DOUG SCOTT: MOUNTAINEERING LEGEND

Doug Scott_Everest 1975.jpg

The Boardman Tasker Trust joins others in mourning the passing and celebrating the achievements of one of Britain’s greatest mountaineers who passed away on 7 December 2020.  Best known for the first ascent of Everest South West Face, the first Briton to summit this peak, with an unplanned bivouac on the South Summit without oxygen and the epic descent of the Ogre with broken legs following an accident just below the summit after making the first ascent with Chris Bonington, he actually climbed 40 Himalayan summits on 42 expeditions. 

Doug was a good friend of Peter Boardman, who made the second ascent of Everest South West Face with Pertemba a few days after Doug, and of Joe Tasker.  Together all 3 climbed Kanchenjunga South Summit in a light-weight trip.  Indeed, apart from Everest, all Doug’s climbs were light-weight without porters above base camp.  This was a bold and innovative approach that gained great respect within the climbing community and was influential.

Doug was also a good friend to the Boardman Tasker Charitable Trust.

In 1984 he was co-winner of the first BT award with his book about Shishapangma, none having been made the previous year.  He donated to the Trust a large framed and signed photograph of himself with Peter and Joe just below the summit of Kanchenjunga which raised a significant sum at auction to augment Trust funds.

Doug was a very determined character and a powerful personality who liked to make individual decisions and get his own way.  All the more remarkable that he served as President of the Alpine Club, Vice President of the British Mountaineering Council and on the board of the International Mountaineering Federation and in all roles he made telling contributions to debates on national and international stages.  He was also proud of his appointment as CBE, to receive the Patron’s Gold Medal of the Royal Geographical Society in 1999 and to be awarded the Piolets d’Or Lifetime Achievement award in 2011.

A measure of his determination was the descent from the Ogre and he was a real stoic.  His broken ankles and shins needed to be pinned but they gave him trouble for the rest of his life although he did not let that him stop doing whatever he put his mind to.  I recollect a Sunday morning at his house following a Nick Estcourt Award meeting the previous evening.  Tut and I were preparing to depart when Doug asked us to barrow into the house logs from the yard for the open fire.  He was recovering from recent surgery to his ankles and could not get around very well.  We dropped the first load just inside the kitchen, as directed, and were astonished when Doug dropped his crutches, produced a felling axe from a corner and started to split the logs!

Although revered in mountaineering circles, he was perhaps not as well known to the British public as he was in European alpine nations.  This notwithstanding, the marathon lecture tours that he conducted every year in the UK and on occasion in Europe and North America, always attracted large audiences. I remember travelling with him to London by train for an AC committee meeting when he produced several boxes of previously unopened slides and started to assemble them for a talk he was to give that evening.. If that sounds slapdash nothing could be further from the truth.  Doug was a consummate story-teller and had great stories to tell.  He was also a prolific author but sadly we will not get to read part 2 of his autobiography or planned book about Kanchenjunga.

He saw his mountaineering career as part of a spiritual journey that led him to adopt the Buddhist faith.  He had a great connection and affection for the people of Nepal and in 1995 he set up a charity, Community Action Nepal. CAN has built and maintained numerous schools, hospitals and porter lodges in several districts of the Nepalese Himalaya and a significant proportion of the funding was generated by Doug’s lecture tours and his sale of Nepalese goods.  On his frequent trips to Nepal he travelled out with empty bags, but they were always full on return.

Doug was born in Nottingham in 1941 and started climbing 14 years later after seeing people climbing on Black Rocks during a scout camp.  He returned a couple of weeks later with 2 friends and his mother’s washing line after cycling from Nottingham.  There was no looking back.  He was soon visiting the Alps and then further afield mostly with friends from Nottingham where he worked as a school teacher after training at Loughborough. He was a founder member of the Nottingham Climbers Club.  However life as a teacher began to pale and Doug became a professional mountaineer earning an income from writing and lecturing.

At age 20 he married Jan and they had 3 children: Michael, Martha and Rosie.  Many years later they divorced and Doug married Sharu with whom he had sons, Arran and Euan.  By now he had moved to Cumbria, but that marriage also ended in divorce.  Subsequently Doug met and married Trish with whom he spent the remainder of his life. Rest in peace Doug.

Martin Wragg,
Chairman
Boardman Tasker Charitable Trust

13 December 2020

BT18_48LR.jpg

Boardman Tasker Award for Mountain Literature 2020 - The Winner

BT social stuff and news 2.jpg
jessica.jpg

Our Congratulations to Jessica J. Lee for winning the Boardman Tasker Award for Mountain Literature 2020 with her book ‘Two Trees Make A Forest’.

A poetic and deeply moving account of Taiwan’s mountains, waters and forests that interweaves the author’s experiences of hiking with recollections of political, cultural and family histories, creating portraits of landscapes haunted by memory and longing.

Jessica J. Lee is a British-Canadian-Taiwanese author, environmental historian, and winner of the RBC Taylor Prize Emerging Author Award. She received a doctorate in environmental history and aesthetics in 2016, and her first book, Turning, was published in 2017.

You can also hear Jessica J. Lee speaking as part of ‘The Willowherb Review’ event at Kendal Mountain Literature Festival.

Don’t forget to use the code: BOARDMANTASKER20

If you’d like to read the speech from Katie Ives, the Chair of Judges, it’s available here.

Boardman Tasker Award at Kendal Mountain Festival 2020

kmf 2020 .jpg

We’re excited for the Boardman Tasker Award to be screening this Saturday 21st November as part of Kendal Mountain Festival Online.

In this special 2 hour event hosted by Stephen Venables, you will hear from all the shortlisted authors;
Patrick Baker, The Unremembered Places;
Emily Chappell, Where There's A Will;
Peter Foster, The Uncrowned King of Mont Blanc;
Peter Goulding, Slatehead;
Jessica J. Lee
, Two Trees Make A Forest;

This will be followed by the Chair of Judges Katie Ives announcing the 2020 winner.

We’re delighted to offer a 20% discount on tickets and passes for Kendal Mountain Festival with the code: BOARDMANTASKER20

Hear more about the event from our patron Sir Chris Bonington:

Kendal Mountain Festival 2020

The team at Kendal have seized this huge opportunity to Share The Adventure with the world, pouring all their effort and energy into creating a new, amazing, digital experience that’s packed with the famous Kendal spirit and vibe!

The main stage will deliver to a unique mix of some of the world's most renowned international athletes and adventurers, an array of incredible authors, 15 different themed curations featuring the latest adventure and environmental films, family-friendly content, and all the buzz and atmosphere of the legendary activity-focused sessions - live-streamed and available on-demand to your screen.

There’s more than 200 films, 15 specialist sessions and over 30 literature talks. Live and on-demand from Thursday 19th November right through until 31st December.

We’ve taken a look through the vast programme, and selected some recommendations, including previous shortlisted and winning authors.

First off - take a look at this speakers page where you can see the incredible variety of speakers at Kendal this year.

Our recommendations

Event images for Uscreen Lit Fest51.jpg

Peter Goulding - Slatehead

Hear more from one of this year’s shortlisted authors - Peter Goulding at his Slatehead talk. Part creative non-fiction, part memoir, part sports documentary, Slatehead is set in both Thatcher's Britain and the present day. It conveys not only a climber's passion for the quick-drying slate slopes but also his love for his friends and the punks who first created the climbs.


Event images for Uscreen Lit Fest10.jpg

Bernadette McDonald - Winter 8000

For the first time, award-winning author Bernadette McDonald tells the story of how Poland’s ice warriors made winter their own, perfecting what they dubbed ‘the art of suffering’ as they fought their way to the summit of Everest in the winter of 1980 – the first 8,000-metre peak they climbed this way but by no means their last.


Event images for Uscreen Lit Fest21.jpg

Ed Caeser - The Moth And The Mountain

The untold story of Britain's most mysterious mountaineering legend - Maurice Wilson - and his heroic attempt to climb Everest. Alone.

In the 1930s, as official government expeditions set their sights on conquering Everest, a little-known World War I veteran named Maurice Wilson conceived his own crazy, beautiful plan: he would fly a Gipsy Moth aeroplane from England to Everest, crash land on its lower slopes, then become the first person to reach its summit - all utterly alone.

Wilson didn't know how to climb. He barely knew how to fly. But he had pluck, daring and a vision - he wanted to be the first man to stand on top of the world. Traumatised by his wartime experiences and leaving behind a trail of broken hearts, Wilson believed that Everest could redeem him.


Event images for Uscreen Lit Fest3.jpg

Ed Douglas - Himalaya: A Human History

This is the first major history of the Himalaya: an epic story of peoples, cultures and adventures among the world’s highest mountains. Spanning millennia, from its earliest inhabitants to the present conflicts over Tibet and Everest, Himalaya is a soaring account of resilience and conquest, discovery and plunder, oppression and enlightenment at the ‘roof of the world’.


Event images for Uscreen Lit Fest40.jpg

Kerri Andrews - Wanderers: A History Of Women Walking

This is a book about ten women who, over the past three hundred years, have found walking essential to their sense of themselves, as people and as writers.

In a series of intimate, incisive portraits, Wanderers traces their footsteps, from eighteenth-century parson's daughter Elizabeth Carter ‐ who desired nothing more than to be taken for a vagabond in the wilds of southern England ‐ to modern walker-writers such as Nan Shepherd and Cheryl Strayed. For each, walking was integral, whether it was rambling for miles across the Highlands, like Sarah Stoddart Hazlitt, or pacing novels into being, as Virginia Woolf did around Bloomsbury.


This list is my no means exhaustive, we’d recommend taking some time to explore the Kendal Mountain Festival website and planning your Festival week!

2020 Boardman Tasker Award for Mountain Literature Shortlist Announced

BT social stuff and news2.jpg

The Boardman Tasker Award for Mountain Literature continues to attract a substantial level of entries.  This year there were 22 entries, from Great Britain, Ireland, Canada, New Zealand and the USA.  The Award will be made at the Boardman Tasker Shortlisted Authors and Awards event at Kendal Mountain Festival Online, at 7 to 9pm (UK time) on Saturday 21st November 2020.

The judges for 2020 are Katie Ives (Chair), David Canning and Michael Kosterlitz. They have selected the following 5 books for this year’s shortlist:


Unremembered Places.jpg

Patrick Baker

The Unremembered Places: Exploring Scotland’s Wild Histories

Birlinn Ltd

A lyrical exploration of Scotland’s regions of “rumor and folklore,” of hidden places and often-forgotten tales, that makes a compelling argument for a greater examination of “wild histories” beyond the most well-trodden narratives of adventure.

Baker%2C+Patrick.jpg

Patrick Baker studied Business, Finance and Economics at the University of East Anglia and gained a postgraduate qualification in Publishing from the Robert Gordon University, Aberdeen. He worked in the publishing industry for many years and is currently a commercial writer and content producer. A keen outdoor enthusiast, he has walked and climbed throughout Scotland and Europe. His hillwalking guidebook Walking in the Ochils, Campsie Fells and Lomond Hills was published in 2006. Follow him on Twitter @WildHistorian1.


9781788161510.jpg

Emily Chappell

Where There’s a Will: Hope, Grief and Endurance in a Cycle Race Across a Continent

Profile Books

A book that transcends the genre of sports memoirs with prose that deftly captures the physical and psychological intensity of ultra-distance cycling, as well as the struggles of depression and grief, rejecting inspirational clichés in favour  of a complex, honest and profoundly human vision.

Emily Chappell.jpg

Emily Chappell worked as a cycle courier in London for many years, telling her story in What Goes Around. Since then she has explored the world on her bike and committed to supporting others to do the same, as a founder of The Adventure Syndicate.


Uncrowned King of Mont Blanc cover.jpeg

Peter Foster

The Uncrowned King of Mont Blanc: The Life of T. Graham Brown, Physiologist and Mountaineer

Baton Wicks

An intricately researched biography of a Scottish mountaineer whose contributions to climbing history on Mont Blanc and other mountains have long deserved a close look—and whose life and personality may have contained enigmas as challenging as the routes that he climbed.

Peter+Foster+2.jpg

Peter Foster is a retired consultant physician. He has been a member of the Alpine Club since 1975 and still climbs in the Alps most summers but his long-held ambition to climb Mont Blanc by one of Graham Brown’s routes up the Brenva Face remains unfulfilled. His interest in mountaineering history goes back to schooldays when he first started book collecting. He has contributed articles to the Alpine Journal, and The Uncrowned King of Mont Blanc is his first book. He is married to Kate, has three grown-up children and two grandchildren. He lives on the edge of the Peak District.


9781916150133_Hi_Res.jpg

Peter Goulding

Slatehead: The Ascent of Britain’s Slate-Climbing Scene

New Welsh Rarebyte

An in-depth history of the climbs and characters of British slate quarries that is also a meditation on the nature of obsession, on the persistence of wildness in unexpected parts of a post-industrial world, and on the rock itself, at times sharp, lustrous and strangely beautiful.

Peter_Goulding_Benny_Hiscocke+copy.jpg

Peter Goulding is a climber from the north of England. He has spent most of his working life in pubs, kitchens and on building sites. He currently works at Center Parcs as an instructor and is an alumnus of UEA.


Two Trees Make a Forest.jpg

Jessica J. Lee

Two Trees Make a Forest:

On Memory, Migration and Taiwan

Little, Brown Book Group. Virago Press

A poetic and deeply moving account of Taiwan’s mountains, waters and forests that interweaves the author’s experiences of hiking with recollections of political, cultural and family histories, creating portraits of landscapes haunted by memory and longing.

jessica.jpg

Jessica J. Lee is a British-Canadian-Taiwanese author, environmental historian, and winner of the RBC Taylor Prize Emerging Author Award. She received a doctorate in environmental history and aesthetics in 2016, and her first book, Turning, was published in 2017. 

Jessica is the founding editor of The Willowherb Review. 

She lives in Berlin. 


Once again the Award continues to attract a high level of interest and entries on a variety of aspects of the mountain environment.

Steve Dean
Secretary
Boardman Tasker Charitable Trust

07/09/2020

Check out the 2020 submissions...

200722 entries 2020.jpg

Hello Friends and Supporters of The Boardman Tasker Charitable Trust and the Award for Mountain Literature

We hope you are all keeping safe and well in these strange times.

The 2020 Boardman Tasker Award for Mountain Literature submission entry is now closed. We have received 22 entries on a broad range of topics - explore the submissions here.

The 2020 Shortlist will be announced in early September.

The winner will be announced, the award made, after the Boardman Tasker Shortlisted Authors event at Kendal Mountain Festival, this year in a new, dynamic way, delivered whatever the circumstances in November!

Watch this space for more news…

Hello Friends and Supporters

Image © Vertebrate Publishing

Image © Vertebrate Publishing

Hello Friends and Supporters of the Boardman Tasker Charitable Trust and the Award for Mountain Literature.

We hope you are all keeping safe and well at this very difficult time.

We just wanted to let you know that we are still running the Boardman Tasker Award for Mountain Literature for 2020. 

The prize for 2020 will be £3,000 and will be awarded to the author of the best literary work, whether fiction or non-fiction, drama or poetry, the central theme of which is concerned with the mountain environment.  The emphasis will be on literary merit and the judges may withhold the prize if they do not consider any entry to be of sufficient merit.

We are still receiving submissions and the judges are still judging! The last date for submissions is still Wednesday 15th July 2020 and we will make decisions with the judges about ‘What next….’ when we get to that closing date. 

So please watch this space…

Steve Dean
Secretary
Boardman Tasker Charitable Trust

2020 entries open

2020 entries open.jpg

You can now submit your book to the 2020 Boardman Tasker Award for Mountain Literature.

You can read the rules here.

And download a form here.


We are delighted to confirm that the Judging Panel for the 2020 Boardman Tasker Award is:
Katie Ives (Chair of Judges), David Canning & Mike Kosterlitz.

Katie Ives

Katie Ives

David Canning

David Canning

Mike Kosterlitz

Mike Kosterlitz

Some thoughts from the authors

KMF19_BT_46LR.jpg

Kate Harris

2019 Boardman Tasker Award for Mountain Literature Winning Author writes…..

I'm no climber, but I've always been drawn to tales of risk and grandeur, literature that contends with what Annie Dillard described as "a minimum of choices and a maximum of risks."  The sort of books, in other words, that alpinists Joe Tasker and Pete Boardman wrote, and that the UK literary award established in their name continues to celebrate.  I might never summit an 8000 metre peak myself, but what I get from reading such books is a sense of possibility, a sense of expansiveness akin to how I feel in the mountains themselves, or when travelling somewhere unfamiliar. 

I tried to capture that sort of intimacy with immensity in my own book, based on a bike ride along the Silk Road with my best childhood friend Mel Yule.  Bonds forged in the mountains tend to be uniquely robust, and while Mel and I forged ours at slightly less insane altitudes than Pete Boardman and Joe Tasker frequented, I like to think our friendship is similar in its verve and spirit, albeit with a less tragic ending.  My book is about friendship, but it's also about the nature and meaning of borders, and about the history and sometimes dubious consequences of exploration.  One thing my book isn't about, however, is alpinism. 

For this reason I figured my chances were slim when it came to the Boardman Tasker Prize, which mostly seemed to recognise mountain literature in quite literal terms: first-hand accounts or histories of hypoxic derring-do.  So I was astonished to be shortlisted with an incredible group of writers; the chance to hang out with them at the Kendal Mountain Festival felt like a win in itself. I was even more astonished to take home the prize.  So a deep bow of gratitude to the Boardman Tasker Prize jury for this amazing honour, and for their open-minded conception of what mountain literature can be. Another bow of gratitude to the mountains themselves, and to the friendships that make our journeys on and among them so potent, so meaningful, so full of joy and absurdity and wonder.

Lands of Lost Borders: A Journey on the Silk Road
Harper Collins

 

Mick Fowler

BT Shortlisted author writes…..

“You have been shortlisted for the Boardman Tasker”.  

It’s an exciting message to receive.

And the award event at the Kendal Mountain Festival was so much more of a big thing than I had expected. The majority of the shortlisted authors were from North America and all were present to be interviewed by Stephen Venables and read a chosen exert from their book. I hadn’t expected all the authors to be there! Nor had I expected such a vibrant and well-attended event. I came away feeling that mountain related writing is alive and well. 

No Easy Way: The Challenging Life of the Climbing Taxman
Vertebrate Publishing

 

Geoff Powter

BT Shortlisted author writes….

It was such an immense pleasure for me to be shortlisted for the Boardman Tasker Award, and such a joy to be able to come to Kendal for the BT event and ceremony.  Peter Boardman and Joe Tasker were two of my mountaineering and mountain-writing heroes, and to have my own writing considered worthy of their memory was a huge honour.  The team, and the audience, at Kendal couldn't have been more welcoming, and the event made it clear just how important mountain literature continues to be, for so many people. We writers were treated a bit like Rock-Stars by the crowd!

Inner Ranges: An Anthology of Mountain Thoughts and Mountain People
Rocky Mountain Books

In 2019, Shortlisted for the Boardman Tasker Award for Mountain Literature, won the Climbing Literature Award at the Banff Mountain Book Festival, and won the National Outdoor Book Award in the USA.

Boardman Tasker Award for Mountain Literature 2019 – The Winner

BT social stuff and news winner 2019 website.jpg
kate harris.jpg

Our Congratulations to Kate Harris for winning the 2019 Boardman Tasker Award for Mountain Literature with her book ‘Lands of Lost Borders’.

A gripping account of an epic journey, fraught with difficulties and dangers, made by the writer and her partner following the old Silk Road through many different countries.

Chair of Judges, Roger Hubank, says of the book:

“Readers of mountain books of my generation were brought up on the great epics: the Germans and Austrians on Nanga Parbat, the French on Annapurna, the Americans on K2, the Brits on Everest. Lands of Lost Borders, which has nothing to do with the great 8000 metre peaks, nevertheless reads like an expedition epic. It offers a gripping account of a challenging journey, fraught with many difficulties and dangers, following the old Silk Road. Each day a plunge into the unknown. As one of my fellow judges said, ‘the writing is suffused throughout with a sense of exuberance and joy in the present moment, and illuminated with such keen-eyed observations that its images linger long in the reader’s imagination"‘.

I myself was put in mind, again and again, of the question put by the great 19th C. explorer Sir Martin Conway:

‘What truth is it lies behind those mountain walls that is a lie here in the world beyond?’

Certainly ‘Land of Lost Borders’ might very well, in the words of the rubric,‘challenge and inspire readers’ to look at the world in a different way.’ It’s a truly life-affirming book.

Read the full speech here.

Here is a video of the announcement of the winner:

2019 Boardman Tasker Award for Mountain Literature Shortlist Announced

shortlist announcment website image.jpg

The Boardman Tasker Award for Mountain Literature continues to attract a substantial level of entries. This year there were 32 entries, from Great Britain, Canada, Italy, New Zealand and the USA. The Award will be made at the Boardman Tasker event at the Kendal Mountain Festival, on Friday November 15th 2019.

The judges for 2019 are Roger Hubank (Chair), Katie Ives and Tony Shaw. 

They have selected the following 6 books for this year’s shortlist:


cover with outline.jpg

Mick Fowler

No Easy Way 


Vertebrate Publishing

A third volume of memoirs of mountaineering in the greater ranges, written in Fowler’s inimitable style; self-deprecating, understated, never taking himself too seriously while at the same time conveying that what he is engaged in is very serious indeed.


LOLB_1.jpg

Kate Harris

Lands of Lost Borders

Dey Street Books

A gripping account of an epic journey, fraught with difficulties and dangers, made by the writer and her partner following the old Silk Road through many different countries.


Inner_Ranges_highres.jpg

Geoff Powter

Inner Ranges

Rocky Mountain Books

A wide-ranging anthology of essays and articles by the prize-winning Canadian climber and journalist reflecting his life-long affair with mountains and mountain people.


9781771603232_Paul_Preuss_web.jpg

David Smart

Paul Preuss

Rocky Mountain Books

An account of the life and death of the influential Austrian climber who soloed many first ascents In the Eastern Alps scorning artificial aids in preference for an ethically pure Alpine style.


hangdog days.jpg

Jeff Smoot

Hangdog Days

Mountaineers Books

An engaging account of the changes that took place in American rock climbing in the ‘70s and ‘80s told with great verve, through the stories of some fascinating characters from dyed-in-the-wool bottom-up traditionalists to top-down rap-bolters.


cover with outline.jpg

David Wilson

The Equilibrium Line

The Poetry Business

‘Poems inspired by climbing.’ An outstanding second collection by the poet and novelist examining ambition, failure, risk and where to draw the line in settings ranging from the gritstone crags to the Alps and further afield.


Once again the Award has generated more than 30 entries and it continues to attract a high level of interest.

Steve Dean, Secretary

Boardman Tasker Charitable Trust

29/8/19