Mick Fowler

Michael "Mick" Fowler (b. 1956 in London) is a British mountaineer. He was awarded the Piolet d'Or and Golden Piton with Paul Ramsden for their 2002 ascent of Siguniang (6250m), was voted "the Mountaineer's Mountaineer" in a poll in The Observer, and was described by Chris Bonington in 1981 as "the most successful innovative mountaineer of the last twenty years".[1] He specialises in on-sight climbing, and challenging, unclimbed lines on peaks of 6000 m-7000 m: he has never climbed an eight-thousander, as he is unwilling to take the necessary time off work from his job at HM Revenue and Customs (formerly Inland Revenue), where he is Assistant Director of Capital Taxes. He has also pioneered rock climbing on sea stacks, and the use of ice-climbing techniques on the soft chalk cliffs of England's South-East.

He has written two volumes of memoirs, the second of which was shortlisted for the 2005 Boardman Tasker Prize for Mountain Literature, and he won the Jon Whyte Award for Mountain Literature at the 2005 Banff Mountain Book Festival [1].

He was introduced to rock climbing and mountaineering as a teenager by his widowed father George, who took him to the Alps in 1969 at the age of 13. In the 1980s, he was regarded as the driving force behind a group of London climbers who would regularly drive to the north of Scotland, a round trip of 1,300 miles, for winter weekends.[2] His record was 11 consecutive weekends.

He lives in Melbourne, Derbyshire with his wife and fellow-climber Nicki and their two children, Tessa and Alec.

Contents

Notable ascents

Rock and ice climbs (first ascents)

Conventional rock climbs:

Sea cliffs:

Sea stacks:

Ice climbs:

Mountains

Bibliography

External links

References

  1. ^ Chris Bonington, Quest For Adventure, p.220
  2. ^ http://www.firstascent.co.uk/b_person8.html Mick Fowler's Black Diamond Team profile.
  3. ^ Venables, Stephen (2001). Lost Mountains: Climbs in the Himalaya. New York, NY, USA: Thunder's Mouth Press. ISBN 1560253738. 
  4. ^ Fowler, Mick (1998). "A Touch Too Much?". American Alpine Journal 1998 (Golden, CO, USA: American Alpine Club) 40 (72): 53–68. ISBN 0930410785.