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Would you ever look to climb Mount Everest?

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I feel that climbing Mount Everest is a very overrated thing to do. Many people waste a lot of money there and some people even die. I am unlikely to ever attempt it.

Would you ever try it? Have you tried it?
 
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My question here to whoever is says yes is why!!!
If you are a lone person with no family children spouse parents etc then fine go ahead and commit this suicide. But if you have any of the above then this would easily be one of the most selfish acts.
 
Yeah, why not? I've climbed a few peaks in the UK including Ben Nevis and absolutely loved it. After this I started looking up a few mountains including K2, Everest and others.

Of course, the eight thousander mountains are a completely different beast to your highest peaks in the UK. I'd maybe like to go to K2 base camp next time in Pakistan but I'd need to get fitter for an attempt like that.
 
Yeah, why not? I've climbed a few peaks in the UK including Ben Nevis and absolutely loved it. After this I started looking up a few mountains including K2, Everest and others.

Of course, the eight thousander mountains are a completely different beast to your highest peaks in the UK. I'd maybe like to go to K2 base camp next time in Pakistan but I'd need to get fitter for an attempt like that.

What if you get into a devastating injury? It can ruin your life. Do you ever have a second thought about it?
 
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I feel that climbing Mount Everest is a very overrated thing to do. Many people waste a lot of money there and some people even die. I am unlikely to ever attempt it.

Would you ever try it? Have you tried it?

i would never do it because i lack the fitness to, and the time to get my fitness up to that level, however i enjoy being in mountains, and i like going off the beaten track too.

some people have this irresistible urge to get away from from people and civilisation, that inherently involves risk, but arguably everything that is exciting does.
 
I’ve climbed many alpine mountains including Mont Blanc. I’ve not attempted the 8000 metres altitude mountain but never say never.

Mont Blanc is essentially hiking but with snow so you will need crampons for much of the journey and skills to use an ice axe and rope skills. Although it is hiking, one wrong step and you will die and I have seen people die.

I am married and I have children. Is it a rational thing to do? No.

Is it selfish? Depends on who you are and I see both sides of the argument.

Essentially, us mountaineers are natural thrill seekers but do it amongst nature. Me personally, I find climbing mountains so peaceful and relaxing and usually do it with my best friend who is also married with kids etc.

I need to achieve and mountaineering helps me be the person I am.

I can talk for pages about this but it is hard to rationalise until you do it.

I do have one rule, which is if I’m in obvious danger then walk back and I try to stick with it. Last summer whilst in the alps, I came across heavy rockfall near the summit of a mountain in Zermatt, Switzerland and I turned back even though death was not likely. Likewise in Chamonix I walked on an ice glacier at night and dropped my ice axe so walked back and didn’t attempt to climb Le Drus.
 
What if you get into a devastating injury? It can ruin your life. Do you ever have a second thought about it?

My time to do something like this is probably gone but yeah mountain climbing carries extreme risk. That's why you would have to plan and train very rigorously to take such an undertaking.

Definitely, its not for everyone but it is I would imagine a unique and thrilling experience. I guess its that challenge that drives people to it. Everest is dangerous but it is not the most dangerous, I believe that accolade belongs to Annapurna.
 
Nepali climber reaches summit of Everest for record 30th time

Nepali climber Kami Rita Sherpa broke his own record Wednesday as the person to have scaled Mount Everest the most times, achieving the milestone 30th ascent of the world’s highest peak.

The veteran 54-year-old guide had reached the summit for the record 29th time earlier this month, before climbing to the icy top again early on Wednesday morning.

“Kami Rita reached the summit this morning. Now he has made a new record with 30 summits of Everest,” Mingma Sherpa of Seven Summit Treks, his expedition organiser, told AFP.

A guide for more than two decades, Sherpa, also known as “Everest Man”, first stood the 8,849-metre (29,032-foot) peak in 1994 when working for a commercial expedition. Since then he has climbed Everest almost every year, guiding clients.

“I am glad for the record, but records are eventually broken,” Kami Rita told AFP after his 29th climb on May 12.

“I am more happy that my climbs help Nepal be recognised in the world.”

Last year, Sherpa climbed Everest twice to reclaim his record after another guide, Pasang Dawa Sherpa, equalled his number of ascents.

Sherpa has previously said that he has been “just working” and did not plan on setting records.

He has also conquered other 8,000-metre peaks including the world’s second-highest mountain, K2 in Pakistan.

But his success on reaching the top came as the season’s toll climbed to five with the death of a Romanian climber during a bid to climb Lhotse, the fourth highest mountain, his expedition organiser confirmed.

“He was found dead in his tent on Camp Three on Monday morning by his guide,” said Mohan Lamsal of Makalu Adventure, naming the climber as Gabriel Viorel Tabara.

Everest and Lhotse share the same route until diverting at 7,200 metres.

“We are making efforts to bring his body down,” he said.

 
Nepal plans new Everest rule: Only experienced climbers will get permits
A new law draft in Nepal aims to improve safety and shrink crowding by limiting Everest permits to climbers who have climbed at least one of the 7,000-metre (22,965-foot) Himalayan nation's peaks.

Nepal, which is largely reliant on climbing, trekking and tourism for foreign cash, has faced censure for allowing too many climbers, especially novice ones, to try to ascend the 8,849-metre (29,032 ft) peak.

This often results in long queues of climbers in the 'death Zone', an area below the summit with insufficient natural oxygen for survival.

Overcrowding has been blamed for the high number of deaths on the mountain. At least 12 climbers died, and another five went missing on Everest's slopes in 2023 when Nepal issued 478 permits. Eight climbers died last year.

Under the proposed law, an Everest permit would be issued only after a climber provides evidence of having climbed at least one 7,000-metre mountain in Nepal.

The sardar, or the head of local staff, and the mountain guide accompanying climbers must also be Nepali citizens.

The draft law has been registered at the National Assembly, the upper house of parliament, where the ruling alliance holds a majority required to pass the bill.

International expedition operators have urged Nepal to allow any 7,000-metre peak, not just those in the Himalayan nation, for the Everest permit.

"That wouldn't make any sense. And I would also add mountains that are close to 7,000 metres to that list and that are widely used as preparation, like Ama Dablam, Aconcagua, Denali and others," said Lukas Furtenbach of Austria-based expedition organiser, Furtenbach Adventures.

Furtenbach, currently leading an expedition on Everest, said mountain guides from other countries must also be allowed to work on Everest, as there are not enough qualified Nepali mountain guides.

"It is important that mountain guides have a qualification like IFMGA (International Federation of Mountain Guides Associations), no matter what nationality they are. We do also welcome Nepali IFMGA guides to work in the Alps in Europe," he told Reuters.

Garrett Madison of the US-based Madison Mountaineering also said a 6,500-metre peak anywhere in the world would be a better idea.

"It's too difficult to find a reasonable 7,000-metre plus peak in Nepal," Madison said.

There are over 400 mountain peaks in Nepal which are open to expeditions - of them, 74 are higher than 7,000 metres, according to tourism department data.

However, not many of those peaks are popular among climbers, hiking officials said.

"Only a few of the 7,000 metre mountains attract climbers," said Tashi Lhakpa Sherpa of the 14 Peaks Expedition, a major expedition organising company in Nepal. Tashi has climbed Everest eight times.

Source: https://www.thenews.com.pk/latest/1...le-only-experienced-climbers-will-get-permits
 
Bear Grylls says there is nothing romantic about climbing Mount Everest and called it a dark place. There are many dead bodies there which are yet to be recovered.

He doesn't want to climb Mount Everest again.

 

British soldiers make Everest history using new method​


Four British former special forces soldiers have set a record by climbing Mount Everest in under five days without acclimatising on the mountain, as part of a high-speed expedition controversially aided by xenon gas.

The team, which included a UK government minister, summited the world's highest peak early on Wednesday.

Xenon was used to help them pre-acclimatise to low oxygen at high altitudes. Climbers usually spend between six to eight weeks on Everest before summiting.

Organisers said the use of xenon had made such a fast ascent possible. But the science around using the gas remains disputed and many in the mountaineering industry have criticised it.

Although this expedition is a record Everest ascent without acclimatising in the Himalayas, it's not the fastest Everest time.

That record still belongs to Lhakpa Gelu Sherpa, who climbed from base camp to the summit in 10 hours and 56 minutes in 2003 – but he did this after acclimatising on the mountain.

The xenon-aided team, accompanied by five Sherpa guides and a cameraman, reached the 8,849-metre (29,032-foot) summit early on Wednesday, and began their descent soon afterwards.

"They started on the afternoon of 16th May and summited on the morning of the 21st, taking four days and approximately 18 hours," expedition organiser Lukas Furtenbach told the BBC.

The four former soldiers, who include veterans minister Alastair Carns, slept for six weeks in special tents before travelling to Nepal to help them acclimatise to decreased levels of oxygen at high altitude.

They then flew to Everest base camp from Kathmandu and started climbing straight away, Mr Furtenbach said. They used supplemental oxygen, like other climbers, during the expedition.

Climbers usually spend weeks going up and down between base camp and higher camps before making the final push for the summit.

They need to do that to get used to thinner oxygen levels at high mountain altitudes. Above 8,000m, known as the death zone, available oxygen is only a third of that present at sea level.

But the four British men in the team did none of that.

"The team made a three-month acclimatisation programme in simulated altitude before coming to Nepal," Mr Furtenbach said.

The simulated altitude was created in what is known as hypoxic tents from which oxygen is sucked out using a generator, bringing it to levels present at high mountain altitudes.

Then the climbers inhaled xenon gas at a clinic in Germany two weeks before the expedition, said Mr Furtenbach.

"It helps to protect the body from altitude sickness," he said.

Some researchers say xenon increases production of a protein called erythropoietin that fights hypoxia, a condition that occurs when the body can't get enough oxygen.

They say it does that by increasing the number of red blood cells that contain haemoglobin, which transports oxygen around the body, but this remains a disputed subject and many say further studies are required.

Some in the mountaineering industry have cautioned against the use of xenon gas.

"According to current literature, there is no evidence that breathing in xenon improves performance in the mountains, and inappropriate use can be dangerous," the International Climbing and Mountaineering Federation said in a statement in January.

"Acclimatisation to altitude is a complex process that affects the various organs/systems such as the brain, lungs, heart, kidneys and blood to different degrees, and is not fully understood.

"From a physiological point of view, a single, one-off drug cannot be the key to improved acclimatisation or increased performance."

Adrian Ballinger, who heads another expedition team climbing Everest from the Chinese side to the north, also makes his clients undergo pre-acclimatisation training like using hypoxic tents to shorten time on the mountains. But he opposes using xenon gas.

"If you're promoting xenon as a performance enhancer, but you're not also willing to examine what that means for fairness and integrity in the mountains, it's a problem," he told the BBC.

"People are grasping at shortcuts instead of doing the real work of acclimatisation and training."

But now that the British team have made their groundbreaking Everest ascent, expedition operators think, and some worry, that this method may be used by other climbers too.

"If that happens then it will certainly have a direct, negative impact on the tourism industry as the length of time mountaineers stay will come down significantly," said Damber Parajuli, president of the Expedition Operators Association of Nepal.

"Also, acclimatising on the mountains is the basic rule of mountaineering. If that is not done then authorities should not be giving them certificates certifying that they climbed the mountain."

Nepal's tourism department officials said they were not aware the British team had reached the summit without acclimatisation on Everest.

"Now that we know about it, we will be discussing the issue and decide on our future course of action," Narayan Regmi, director general at Nepal's department of tourism told the BBC.

But why climb the highest peak at such speed?

"A shorter expedition has a lower carbon footprint and less ecological impact," said Mr Furtenbach.

"And it is safer for climbers because they can climb the mountain in good health and they are exposed to high altitude risks and mountain hazards for shorter time compared to when they are acclimatising on the mountain."

Source: BBC
 

Nepal's 'Everest Man' sets record with 31st summit​


Nepali sherpa Kami Rita, also known as "Everest Man", has scaled Mount Everest for the 31st time, breaking his own record for the most climbs up the world's tallest peak.

The 55-year-old, who was guiding a group of Indian army officials up the mountain, reached its 8,849m summit at 04:00 local time on Tuesday (23:15 GMT Monday).

"Kami Rita Sherpa needs no introduction. He is not just a national climbing hero, but a global symbol of Everest itself," expedition organiser Seven Summit Treks said in a statement.

Kami Rita first summited Everest in 1994 guiding a commercial expedition and has made the peak almost ever year since.

He scaled it twice some years, like in 2023 and 2024.

His closest competitor for the Everest record is fellow Nepali sherpa Pasang Dawa, who scaled the peak 29 times - the latest attempt made last week.

Kami Rita has previously told media how his climbs are just work.

"I am glad for the record, but records are eventually broken," he told AFP in May last year. "I am more happy that my climbs help Nepal be recognised in the world."

Earlier this month, Kami Rita posted snippets of life on Everest, including one of the Puja ceremony, a Tibetan Buddhist ritual done before Everest expeditions to pray for a safe and successful climb.

Kami Rita's feat comes one week after British mountaineer Kenton Cool summited Everest for the 19th time, also breaking his own record for the most climbs for a non-sherpa.

More than 500 people and their guides have climbed Everest successfully this climbing season, which is coming to an end.

Nepal issued more than 1,000 climbing permits this season - including for Everest and other peaks - according to its tourism department.

The number of Everest summit attempts has soared in recent years. However this has led to concerns around overcrowding and environmental impact.

Last year, authorities introduced a rule requiring climbers to clear up their own poo and bring it back to base camp to be disposed of.

Source: BBC
 
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