Peter Croft (climber)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Peter_Croft_(climber) an entity of type: Thing

بيتر كروفت هو متسلق جبال كندي، ولد في 18 مايو 1958 في كندا. rdf:langString
Peter Croft (born May 18, 1958) is a Canadian rock climber and mountaineer. He has concentrated much of his rock climbing career on big routes in Yosemite National Park, Squamish, British Columbia as well as the High Sierra. He received The American Alpine Club’s Robert & Miriam Underhill Award in 1991. Croft listed The Evolution Traverse (YDS class 5.9 grade VI) which links Mount Mendel, Mount Darwin, Mount Haeckel, Mount Fiske, Mount Warlow and Mount Huxley as one of his favorite climbs in Fifty Favorite Climbs: The Ultimate North American Tick List rdf:langString
rdf:langString بيتر كروفت
rdf:langString Peter Croft (climber)
rdf:langString Peter Croft
rdf:langString Peter Croft
rdf:langString Nanaimo, British Columbia, Canada
xsd:date 1958-05-18
xsd:integer 24186862
xsd:integer 1085092313
xsd:date 1958-05-18
rdf:langString Peter Croft in Salt Lake City, circa 1990
rdf:langString بيتر كروفت هو متسلق جبال كندي، ولد في 18 مايو 1958 في كندا.
rdf:langString Peter Croft (born May 18, 1958) is a Canadian rock climber and mountaineer. He has concentrated much of his rock climbing career on big routes in Yosemite National Park, Squamish, British Columbia as well as the High Sierra. He received The American Alpine Club’s Robert & Miriam Underhill Award in 1991. Croft listed The Evolution Traverse (YDS class 5.9 grade VI) which links Mount Mendel, Mount Darwin, Mount Haeckel, Mount Fiske, Mount Warlow and Mount Huxley as one of his favorite climbs in Fifty Favorite Climbs: The Ultimate North American Tick List Royal Robbins, a leading climber of the previous generation, wrote about Croft and his climbing achievements in 2000: "Peter has been my hero for many years, ever since he came blazing out of nowhere with his stunning free solo ascent of Astroman on Washington Column in Yosemite. Tom Frost and I had made the second ascent of this route, mostly with direct aid in the early sixties. That one could climb this route without resorting to direct aid was impressive. To do it without a rope was astonishing. But such was Peter's level of mastery. That it was mastery, and not mere daring was proven by a string of free solos of similar stature, executed to perfection."
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 6812
xsd:gYear 1958

data from the linked data cloud