Colin Wyatt's achievements in ski-mountaineering included "firsts" in New Zealand, Lapland and Morocco. He submitted a list of mountaineering travels from 1930 to 1950 to the Royal Geographical Society in support of his successful candidacy to become a Fellow. The list included: various summer and winter climbs in the Swiss and Austrian Alps, on foot, on ski, or both; Norway; Albania; Canada; Papua New Guinea; New Zealand; Lapland; Australia; and Morocco. His book
The Call of the Mountains describes many of these and a reviewer wrote: "For Mr Wyatt set out to recapture 'the golden age' of climbing and ski-mountaineering such as was known to his father and to Whymper and Mummery, and sought out-of-the-way countries and mountains where very few people had been before.". Wyatt learned a range of languages and regional dialects, including fluent and colloquial French, German, Spanish, Swedish and Norwegian. He picked up sufficient knowledge of other languages, including Arabic, to get by during his travels to many parts of the world. He yodelled Swiss-German and Tyrolean dialect songs, accompanying himself on the Swiss accordion, and gave vaudeville performances on BBC radio. He was invited to yodel and play the accordion before the then Prince of Wales, later
Duke of Windsor, at Oxford and before the King and Queen of Norway when he visited that country in 1933. Mountaineer John Harding, in his 2016 book ''Distant Snows: A Mountaineer's Odyssey'', refers to Wyatt as someone "who pioneered expeditions to unusual places from the Arctic to the Antipodes", and writes that "Wyatt's exceptional ski mountaineering achievements have all but been forgotten." He writes that "although the first stirrings of New Zealand ski-ing pre-date the
First World War, its ski mountaineering history really begins in 1936 when the New Zealand government invited an Englishman, Colin Wyatt, to advise on winter sports development". In an article in the
Alpine Journal in 1988 titled "Ski Mountaineering
is Mountaineering", Harding wrote of the 1930s as an era of animosity between traditional British climbers and those embracing "the new-fangled sport of ski-ing and, by extension, ski mountaineering". He describes Wyatt as "the outstanding British ski mountaineer of the immediate pre- and post-war years". In 1936 and 1937 in New Zealand, Southern Alps, Wyatt made the first ascent Mt. Wilycek (10,001 ft); the first double winter ski traverse of Main Divide, via Tasman, Franz Josef, Fox and Haest glaciers and the first winter ascent of Mt. Annan. In North Island, he made a winter traverse of all Ruapehu-Tongariro group of volcanoes, and winter traverse of Mt. Egmont. In 1938 in Lapland, he made the complete winter crossing of Lapland on ski from Kebnekaise to North Cape, 350 miles. In 2021, Darren Hamlin, photographer and film-maker, and a team were planning to make a film of a winter crossing of the
Kebnekaise. During research, he came across Wyatt's November 1938 article "On Ski through Arctic Lapland to the North Cape" in The Alpine Journal and realised that their winter crossing would not be the first. Hamlin's 2022 film "The Arctic 12" paid tribute to Wyatt, and included some of Wyatt's photographs. In 1949 in Morocco, he made the complete traverse of the Toubkal Range,
High Atlas, in winter (13,000 ft) with several first winter ascents and in 1950 he made the first crossing of Tiferdine and M’Goun (13,000 ft) ranges, to the Sahara and E. High Atlas (and spent five months painting in Morocco). Little was known about the area at that time. In 1912 Morocco had become a protectorate of France and Moroccan nationalists fought for decades for independence which was not granted until 1955. A military permit was required to visit southern Morocco which was a "zone d'insecurité" and the only maps were prepared from aerial surveys. Further travels described in articles, illustrated with his photography, included seven months travelling the Northwest Territories, Canada; and trips to Kashmir, Nepal, India, Himalayas, Afghanistan, Afghan Hindu-Kush, High Atlas Morocco, Kara-Dagh and Elburs in Azerbaijan, north-western Iran. Up to his death in Guatemala, Wyatt was making regular trips to study and photograph archaeological sites in Central and South America. ==Art==