Huinchuli, with Annapurna South, forms the
massive south-facing wall, well seen when trekking north from
Pokhara. Huinchuli is the eastern bastion of this rampart, with
its East Face overlooking the Modi Khola, guarding the entrance to
the Annapurna Sanctuary. An impresseve mountain in its own right,
and not, as it was at one time dubbed, ‘the eastern outlier of
Annapurna South’. Despite the relative ease of access to the
mountain and the popularity, rightly so, of the Sanctuary as a
trekking destination, it has, like Fluted Peak , received little
attention from mountaineers although it obviously offers major new
route porential.
From the south, Huinchuli has few weaknesses in its defences. A
precipitous south wall rises above the untracked Chomrong Khola,
seemingly menaced by snow avalanches from the slabby, ice-veined
buttresses above. The easter flank from afar appears the most
approach- able; however, once beyond Kuldi Ghar, it seems far less
so. Out of sight, the mountain remains an unknown quantity
approached by only a few, through steep and dense bamboo forest,
menaced by unseen avalanche danger from hanging glaciers above.
From the north the mountain rises steeply above the moraines of
the Annapurna South Glacier in a series of slabby buttresses and
an ill-defined and complicated North Ridge. These in turn lead to
a final triangle of fluted ice that form the summit. The summit is
bounded on the east by a ridge that rises in an icy parabola from
a small col , from which a steep couloir descends towards the
moraines above the lodges at base camp. This is a feasible looking
route, and is as yet unclimbed. The mountain’s western arm is the
ridge connecting it with Annapurna South, and forming from the
north an icy wall. It is this wall that has provided the key to
new things. |