Wednesday, 2 September 2020

Guest Contributor – Mark Trengove



Introduction

If readers would like to contribute an article for the Guest Contributor page heading please contact me, my email address appears on the About Me page heading.  The 0nly two things I ask is that the article should be hill related and importantly I should not end up in court through its publication!  Otherwise the choice of subject matter is down to the Guest Contributor.



About the Author; Mark Trengove



Mark Trengove is a hill- and mountain-hiker who wanders over the ranges of Britain, Ireland and mainland Europe, when he is able.  He is also a creator of hill and mountain lists, which are published on his Europeaklist website.  He lives in North Wales.



Europeaklist

By Mark Trengove

As a consumer of British hill-lists, I often wondered, when I went on holiday in mainland Europe, what the prominence was of the hills and mountains in the places we visited (for an explanation of ‘prominence’, also known as ‘drop’, see at http://www.peaklist.org/).  I wondered whether there were mountain lists for these countries.  The hills of Britain have been listed more than any country in the world, perhaps with the exception of the USA.  However, I found that most countries in Europe did not appear to have hill and mountain lists to any great degree – apart from such lists as the 4000-metre peaks of the Alps.  I decided to attempt to rectify this.

The first list I produced was of the Vosges Mountains in north-east France, which I had visited and hiked in the summer of the year 2000.  It was rather a haphazard attempt at a hill-list, as I only had French paper maps to work with.  Eventually I produced a list for my own use of all the summits over 915 metres (3000 feet) in height and 150 metres of prominence.  I then moved on to the parts of the French Alps that I was exploring.

In the early 2000s hill-listing got much more reliable, as Jonathan de Ferranti, a friend of mine with far better computer skills than me, started producing computer-generated lists of hills and mountains (see Jonathan’s website at   http://viewfinderpanoramas.org/).  These lists still needed checking against maps to tighten the accuracy, but the task was now much more methodical, and easier.  I remain very grateful to Jonathan for his huge and continuing contribution to hill- and mountain-listing.

A forthcoming trip to Zakopane in southern Poland in 2005 turned my interest to the Tatra, in the Carpathians.  I began creating a list of the peaks in this fine range of mountains for my own use.  Through web-searches I became aware that a Pole from Warsaw called Piotr Mielus was also creating a list of this range, so I got in contact with him.  We ended up collaborating to produce a list that was put into the public domain – ‘The Crown of the Tatra’ (see at http://www.peaklist.org/WWlists/euro600/tatra/Tatra.html).  This was the first mountain list that I had (jointly) worked upon that was published.

As time went on, I continued to produce other hill and mountain lists for a number of other countries in Europe.  These, too, were published on the Peaklist website.
 
However, the Peaklist website was effectively moth-balled in around 2009, when its web-master moved onto other projects.  I was continuing to produce new lists, and they needed a platform to put them in the public domain.  The Europeaklist website (see at https://sites.google.com/site/europeaklist/Home) was therefore originally created in about 2010 to continue Peaklist in a European-only context, and to serve as a platform for the growing collection of hill and mountain lists I had and continued to produce.  The concept developed from publishing online lists to providing a series of free downloadable leaflets and booklets that could be printed off on paper or used in an e-format.
 
Originally a selection of booklets of the British hills were included – these were taken off the website at the end of January 2020 (with one exception – see below), at the time when the website was re-launched in a new format.

Countries currently represented on the website are Andorra, Austria, Belarus, Belgium, Croatia, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Montenegro, Netherlands, Poland, San Marino, Slovakia and Spain.  Lists for the Czech Republic and Portugal are under development.



Baggers without Borders

Krzesanica 2122m, P323m, in the Polish Western Tatra (photo Mark Trengove)
  
In recent years the website has diverged somewhat from its original purpose.  In 2020, following my creation of a Google Forum for international peak-baggers, new parts of the website were also created, devoted to the activity of international peak-bagging, under the banner ‘Baggers without Borders’.  These website pages include registers and Halls of Fame for international peak-baggers – see at https://sites.google.com/site/europeaklist/international-peak-baggers-registers-halls-of-fame.

This has proved a very successful development.  The Forum has brought together international peak-baggers from across the world as the go-to place to ask for advice on peaks across the world, as many of the members have both local and global knowledge from their own wanderings over the planet.
 
The Europeaklist website supports the Forum by publishing annually peak-totals in various different prominence categories for all who wish to participate.  You do not need to be a member of the Forum to participate in the Registers and Halls of Fame.  There is no minimum number of peaks to enter a Register.  Further details can be found on the website via the hyperlink given above.



Poly-bagging
Later in 2020 a new section of the website was created, devoted to those who ascend the same hill or mountain many times and keep a record of their ascents.  I have coined a new term for this activity – ‘poly-bagging’.  An introduction can be found on the website at https://sites.google.com/site/europeaklist/polybaggers-register-hall-of-fame.  There is also a register of ‘poly-baggers’, with some people putting up over a thousand ascents of the same hill or mountain.  You can view the first register (for 2019) at https://sites.google.com/site/europeaklist/polybaggers-register-hall-of-fame/poly-baggers-register-2019.



The 119
Although most British hill lists have been removed, one still remains.  This is a list of the one hundred and nineteen hills in Britain and Ireland that have at least 600 metres of prominence   This is a hill-list I first compiled over ten years ago which has gained some popularity.  You can find an introduction to this list at https://sites.google.com/site/europeaklist/the-119, and an article in The Summit, the e-magazine for Irish hill-walkers – see at page 41 in https://mountainviews.ie/annual/summitteering-Ireland-Britain-the119-2019/#page=41.



The future: Chinese mountain lists

Liánhuā Fēng (蓮花峰) 1854.8m, P1735, the highest peak in the Huáng Shān (黄山), Anhui Province, China (photo Mark Trengove)

In 2020 I became involved in a project to publish a list of all the mountains in the world with at least 1000 metres of prominence – the World Ribu Project.  The project came about as a result of the Baggers without Borders Forum.  After a hiking visit to China in 2019, I decided to take on the mountains of China as my contribution to the project.  Most of the mountains in China have not been listed before.  My research involves examination of worldwide maps created by Digital Elevation Models, together with extensive searches on the Chinese web.
 
I have decided to venture outside Europe for my next series of mountain lists, and a new set of publications covering the 1000-metre prominences of China will be published on the Europeaklist website in forthcoming months and years.  As there are over eight hundred such peaks in China (Britain has three!), listing them all is a considerable undertaking.  The possibilities for peak-bagging in China are huge, ranging from Mount Everest in the Himalaya to the granite spire peaks of the Huáng Shān (黄山) in the south-east of this vast country.

                  
Mark Trengove (September 2020)



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