Mountaineering Report Outline

The previous paragraph talked with some friends in the circle and felt that the 2000 folk mountaineering activities were booming, but there were also some problems that urgently needed to be summarized. The experience accumulated by each team’s climbing is the wealth of the climbing circle. It is necessary for everyone to share their own lessons and lessons with all mountain friends. In order to make the mountaineering report more standardized, everyone elected me to formulate an outline for the mountaineering report. The following is a summary of the drafts listed in previous reports and some people's suggestions. Please add on

In addition, after the outline of the report is determined, some mountaineering organizations and individuals will write reports on their own mountaineering activities. All mountaineering reports will be uniformly organized and put on the Internet in an open manner for inspection by mountain friends. Thanks for the help of Marco and mh here

Mountaineering report outline
I. Brief description of climbing plan and analysis of mountain peaks
Introduce the purpose of the action. Point out the selected peak route and climbing style (mode).

Second, the team composition and preparation

Players' mountaineering experience (if it is too long can be considered in the appendix), the team's team form (club activity, commercial team or self-team), team members' duties and division of labor, preparations before departure.

Third, traffic conditions and into the mountain route
Refers to the means of transportation used for starting from the nearest city, the marking of the exits when entering the mountains, the condition of the rented animal power, the location of the base camp, etc.

IV. Mountaineering schedule
From the tactical arrangements and action schedules that start at the base camp, it is best to have a personal chart of rise, material transportation, and consumption when building multiple camps.

V. Climbing route
Use photos or diagrams to identify the location and surrounding environment of the camps, the topography and difficulty of climbing between the camps, and the time spent in each camp between each march.

Sixth, difficulties and problem analysis
The difficulties and problems encountered by the team in the climbing process include the representative issues arising from the organization and implementation of mountain topography, climate, and the climbing process, such as inadequate material preparation, physical condition of the players, and technical strength. Peak difficulty is not matched, tactical arrangements are poor, and other unforeseen difficulties.

Seventh, supplies and equipment list and mountaineering expenses
Including technical equipment and logistic materials, the cost includes registration fee, transportation fee, equipment rental fee and consumptive material cost

VIII. Summary and Suggestions

IX. References (pointing out sources and time)