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Pharchamo |
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Click Below for :
Picture of
Pharchamo |
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The Nepal Mountaineering Association
call this peak Parchemuche, a name by which, as far as I
can find out, no one else knows it! The peak, which lies
due south of the Tesi Lapcha, is unnamed on the Schnider
Rolwaling Himal map, but is given a spot height of
(6273m/20581ft). The Mandala Lamasangu to9 Everest map
calls the peak Parchome, which is quite possibly a
spelling mistake. Bath Shipton’s and Gregory’s
expedition surveys gave the peal an altitude close to
6318metres(20700ft).
Seen from the pass the mountain is an attractive but
straightforward snow peak with a well defined north by
north-west ridge rising from the relatively flat,
crevassed glacier astride the Tesi Lapche. To the west
of the ridge the face forms a uniform snow slope broken
by crevasses and small seracs rising from the rocky
lower buttresses above the Drolambau Glacier. The
mountain had an interesting early history, some of which
was outlined in 1955 by Dennis Davis and Phil Boultgee,
members of the highly successful Merseyside Himalayan
Expedition led by Alf Gregory. As well as climbing
nineteen summits in and around the Rolwaling Valley,
their explorations took them to the head of the
Drolambau, where numerous peaks were climbed, up the
Ripimu Glacier and into the Menlung Basin via the Ripimu
La. This was the most extensive exploration of the area
first entered by Shipton that there has been, using a
style of expedition, light weight and free ranging, that
alas is no longer possible within the kingdom of Nepal.
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