
- 27 Dec, 2023
Four climbers dead on Everest, ‘Mountain of Extremes’
Avalanches killed 35 climbers on Mount Everest
the past two years – including 16 in one devastating day in 2014. At least one
person has died climbing the mountain in Nepal every year since 1900.
And now the 2016 climbing season has claimed
its first victims.
Since last Thursday four people have died on
the 29,035-foot peak, including a Sherpa. Rescue efforts are ongoing for two
other missing climbers.
“Everest is a mountain of extremes,” said Jon
Kedrowski, a geographer and climber who summited Mount Everest in 2012, when 10
climbers died. “At altitude, the
body deteriorates on a certain level.
The recent deaths – coming so quickly on the
heels of one another – have rattled climbers who are beginning their descent as
the Everest climbing season nears its end. April and May are the most common
months to attempt a climb because there tends to be less wind. Regardless, the
climate on the mountain is brutal. Temperatures range from -31 to -4
Fahrenheit.
April was the first month of climbing since
all ascent was halted after the catastrophic
earthquake that struck Nepal in 2015 and a deadly avalanche that
killed 16 Sherpas in
one day in 2014. More than 200 climbers have died since Tenzing Norgay
and Edmund Hillary made the first official ascent in 1953.
And yet the hopefuls keep coming. More than
400 people have attempted the Everest climb this season, including 288
foreigners and more than 100 Sherpas and guides, said Sudarshan Dhakal,
director of the Nepal Tourism Department. That’s more than the average for
previous seasons, he said.
Here’s a closer look at the recent fatalities.
Crew member Phurba Sherpa (no relation to the
journalist of the same name) fell to his death. The 25-year-old had been
working to fix a route about 150 meters near the summit when he fell, according
to Mingma Sherpa, the Nepal rescue team leader who was at the Everest Base
Camp.
The Sherpa
people are an ethnic group from Nepal who have lived in the high
altitudes of the Himalayas for generations. They have long served as guides
whose local expertise has been invaluable for foreigners attempting Everest
climbs.
Eric Arnold, 36, of the Netherlands, died at
night while heading back after a successful summit on Everest, according to
Tashi Lakpa Sherpa, the owner of Seven Summit Treks. A heart attack was
suspected, he said.
Eric Arnold on a climb.
Arnold was a triathlete based in Rotterdam,
according to his
Twitter bio.
While it’s unknown what might have caused
Arnold’s apparent heart attack, one of the first steps for anyone considering
an Everest trek is to consult a doctor for a full evaluation to screen for any
pre-existing conditions, experts say.
If Kedrowski is leading a peak expedition, he
screens his clients and designs training programs to help them prepare for the
journey. When altitude is a consideration, cardio is the emphasis, rather than
strength, Kedrowski said.
The elevation at Everest Base Camp is 17,590 feet,
an altitude that decreases oxygen by about 50%. Before attempting a May summit,
Kedrowski recommends arriving at base camp toward the beginning of April to
acclimatize for a few weeks.
Well aware of the hazards of climbing Everest,
Dr. Luanne Freer founded the Everest Base Camp Medical Clinic in 2003.
Physicians with mountaineering medical expertise and volunteers staff a medical
tent during each climbing season.
An Australian woman, Maria Strydom, who was
also traveling with the Seven Summit Treks, started suffering altitude
sickness. She had reached Camp IV, the final camp before the summit.
A rescue attempt failed to reach Maria Strydom.
Strydom, 34, could not climb any higher and a
rescue attempt to reach her failed, according to Tashi Sherpa. The finance
professor at Monash Business School in Australia died Saturday before she could
come back down to Camp III.
High-altitude cough and acute mountain
sickness, which can mean headaches and shortness of breath, are common among
Everest climbers, Kedrowski said.
Her mother, Maritha Strydom, who had been
posting updates about her daughter and son-in-law’s expedition, said on
Facebook: “I’m just too devastated to communicate, sorry.”
She posted hours later that she was “praying”
for her son-in-law, who the
Australian media reported was battling “against congestive heart
failure.”
Subash Paul, 44, died at Base Camp II from
altitude sickness, according to Wangchu Sherpa, Managing Director of Trekking
Camp Nepal.
Paul was part of a team (consisting of four
Indian climbers and four Sherpas) that also saw two members – Paresh Chandra
Nath and Goutam Ghosh – go missing Saturday night.
“It is not clear what happened. We believe the
weather suddenly deteriorated at some point, and the team lost direction,”
Wanchu Sherpa said.
An official at Nepal Tourism Department,
Gyanendra Shrestha, said a helicopter search was not possible because the
climbers were too high up the mountain.
“We are trying to communicate with other
expedition teams around that level to locate the missing climbers,” Shresthra
said.
The fourth climber from the team, Sunita
Hazra, was rescued and is undergoing treatment at base camp.
Meanwhile, an Indian woman suffered severe
frostbite injuries near Camp IV after climbing Everest from the Nepal side.
Seema Goswami was undergoing treatment at a
hospital after being airlifted from the Everest region, said Pemba Sherpa, the
Seven Summit Treks manager.
Since the 2016 climbing season opened on Everest, about 300 people have scaled, according to data from Everest Base Camp as of Saturday.
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