The self-motivated 25-year-old saved up and spent the following five years in Italy’s Aosta Valley training for his mountain guiding apprenticeship and focusing his natural athleticism on classics like the Grande Jorasses, the north faces of the Matterhorn and Eiger, and the classic Mont Blanc test piece — the Peutery Integral — the longest ridge climb in the Alps. It took another five years to complete his IMFGA credentials, and once this benchmark was attained, it was time to test himself in the great ranges far from home.
During Albrighi’s 40-day pilgrimage to Patagonia in 2018, he managed successful ascents of Monte Fitz Roy, Cerro Torre and a handful of massive technical objectives completed in single pushes up to 26 hours. His love of fast, light, minimalist alpinism translated well to the fickle peaks of the Fitz Roy massif, where weather systems offer only a short window of climbable conditions, and fast equals safe. Even then, Albrighi had a broader definition of what ‘climbable’ meant than most.