January 26th, 2007

The Highest Traffic Jam in the World

Everest : The Highest Traffic Jam in the World : Discovery Channel

There have been much-publicized cases over the years of people on their way to the summit walking past dying climbers, and it happened again this year. A young Briton collapsed next to the summit route. Many climbers passed him on their way to the top.

Sir Edmund Hillary has been very vocal about this in the past and he had this to say this year: “I think the whole attitude toward climbing Mount Everest has become rather horrifying. The people just want to get to the top. They don’t give a damn for anybody else who may be in distress and it doesn’t impress me at all that they leave someone lying under a rock to die.”

I agree with his view that the attitude of climbing Everest has changed. In his day mountaineers had a code of conduct, and only real mountaineers would attempt the big mountains. You didn’t boast, you didn’t lie about your achievements, and you helped those in trouble. These were the values held dear by climbers like Mallory.

But there is more to it than that. I listened to one of our team members on the radio weeping as he tried to administer oxygen to the casualty. It was one of the most harrowing things I have ever heard. He did his very best to help.

Everyday Rescues

In fact, it was completely ignored by the press that our expedition had already rescued a fellow climber this season lower down the mountain. An Indian climber had lost consciousness on the descent from the North Col and had the luck to do this right in front of our group on the way up.

Far from climbing past him, our doctor, Terry O’Connor, started treatment while guides Shaun Hutson, Bill Crouse and Mark Wynton improvised a stretcher and organized the team to carry him down the mountain. He spent the night in Russell’s tent on our oxygen supplies and the next day he was on his way home. He was seriously ill from cerebral edema (swelling of the brain) and he certainly would have died without our intervention The last I heard from the Indian expedition leader, the climber was “95 percent OK.”

I have seen Russell’s guides perform this kind of rescue every season that I’ve been with them, with no mention in the press. Russell Brice never gets paid for the oxygen ($400 a bottle) and rarely gets any thanks. But when a dying climber is encountered high on the mountain there is a storm of criticism.

The simple truth is that it is very hard to rescue someone from near the summit. Everyone is very near their personal limit, everyone is self-absorbed, and it takes a huge effort of will to organize a dozen other people to carry the casualty, prepare tents and safeguard the route down.

And let’s be blunt, when people have paid $40,000 for a package holiday they are reluctant to turn away from their goal. In my experience, most climbers are decent people only too willing to help. But near the summit of Mount Everest, up in the death zone, your moral being is stripped away to a self-preserving core.

Money has perverted the spirit of mountaineering as it has perverted so many other things. Real climbers follow their passion well away from Mount Everest. I’m only sad that my boyhood dream of an impossibly remote Himalayan peak has evaporated like the clouds that embraced George Mallory.

Everest: Beyond the limit is an excellent documentary about the 70-day $40000 (per person) expedition that has lost a lot of it’s magic. Graham Hoyland has completed an unbelievably demanding project by directing a documentary at a location where a surprisingly big number of people get killed every year trying to survive in the ultra-harsh environment of the high camps. The local sherpas are superstious about touching or approaching the dead bodies. There must be about 200 bodies just lying there.

Posted by api in Outdoor pursuits

3 Comments »

3 Responses to “The Highest Traffic Jam in the World”

  1. Linda LeBlanc says:

    Through this climb, Apa hopes the world will hear the Sherpa story.

    Beyond the Summit is the first work to dramatize the lives of Sherpas in fiction. Details of their culture and religion are interwoven in a tale of romance and high adventure. It has something for everyone: a love affair between an American journalist and Sherpa guide, conflict between generations as the modern world challenges centuries of tradition, an Everest expedition from the porter’s point of view.

    Barnes and Noble Review
    Average Rating: *****
    07/07/2006
    “Best book on Nepal ever… This is the book to read before you embark on your pilgrimage to Nepal. The author knows and loves the people and the country, and makes you feel the cold thin air, the hard rocks of the mountains, the tough life of the Sherpa guides, and you learn to love them too. This is a higly literate, but also very readable book. Highly recommended.”
    – John (college professor)

    Amazon Reviews:

    ***** (5 stars) Truth and fiction
    September 14, 2006
    Reviewer:Bernhard Fassl (Utah, USA)
    This book covers the daily lives of people in the Himalayas. It not even goes beyond the summit but beyond the Shangri_la image often painted by visitors, people in search of spirituality. The story in itself is immensely spiritual but not the circumstances under which life has to take place.
    I represent a volunteer organization IPPG (International porter protection group, check us out at [...]) that gives high altitude porters a voice and I am depply touched by Linda LeBlanc’s account which is more truth than fiction.
    Bernhard Fassl MD

    Below are selections from reviews. To read the complete ones and excerpts go to http://www.beyondthesummit-novel.com

    A hard-hitting blend of adventure and romance which deserves a spot in any serious fiction collection. Midwest Book Review

    LeBlanc is equally adept at describing complex, elusive emotions and the beautiful, terrifying aspect of the Himalayan Mountains. Boulder Daily Camera

    LeBlanc’s vivid description of the Himalayas and the climbing culture makes this a powerful read. Rocky Mt News Pick of the Week

    A rich adventure into the heart of the Himalayan Kingdom. Fantastic story-telling from one who has been there. USABookNews.com

    A gripping, gut-twisting expedition through the eyes of a porter reveals the heart and soul of Sherpas living in the shadows of Everest. EverestNews.com

    Memorable characters and harrowing encounters with the mountains keep the action moving with a vibrant balance of vivid description and dialogue. Literary Cafe Host, Healdsburg, CA

    This superbly-crafted novel will land you in a world of unimaginable beauty, adventure, and romance. The love story will keep you awake at night with its vibrant tension and deep rich longing. Wick Downing, author of nine novels

    The book is available from amazon.com, chesslerbooks.com, Barnes & Noble and Borders Stores, and the web site for an autographed copy.

  2. Reko says:

    I’ve watched loads of stuff about Everest etc. and the stuff described above seems to be common nowadays. It wasn’t too long ago that one person even managed to survive in the death zone of everest (over 1-2 nights, i think) after being left to die.

    There’s been alot of criticism against the whole mentality of climbing to Everest. It’s no longer that much of a personal quest, but something you put extravagant amount of money into with sherpas, electronics and whatever. You get sponsorship deals and generally your whole support team is huge.

    Reinhold Messner was apparently quite taken a back when he visited the base camp of Everest in around 2002. What was once a small plain with a tent was now a tent complex with internet connections and he actually took 1-2 hours to walk across the camp.

  3. api says:

    Yes, every single member of the Russell’s expedition has a personal walkie talkie, even the Sherpas. According to the documentary there were about a hundred tents at the advanced base camp which is higher up on the mountain. That’s a lot of tents considering that you need to pay $10000 per person just in license fees. I can only imagine how many tents there must be at the regular base camp.

    It seems to me that Antarctica has become the new hip place among mountaineers.

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