Totem Pole

Cold, wet, isolated and imposing. An iconic rock climb due to the unpredictable and dangerous nature of the weather and sea state below, the Totem Pole is a narrow dolerite sea stack at Cape Huay in the Tasman National Park, Tasmania, Australia. It stands 65 metres (213 ft) tall from the mean sea level, yet is only a few metres wide in any direction. The southern ocean often pounds into the sea stacks and makes even getting to the pole quite difficult.

TotemPoleIG.jpg
Its notoriety further increased after leading British climber Paul Pritchard suffered a severe head injury in 1998 rupturing his skull and losing half of his blood causing a hemiplegia or partial paralysis. His female climbing partner spent three arduous hours hauling him up to a ledge halfway up the pole where she could secure him and then ran 7km to arrange help. Due to the narrow channel the rescue team was not able to get a helicopter close enough for a direct rescue and ambulance service had to down climb from the top of the Totem Pole to the ledge. Pritchard spent a total of 10 hours on the ledge before the rescue was complete.

TotemPole.jpg

If you would like to learn a little bit more about my background in photography you can read the interview @photofeed did with me here.

Robert Downie
Love Life, Love Photography

All images in this post were taken by and remain the Copyright of Robert Downie - http://www.robertdowniephotography.com

Sort:  

Pretty sure I've mentioned it to you before but I love the stories you include with photos. That's a pretty serious looking climb :S

And a pretty serious business climbing accident D: but occupational hazard?

Wow, cudos to the rescue team! Cool photo too :)

Wow it's an impressive wall. Is it possible to climb up there?

Yes people climb up the totem pole itself

 3 years ago  

I know you're using tons of scot-bot tags but if you have a couple open try out some of the community's preferred topics

Ok have tried it out.

 3 years ago  

also you do not need any of the scot-bot tags after things are triggered or paid out ... so you can easily replace them since no one searches for them anyway. Changing a post's tags even months later will get them into the search feed in particular for these preferred-topic feeds on communities.

Hmm ok that makes sense