GrannyJen
Super Poster
Lifetime VIP Member
Joe Brown, mountaineer.
No.
Joe Brown, a peerless rock climber, and I use peerless in its true sense. Someone who defined the sport, who broke through barriers, who forged partnerships with people such as Don Whillans to propel climbing bits of vertical rock into the stratosphere compared to what had gone before.
Massive accomplishments in the snow and the ice of the alps followed and then, with George Band, to be one of only two Britons to ever achieve the first ascent of a +8,000 metre peak, Kanchenjunga, in 1955.
Joe was peerless on rock, also peerless as a self-effacing human being. I first met him very early in the 1960's, in the Lake District, a passing meting in the home of people who took me in as one of their own, in the ODG. One night in the later '60's I found myself in Llanberis along with about 50 others searching for a missing person. I never knew it was the legendary Joe Brown that trudged alongside me until Later, when we shared Coco at Clogwyn station. Later I would climb with Joe on Gogarth, always the same, not a legend, just Joe.
Joe Brown defined a generation of British mountaineering and inspired the generation after. He was though, always, Joe Brown, a climber amongst climbers. RIP Joe.
No.
Joe Brown, a peerless rock climber, and I use peerless in its true sense. Someone who defined the sport, who broke through barriers, who forged partnerships with people such as Don Whillans to propel climbing bits of vertical rock into the stratosphere compared to what had gone before.
Massive accomplishments in the snow and the ice of the alps followed and then, with George Band, to be one of only two Britons to ever achieve the first ascent of a +8,000 metre peak, Kanchenjunga, in 1955.
Joe was peerless on rock, also peerless as a self-effacing human being. I first met him very early in the 1960's, in the Lake District, a passing meting in the home of people who took me in as one of their own, in the ODG. One night in the later '60's I found myself in Llanberis along with about 50 others searching for a missing person. I never knew it was the legendary Joe Brown that trudged alongside me until Later, when we shared Coco at Clogwyn station. Later I would climb with Joe on Gogarth, always the same, not a legend, just Joe.
Joe Brown defined a generation of British mountaineering and inspired the generation after. He was though, always, Joe Brown, a climber amongst climbers. RIP Joe.