
Houlding family at the bivouac hut near the summit of Piz Badile
Renowned climber Leo Houlding marked his 40th birthday by introducing the next generation of his family to the kind of adventures that he has enjoyed since he teamed up with Berghaus in the late 1990s. He took his wife and young children on a four-day climb of the iconic alpine peak Piz Badile. They all celebrated his landmark birthday in a bivouac high on the mountain and his children became two of the youngest climbers to stand on the summit.
Houlding has been climbing since the age of 10 and has been working with Berghaus all of his adult life. He is already a veteran of more than a dozen major expeditions that have taken him around the world, from the summit of Everest to remote Arctic and Antarctic peaks, via Yosemite, the jungles of South America and the Old Man of Hoy.
For his birthday celebrations in the Alps, he was joined by his wife Jessica and their children, seven-year-old Freya and three-year-old Jackson. Together, they spent four days on a round trip to climb the north ridge of Piz Badile on the border of Switzerland and Italy.

Leo and Jackson Houlding at camp on their Piz Badile adventure
They carried all of their equipment and supplies, staying overnight in alpine huts and bivouac shelters. By reaching the summit of the 10,853ft peak, Jackson Houlding may have become the youngest person to stand on the top of Piz Badile.
Houlding said, “We were planning an excursion into the wilderness of the Wind River Range, Wyoming this summer but due to USA travel restrictions we changed plans to a campervan trip around the Alps. The north ridge of the Piz Badile is unique in its astounding quality, great length and lack of objectives hazards.
“I was confident that if we had a stable weather window, we could make a family ascent and lucked out that the good spell saw us summit on my 40th birthday. Watching the dawn above the clouds, surrounded by everything I love the most was magical. It was a very special family adventure – as important and memorable as anything that I have done before.”

For many years, Houlding was the youngest person to have scaled the Old Man of Hoy on Orkney, which he first climbed at the age of 11. In 2014, he returned to the famous sea stack with Sir Chris Bonington. Almost 50 years after Sir Chris made the first ascent of the Old Man, they marked his 80th birthday by climbing it again together and are pictured here at the top. Credit: Berghaus
Houlding secured his first sponsorship deal with Berghaus when only 17 and has been one of the company’s key brand ambassadors ever since, alongside the likes of fellow climbers Sir Chris Bonington, Mick Fowler, and, more recently, Anna Taylor. He’s used Berghaus products in some of the most spectacular climbing expeditions of the last 20 years, including new routes and first ascents such as The Prophet on El Capitan in Yosemite, on remote peaks Ulvetanna and the Spectre in Antarctica, Mount Asgard on Baffin Island, and, late last year, the Prow of Roraima in Guyana.
He added, “I’m so fortunate to have been able to feed my appetite for adventure almost constantly since I was a child. It’s been a huge privilege and my relationship with Berghaus, and its people and products, has played a massive role in making that possible.

Jackson high on Piz Badile and loving it.
“I have always encouraged everyone to engage with adventure at any level and I’m very proud to be a trustee of the Outward Bound Trust, which last year introduced 30,000 young people from mainly underprivileged, urban backgrounds to the joy of outdoor action. As I’ve matured a bit and with a good deal of experience, I’m enjoying taking a mentoring role and sharing some of what I’ve learned with the next generation of adventure climbers, and of course my own kids.”