my-server
← Wiki

Carlos Buhler

Carlos Buhler (born October 17, 1954, in Harrison, New York) is one of America's leading high altitude mountaineers. Buhler's specialty is high-standard mountaineering characterized by small teams, no oxygen, minimal gear and equipment, and relatively low amounts of funding; yielding first ascents of difficult routes in challenging conditions, such as the Himalayan winter season.

Early life, education, and personal life

Buhler graduated from The Putney School in Putney, Vermont. As a junior in high school, he attended a School Year Abroad (SYA) program in Barcelona, where his exposure to the Spanish climbing community sparked his lifelong mountaineering career. In 2024, he received a distinguished alumni award from SVA for his outdoor expeditions as well as his work that draws on his mountaineering experience to enhance cross-cultural communication in corporate settings.

In 1978, Buhler graduated from Western Washington University's College of the Environment. He later received the university's distinguished alumni award.

Buhler lives in Canmore, Alberta, Canada. He has two children.

Notable ascents

Notable events

Honors

  • 1988 Mugs Stump Award, first year awarded. (Award honors “climbers attempting alpine climbing objectives that exemplify fast, light and clean tactics.”)
  • 1988 American Mountain Foundation Award, for 1st American ascent of Kangchenjunga, world’s 3rd highest mountain.
  • 1994 Mugs Stump Award for the West Face of K2.
  • 1999 Mugs Stump Award for Menlungtse/Milarepa.
  • 2001 Polartec Challenge Award, for “vision, commitment, credibility and respect for the local culture and environment [which] serve as role models to outdoor enthusiasts worldwide.”
  • 2002 Ranked “Best of the Best”, and only American among the top four international high altitude climbers, by Everestnews.com. (2002 was the last year ranking was compiled.)
  • 2003 Western Washington University, Distinguished Alumni Award.
  • 2004 Lyman Spitzer Cutting Edge Grant (awarded for cutting edge “bold first ascents or difficult repeats of most challenging routes”)
  • 2007 Robert and Miriam Underhill Award, for outstanding mountaineering achievement, by the American Alpine Club
  • Keynote speaker and juror at leading mountain and wilderness film festivals:
  • 2002 Mountainfilm in Telluride Festival, Telluride, Colorado
  • 2003 Wild and Scenic Film Festival, Nevada City, California
  • 2004 Banff Mountain Film Festival, Banff, Canada
  • 2006 Juror, Trento Mountain Film Festival, Trento, Italy
  • 2008 Juror, Inkafest Mountain Film Festival, Huaraz, Peru

Writings

References