Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Roger Payne (mountaineer)

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Main discipline
  
Mountaineering

Name
  
Roger Payne

Role
  
Mountaineer

Nationality
  
British

Notable ascents
  
Lobuje


Roger Payne (mountaineer) Roger Payne obituary World news The Guardian


Died
  
July 12, 2012, Mont Maudit, Chamonix, France

Education
  
University of Sunderland

Other disciplines
  
Climbing, alpinism

Attend the whale song roger payne at tedxbeaconstreet


Roger Payne (16 July 1956 – 12 July 2012) was a British mountaineer. He was formerly general secretary of the British Mountaineering Council (BMC) and a qualified mountain guide from 1983, taking part in over 20 expeditions to the Karakoram and Himalayan ranges, including K2 and the north face of Changabang. He was an avalanche instructor and climbed in the Alps every year from 1977.

Contents

Roger Payne (mountaineer) Roger Payne The Economist

Tribute to roger payne


Biography

Payne grew up in Hammersmith, London, and took an education degree in 1983 at Sunderland Polytechnic where he was president of the mountaineering club. He then became a teacher and climbing instructor and he later moved to Leysin, Switzerland.

Death

Payne was killed aged 55 with eight other climbers by an avalanche whilst traversing Mont Maudit, on the Mont Blanc massif, near Chamonix in the French Alps on 12 July 2012.

Notable climbs

  • 2007 - Brumkhangshe, Pheling, Chombu, Eagle Peak
  • 2006 - Chogyl, Frontier Peak, Koktang, Ratong
  • 2005 - Lama Lamani, Mount Tinchenchang
  • 2004 - Thangsing Valley
  • 2004 - Chomolhari
  • 2003 - Mount Grosvenor
  • 2002 - Island Peak
  • 2000 - Pumari Chhish
  • 1999 - Pumari Chhish
  • 1998 - Meru
  • 1997 - Changabang
  • 1996 - Changabang
  • 1995 - Tirsuli West
  • 1994 - Nanda Devi East
  • 1993 - K2
  • 1992 - Broad Peak
  • 1991 - Khan Tengri, Pobeda
  • 1989 - Lobuje East
  • 1988 - Mount Foraker, Mount McKinley
  • 1987 - Gasherbrum 6, Gasherbrum 2
  • 1986 - Rusac, Peru
  • 1985 - Millpuqrahu, Kayish
  • 1983 - Meru
  • 1982 - Mount McKinley
  • References

    Roger Payne (mountaineer) Wikipedia