and heading back toward Base Camp. Eventually Parmentier, who had tried to wait for some sign of the Barrards, began to descend, in white-out conditions and gale-force winds. Parmentier was eventually guided down the mountainside via radio directions from Base Camp, about 3000m/9,843 feet below, based on the few landmarks he could find in the blizzard.
[6]
Rutkiewicz, suffering from frostbite, and Parmentier both reached Base Camp alive. The Barrards were never seen alive again. The morning after summiting, Maurice had been very tired, and he and Liliane had left their tent after their climbing partners. It was windy and visibility was poor. The most likely scenarios are that the Barrards wandered off-route in the storm; that they fell; or that they collapsed from exhaustion and possible
hypoxia and died.
[7]
Aftermath
A month later a Korean team found Lilliane's body on a snow field at around 17,500 ft, nearly 10,000 ft lower than where she was last seen; Maurice's body was not found until 1998 on the glacier just above Base Camp, and both are now buried at the Gilkey Memorial at the base of K2.
Notes
★ That summer, known as the ‘Black Summer of 1986’, saw 13 deaths and 27 ascents on K2.
★ During the 'Black Summer', many expeditions shared in a surfeit of tragedies. An
American expedition to the South-South-West Ridge suffered two casualties --
John Smolich and
Alan Pennington were killed in an avalanche on
June 21, after which their teammates left the mountain. Maurice and Lilian Barrard were lost on their descent after a successful summit bid, on
June 25. A
Polish climber,
Tadeusz Piotrowski, fell to his death after a successful summit of the Central Rib of the South Face, on
July 10. On
July 16,
Renato Casarotto fell into a crevasse, after an unsuccessful attempt at climbing the South-South-West Ridge, and died later that day after being pulled out.
Wojciech Wroz, a Polish climber, died during his descent on August 3-4, after a successful ascent of the South-South-West Ridge. On
August 4, Mohammed Ali (Sirdar, or leader ,of a South Korean expedition's high-altitude porters) was killed by stonefall on the Abruzzi Ridge.
British climber
Julie Tullis died after a successful summit attempt and forced descent to Camp Four, possibly from
High Altitude Cerebral Edema (HACE) on
August 7. Two
Austrian climbers,
Alfred Imitzer and
Hannes Wieser, died in a descent from Camp Four during a storm on
August 10. British climber
Alan Rouse is presumed to have died the same day; as was
Dobroslawa Miodowicz-Wolf, a Polish climber who disappeared on fixed ropes below Camp Three. Difficult weather conditions caused many other injuries and near-fatalities throughout the summer.
[8]
★ The Barrards had planned to attempt the notorious East or Kangshung face of
Everest (8,848 m/29,028 ft) following their K2 bid.
See also
★
1986 K2 Disaster
★
List of climbers
References
★ Jordan, Jennifer, ''Savage Summit: True Stories of the First Five Women Who Climbed K2'' (2006) ISBN 0-06-058716-4
★ http://classic.mountainzone.com/news/barrard.html
★ http://www.k2climb.net/story/RememberingLilianeBarrardDec92003.shtml
★ http://outside.away.com/news/specialreport/alison/K2omag.html