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Alpine Lodge Dedicated to Seventy Year Love Affair

September 19th, 2015  |  Canadian Business

Richard Guy and his wife, Louise, climbed hundreds of mountains in their seventy years of marriage and now he is honouring his wife’s memory with a large donation to a $500,000 Alpine lodge being built in B.C.’s Yoho National Park.

Richard and Louise moved to Calgary in 1965 and began to volunteer for the Alpine Club of Canada, a relationship that spanned over four decades.  They remained involved in the mountaineering community together until his wife passed away at 92 years of age in 2010.

As a testament to their love, he made the donation to help make the lodge possible, the first back-country hut to be built in twenty years by the Alpine Club.

“I am the luckiest person in the world,” Guy said. “I had the company of the finest person in the world for 70 years.”

Several volunteers spent the summer building the two storey lodge designed to provide shelter to back-country skiers exploring the remote regions of the Rocky Mountains.

As the project neared completion, the Alpine Club flew Richard Guy out to see the lodge, named the Richard and Louise Hut.

Guy brought a picture of his wife and her Alpine jacket so a part of her could be there while the club honoured them both. “I think she is happy that so many of us are happy,” he said.

Mountaineering is a popular sport in British Columbia and officials urge all hikers and skiers to ensure they have the proper equipment, training and travel health coverage to deal with all emergencies.

Image Courtesy of Adobe Stock