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A01=Jeff Barker
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Yesterdays upon the Stairs

Hardback | English

By (author): Jeff Barker

''Yesterdays upon the Stairs'' is a series of memories of walks/climbs and events undertaken by the author and/or members of his family. The memories arose as he reached particular heights in climbing the stairs at his home to a height the equivalent of Everest during the recent Covid lockdown; a task he set himself, aged 84, to delay, hopefully, the effects of Parkinson''s Disease. He and his family have found themselves in a variety of environments from burning deserts to Antarctic windswept cold and never turned down any given opportunity to climb any hill or mountain. The book presents his memories in three sections. The first section covers mountains/events in UK. His first walk up a mountain, Coniston Old Man, was aged 12 where he learned a salutary lesson; this is included along with later climbs with his wife and two young sons. Like the following sections, these records are presented in chronological order apart from the first, his most recent climb which he was forced to do, up a ladder and through his upstairs window, to gain entry to his otherwise locked house. He then describes his adventures with his wife and those of his two sons abroad. He remembers activities from North Norway to the Antarctic, from Canada and South America to Hong Kong via Europe, Africa, and the Middle East In the third section, the author recalls occasions in the Himalayas, in particular in Pakistan, Nepal, Sikkim, Bhutan and West China. He mentions six excursions, one of which he organised and, although he himself did not reach the summit, made the first ascent of Lamjung Himal (22,911 ft, 6000m) at the eastern end of the Annapurna massif. He recounts events which happened whilst backpacking, accompanied by his wife, over 3,500 miles from Kathmandu in Nepal to Peshawar in Pakistan via Tibet and Western China. As he nears the end of his stair climb, he remembers, not for the first time, Noel Odell, to whom his wife is related, and the significant part he played in the 1924 Everest Expedition on which Mallory and Irvine disappeared. Finally, as he reaches the top of his stair climb, he again recalls the success of Hillary and Tenzing in 1953 which inspired him to make his own climb and which he records in the Introduction to the book. See more
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Original price €21.99
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A01=Jeff BarkerAge Group_UncategorizedAuthor_Jeff Barkerautomatic-updateCategory1=Non-FictionCategory=WSZCCategory=WSZGCOP=United KingdomDelivery_Delivery within 10-20 working daysFormat=BBFormat_HardbackLanguage_EnglishPA=AvailablePrice_€10 to €20PS=Activesoftlaunch
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Product Details
  • Format: Hardback
  • Weight: 550g
  • Dimensions: 148 x 210mm
  • Publication Date: 03 Feb 2022
  • Publisher: Jeff Barker
  • Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
  • Language: English
  • ISBN13: 9781527290280

About Jeff Barker

The author was born in 1936 into an army family and he later joined the army himself. After Sandhurst he joined the Parachute Brigade as a Sapper; half way through his tour he gained entry to Cambridge where he read engineering played a lot of rugby drank beer ate crumpets and got married to Gillian (Jill) Odell whom he met in an Oxford cellar. He left Cambridge with a good triple first (more commonly called a third or unkindly by one of his former schoolteachers a ''degree of lunacy''). Still in the Army he worked for two years with a civil engineering contractor and consultants in order to gain professional engineer status. Thereafter both in UK and abroad he spent a good deal of his time in the Army when not walking or climbing either designing or planning engineer projects for Royal Engineers to undertake as training and aid to the civil community. After leaving the Army he joined a civil engineering company and later worked for three years in Ghana as an aid worker on a country-wide adult literacy project. He subsequently returned to Ghana on a couple of consultancies this time working with a number of NGOs dedicated to improving the lives of those with HIV AIDS. Throughout his life he has enjoyed mountaineering. Often accompanied by Jill and both or one or other of his two sons Nick and Tim all themselves experienced walkers they invariably sought out some hill or mountain to climb wherever they found themselves in the world. The author now retired lives in Cranbrook Kent with Jill. They celebrated their diamond wedding anniversary in 2021. His two sons are now approaching sixty years of age but seemingly still just as active as twenty-year olds. Tim has a daughter Tabitha and a son Charlie both also keen walkers.

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