Nanga Parbat Before his successful 1953
Nanga Parbat expedition, 31 people had died trying to make the first ascent. The ascent of Nanga Parbat on 3 July 1953 is Buhl's most famous summit victory. It took place as part of the
Willy Merkl Memorial Expedition, organized by the Munich doctor
Karl Herrligkoffer and led in conjunction with
Peter Aschenbrenner as mountaineering leader. Buhl, helped by a change in the weather after an initial monsoon, reached Camp V at 6,900 m on July 2 together with Walter Frauenberger,
Hans Ertl and Otto Kempter, where he and Kempter spent the night while the other two descended with the porters to Camp IV. Buhl set off for the summit single-handedly and without additional oxygen at around 02:30 in the night and finally reached it with his last ounce of strength at around 19:00. As proof of his ascent, Hermann Buhl left his ice axe and the
Pakistani flag at the summit. Kempter, who had followed an hour later, had had to give up at an altitude of around 7,400 m on the plateau at the Silbersattel due to a bout of weakness and had returned to Camp V. There, he waited with Frauenberger and Ertl, who had come back up, for Buhl's return. Buhl spent the following night alone, about 1.2 km (4,000 feet) higher up than Camp V. He was only able to survive at an altitude of almost 8,000 metres without bivouac equipment because of the unusually favourable weather conditions. In the days that followed, he also managed the descent to the main camp under his own steam, arriving there on July 7. Here it turned out that his frostbitten toes could not be saved and had to be amputated. He therefore had to be carried on the rest of the return march. Hans Ertl made a documentary film called
Nanga Parbat about this expedition. A dispute arose between Herrligkoffer and Buhl after the expedition due to Herrligkoffer's authoritarian leadership and Buhl's refusal to follow orders without question. This led to legal issues over exploitation rights and Buhl's desire to publish his own account of the summit victory, which he achieved despite being ordered to desist. Buhl is the only mountaineer to have made the first ascent of an
eight-thousander solo, which he achieved on his initial visit to the
Greater Ranges. His monumental efforts, which included spending the night standing untethered on a tiny pedestal too small to squat upon on the edge of a 60-degree ice slope, have become mountaineering legend, described by
Bonington as "
a magnificent achievement". In 1999, Buhl's ice axe, which had been left behind on the summit, was found by a Japanese expedition and returned to his widow.
Broad Peak Fritz Wintersteller and
Kurt Diemberger reached the forepeak (8030 m) on May 29, 1957, during the course of the Austrian expedition led by
Marcus Schmuck. However, it was a few days later, between June 8 and 9, that Wintersteller, Schmuck, Diemberger, and Buhl reached the true summit of
Broad Peak (8051m), and achieved the first successful ascent of the mountain. Buhl was approaching the summit in the twilight, at around 6:30pm.
Chogolisa Just a few weeks after the successful
first ascent of Broad Peak, Buhl and Diemberger made an attempt on nearby, unclimbed
Chogolisa (7665 m) in
Alpine style. Buhl lost his way in an unexpected snow storm and walked over a huge
cornice on the East Ridge, near the summit of Chogolisa II (7654 m; also known as Bride Peak), subsequently triggering an
avalanche that hurled him down 900 m over Chogolisa's Northeast Face. His body could not be recovered and remains in the ice. On the basis of a photo of the crash site taken by Diemberger, it can be seen from the footprint in the snow that Buhl had probably briefly lost his bearings in the snowstorm and got too close to the edge of the cornice, whereupon the cornice gave way under his weight. ==Legacy==