The northern passage
Climbing expeditions to K-2 normally approach the peak from Islamabad, travelling up the Karakoram Highway to Baltistan and to the base of the mountain. In April this year, however, an Anglo-American team used a different route. Going roundabout, the climbers arrived in Kathmandu, took China the South West Airline flight northeast to Lhasa, thence further east Chengdu, then all the way west to Urumqi, and finally to Kashghar, from where they used camels to the base camp. Expedition equipment and provisions were carried by road from Kathmandu via the Kodari border post.
This unique approach to K-2 served to highlighta new facet of mountaineering that Himal-watchers have tended to ignore — the north faces of border peaks. Like K-2, which lies on the border between disputed Kashmir and Tibet/China, there arenumerous peaks along the Himalayan rimland that sit astride frontiers. This happens almost by definition, because the high ridges provide the defining element for cartographic delineation of borders between the countries of South Asia and Tibet/China.