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National Mountaineering Exhibition Tested

Rained off in the Lakes? The HH National Mountaineering Exhibition plus the Everest Imax movie could save your weekend bacon. Fantastic


Posted: 18 October 2002
by Jon

It's not often you get to gawp at a pair of boots that have been sitting high on Everest for decades, but there they are in the flesh, or should that be 'in the leather', George Mallory's nailed climbing boots, bleached in the sun, torn by the wind, but indisputably reaching out from the past to send a shiver down your spine.

Recovered from Everest - George Mallory's boots.
Shivers down the spine.

And that's what it's all about really. It would have been easy for the Helly Hansen National Mountaineering Exhibition to fall into the trap of being dry and lifeless, but the designers have made a real effort to bring the mountains and the past to life.

We took some typical journalistic cynicism along with us when we dropped in on the Exhibition at the remarkably buried Rheged Centre in the northern Lakes, but we finished off enthusing about the blend of ancient climbing history and modern audio-visual presentation.

As you enter the exhibition you're confronted by a big circular panoramic photo of Everest taken by Leo Dickinson on his balloon flight over the mountain and from there on, you follow a 'time line' through British mountaineering history. At key points along the way, short five-minute videos narrated by John Peel - he went to the same school as Mallory, apparently - present a layman's view of mountaineering interspersed with archive shots.

It's all here: Whymper's ice axe, which is a monstrous five feet long, the familiar sepia prints of gentlefolk clambering all over Mont Blanc, Alex McIntyre's rucksac from Cho Oyu, ancient oxygen sets, original leather boots shod with the legendary tricouni nails and hey, an original Chouinard Curver ice axe belonging to Chris Bonington and used on the first ascent of Annapurna in 1970.

Remarkably, a lot of these priceless climbing relics were lying around in garages and attics till the BMC came up with the idea of the exhibition and George Band's ancient high altitude wind suit even has traces of emulsion paint on it...

The Peel commentary actually works pretty well. Peely is his normal dry but avuncular self as he plays the straight man to a variety of top mountaineers including Bonington and Band who, at appropriate points, explain what it was really like up there in the death zone. But what really carries the day are clips from old climbing films atmospherically projected onto flapping tent fabric screens.

But as we said, for most people the real crux is the glass-encased display of relics from the Mallory Expedition - the absurdly heavy looking steel oxygen set, the boots, fragments of letters, a Whymper tent used by Mallory and Irvine's wooden ice axe. Mind-blowing stuff and a massive contrast to the high tech kit we use today. It's a place to feel just a little awe-struck.

Appropriately enough after an interesting video featuring the likes of Andy Kirkpatrick, Leo Houlding, Airlie Anderson, Stuart Parnell and Dave Birkett talking lucidly about what drives them to climb, the whole thing finishes up in an artificially chilled base camp tent. It's okay, you can borrow a HH down jacket, as artificially generated draughts set the tone for a film composed of evocative footage of the successful 1953 ascent of the mountain by Hillary and Tenzing. Fantastic stuff. You find yourself wondering what Mallory would have made of it all...

Worth It?

Too right. It would have been easy for this whole thing to have fallen into the trap of being a dry jaunt through the dusty corners of obscure British climbing history, but a lot of effort's gone into making it into a lively experience. You can meander throught the relics and read through the wordy sign boards, but equally you can simply gawp and enjoy the videos.

As a wet weather option in the Lakes, it's fantastic, especially when you consider that you can also take in the astonishing Everest iMax film on the same site.

Details

You can see the HH National Mountaineering Exhibition web site here which has some interesting features in its own right, but it's incredibly easy to find. Simply take the A66 towards Keswick from the M6 then take the first left at the first round about you come to for the Rheged Centre. Opening times are 10am to 5.30 pm daily, £5.50 for adults (£3.50 for BMC members) and £3.90 for kiddies plus family deals available. You can also pick up a ticket which also includes a viewing of either Everest or Shackleton for £9.45 or £6.55.

Plus there's also Rheged itself, bar, restaurants, craft shops and even a gear shop should inspiration strike. Plus at the exit to the exhibition, you can buy Nepalese products, the profits from which go to help Doug Scott's Community Action Nepal charity. Great for Christmas pressies. Hint...


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Discuss this story

Have to agree with Jon on this one.

Visited last year after an abhorted attemt on Sharp Edge. Some poor sod was blown of into Usual Gully. The mountain rescue people were superb.

The exhibition is a very useful alternative for days when the weather gets a bit much. Lots of inspiring stuff.

Raghead (whatever) itself is a touch on the expensive side, so take your plastic friend to buy Jon's presie (subtle hey?).

The everest IMAX thing is also more than worthwhile. Gives a sense of scale.

Couldn't find the pub though...

Posted: 18/10/2002 at 14:32

There's a bar right in the middle of it, run by a very taciturn Cumbrian lady. The food's not bad either. It is, seriously, worth a visit, particularly if you don't fancy the pencil museum, enthralling though it's reckoned to be...

Posted: 18/10/2002 at 14:35

Its not a pub though is it?

Some B0 bouldering to be had up the indoor waterfall as well to round of the day.

Posted: 18/10/2002 at 14:44

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