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Kennedy has long been one of the top climbers in the world. Though, unless you were steeped in the minutiae of climbing, you wouldn鈥檛 necessarily know it.
Kennedy has long been one of the top climbers in the world. Though, unless you were steeped in the minutiae of climbing, you wouldn鈥檛 necessarily know it.

Climbers Hayden Kennedy and Inge Perkins Die

The 27-year-old Kennedy died by suicide after Perkins, his girlfriend, was killed in an avalanche in Bozeman, Montana

Kennedy has long been one of the top climbers in the world. Though, unless you were steeped in the minutiae of climbing, you wouldn鈥檛 necessarily know it.

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On Saturday, October 7, 27-year-old alpinist Hayden Kennedy was skiing with his girlfriend, Inge Perkins, 23, on Imp Peak south of Bozeman, Montana. The pair triggered a slide that buried and killed Perkins. Kennedy survived the slide, but聽returned home and .听

Perkins聽had a beacon, but it was turned off and in her pack, said Doug Chabot, director of the Gallatin National Forest Avalanche Center in Bozeman.听鈥淭hat鈥檚 why she wasn鈥檛 found.鈥澛

Hayden聽鈥渘ever called 911鈥 to report the slide, Chabot said. 鈥淗e left a note with locations as to where the avalanche happened. They were incredibly clear directions for where to find her.鈥澛

Early-season avalanches 鈥渃atch people all the time,鈥 Chabot said. 鈥淭his was not a particularly huge avalanche鈥 yet 鈥渋t packed a punch….We had huge storms back in September that put three or four feet of snow on the ground鈥 then another foot around October 1, with high winds that loaded the snow on a firm bed.

Kennedy鈥檚 family 聽saying that they sorrowfully respected Hayden鈥檚 decision and praised their son鈥檚 openness to the world while he was alive.

Perkins was a beloved climber from Bozeman who was working on a degree at Montana State University. 鈥淛ust like Hayden was someone I looked up to, you were, too,鈥 professional climber Chelsea Rude wrote on Facebook, addressing Perkins. 鈥淵ou two were perfect for each other. Both with the biggest hearts a human can have and smiles that made anyone feel welcome, heard and loved.鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 not just the memorable summits and crux moves that are fleeting. Friends and climbing partners are fleeting, too,鈥 wrote Kennedy.

Though his accomplishments were many鈥攆rom big walls in Mexico to bold first ascents in the Karakoram鈥攈e was mostly widely known to the non-climbing world for removing 125 bolts from Cerro Torre鈥檚 Compressor Route in Patagonia after making the first fair means ascent of the Southeast Ridge with Jason Kruk in 2012. Casare Maestri had put in and used the bolts to ascend the pillar 42 years before, and many had followed in his path. Some thought the bolts should be left as a monument to history. Kennedy and Kruk sought to return the mountain to its initial state, and were both praised and criticized for that decision.听

In 聽published in the Alpinist shortly after their effort, Michael wrote: 鈥淭he story of the Southeast Ridge is one of the distance between our ideals and what we are willing to sacrifice to live up to them. As alpinists, we should strive to reach our dream summits with a minimum of means, leaving the least trace of our passage…Chopping the bolts was a reminder that we need to abide by what we say we believe in. For making that decision, some will call you and Jason heroes. Others will call you villains. Don't buy into either narrative.鈥

Just a few weeks ago, Kennedy on the climbing blog Evening Sends that聽contemplated聽climbing, loss, and mortality.听

鈥淥ver the last few years, as I鈥檝e watched too many friends go to the mountains only to never return, I鈥檝e realized something painful,鈥澛爃e wrote. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not just the memorable summits and crux moves that are fleeting. Friends and climbing partners are fleeting, too. This is the painful reality of our sport, and I鈥檓 unsure what to make of it. Climbing is either a beautiful gift or a curse鈥 see both light and dark in climbing. Through this recognition, true learning begins and a full awareness of the brevity of our time becomes clearer. It鈥檚 difficult to accept the fact that we cannot control everything in life, yet we still try, and maybe our path changes to something totally unexpected鈥aybe the most genuine aspects of any tale are the sputterings and the silences, the acknowledgments of failure, the glimmerings in the dark. And maybe one genuine reason to try to share our stories about days we actually send something, when we are alive and at the height of our powers, is to try to bring back what鈥檚 past, lost, or gone. Perhaps by doing so, we might find some light illuminating a new way forward.鈥

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