Everest 2012: A Matter of Perspective
It may be Friday the 13 but that is not all bad around the world, here especially if you are at Everest […]
Climbing the World to End Alzheimer's
Climbing the World to End Alzheimer's
It may be Friday the 13 but that is not all bad around the world, here especially if you are at Everest […]
Kind of a quiet day today as most teams are in the upper Khumbu and perhaps a few have arrived at Everest […]
Teams continue to make the march towards Everest Base Camp on the South, while there is the usual dearth of news from […]
More and more teams are now in Kathmandu preparing to catch their flights to Lukla or Lhasa. Anyone who has followed me […]
The Everest 2012 Season is officially underway with climbers now in Kathmandu and some already trekking towards Everest Base camp on the […]
The last summit window was heralded as a great success by many teams. However it was not without incidents and many were […]
update 2: 50+ climbers to South Col on Sat May 15, few, if any, went for summit as winds picked up. Look […]
The lure of Everest’s summit has taken on new dimensions and is spreading throughout the south base camp. First up, we have […]
With teams mostly enjoying the comforts and electricity of low villages or base camps, the blogs are full of rich details about their recent acclimatization climbs. As I have said so many times, I deeply appreciate it when a climber takes the time, and sometimes risk, to describe what is happening on the mountain. Not so much for the mountaineering details but for the insight into the human experience of climbing Everest. Thanks to you all. But first some mountaineering status.
This was a busy week on Everest with the first summits for the 2010 season along with a risky gamble. And several accidents and, sadly, a reported death on nearby Lhotse. A team of nine Sherpas fixed the ropes to the summit on the south side. They included Sherpas from IMG, Alpine Ascents and Himex. One western guide who was doing route work high on the mountain also joined them to the summit. Over on the north, it is an entirely different story. According to teams, the ropes are currently fixed only to camp 3 or about 27,300′, far short of the summit and thus stopping most summit attempts. The weather has been difficult this year. As usual, the north receives more snow and wind than the south and increases the difficultly of climbing on that side. It appears no summits attempts until May 11th when the winds could begin to ease but more likely it will be a few days later than that.
Climbing the World to End Alzheimer's
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