Ranking traditional icons of Switzerland
by their increasing size may look like this: Swiss watch, Swiss knife,
Swiss chocolate, Swiss cheese, and Swiss bank. The largest icon of
Switzerland - the Matterhorn Mountain - caps the list.
We took pictures of the Matterhorn in 2010 when skiing with Dima Moiseyenko in Zermatt. We had to fly to the mountain twice.
The first day we flew up very close to
it, right to the base, and took some standard landscape panoramas. While
stitching the images that night we realized that huge 4478-meter tall
Matterhorn looked like a small hill on our panoramas. And from a
helicopter we saw an enormous giant hovering over us. An amazing optical
effect due, perhaps, to the challenge of trying to fit the whole world
on a small screen.
So we had to fly again the next day.
This time our helicopter blades were almost touching the mountain slope,
which seemed to be taking all the space around us. The wind at the
slope was very strong: about 70 km per hour. Our pilot, with great
difficulty and quite reluctantly, held the helicopter close to the
mountain for several minutes, and then said: "That's it. It's not safe
here. I am leaving". And so he left. We hardly had time to finish
shooting.
Speaking of the Matterhorn, I made another personal discovery.
Upon my return to Moscow, I was going
over panoramic shots taken close by the mountain, and noticed a small
hut snuggling on the Swiss-side ledge of the Matterhorn. I looked it up
on Google Maps - it was called Solvay Hut. This refuge was built in
1915 at 4003-meter altitude. It can fit about 10 people in case of
emergency during summiting the mountain. Another Google search revealed
an image of the second hut (Rifugio Carrel) on the Italian side. After
that I was actually able to find it on our panorama taken from the
western side of the mountain.
By the way, Italians have a different name for the Matterhorn - Monte Cervino.
And now let's turn to official facts.
Situated on the border of Switzerland
and Italy, the Matterhorn is like a pyramid in the center of Europe,
with four triangular faces meeting at its summit. Like any other pyramid
(whether it be the famous pyramids in Egypt or a bit less famous
pyramidal structures in Mexico), the Matterhorn Mountain is also full of
mysteries and tragic stories.
In terms of altitude, the Matterhorn is the fifth among the Alpine peaks, but the difficulty of
a climb ranks it second to none. Its faces are so deceptive, that even
the most experienced climbers could not ascend them until 1865; and the
southern slope remained unconquered for another 66 years.
Time after time results of those ascents
were rather ambiguous. For example, Edward Whymper (British) and his
fellow climbers made the very first successful ascent of the mountain.
And as they began their descent, rope broke and killed four of the brave
pioneers... In 1933, three French climbers were first to finish one of
the Matterhorn routes, but they all died on the way back.
Hermann Perren, a mountaineer and a
guide, became famous thanks to the Matterhorn too. His goal was to
ascend the mountain 150 times, but he fell and died 10 ascents short of
his goal.
Although all of the Matterhorn ridges
and slopes have been climbed by now, and guides take large tourist
groups to the peak (which makes some of the routes really crowded) -
still about 10 to 15 people die climbing the Matterhorn every year.
The Matterhorn has its character. At
least, that's what the residents of the nearby town of Zermatt are sure
of. They say that even the weather in Switzerland, in this part of the
country, depends on the mood of the legendary mountain. When the sky is
gloomy and the 4478-meter tall Matterhorn peak is hidden behind the
clouds: the mountain is out of humor. When the Matterhorn wants to play
a joke, it pretends to be Vesuvius: clouds are covering up only part of
the mountain making you believe the peak is smoking, as if before
eruption. But when "his highness" is in a good mood: it is showing off,
gleaming with its glacier hat, as if inviting you to take an
unforgettable picture of the Matterhorn.
The town of Zermatt (situated at 1600
meters altitude) enjoys the proximity of such a popular neighbor. Not
only is it one of the most popular ski resorts in Switzerland. It is,
in fact, the tourist landmark of Switzerland. It offers activities all
year round. Even summer activities, as one can guess, are related to
vacationing in the mountains. Zermatt even has a so-called sunrise
train, which takes you to the Matterhorn peak to witness the sunrise of
unparalleled beauty.
The bordering country benefits from the
mountain pretty much in the same way. The southern slope of the
Matterhorn is home to a small town called Brueil Cervinia, an extremely
popular ski resort in Italy located at 2006 meters above sea level. It
does not need to compete with Zermatt. They simply have to accept the
fact that they share the mountain. That is why both resorts have shared
ski routes, tourist routes, and a great number of tourists coming here
for an active outdoor time and ski tourism in the Alps.
...There is a saying: everyone, who sees
the Matterhorn mountain, will be successful and wealthy. Perhaps, this
is the reason why Swiss banks have so much money in their volts. Come
visit the Matterhorn, the famous landmark of the nature of Switzerland,
and who knows, the local saying may just come true for you.
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