A nine-year-old boy from southern California has become the youngest person in recorded history to reach the summit of Argentina’s Aconcagua mountain, which at 6,962m is the tallest peak in the southern hemisphere.
Tyler Armstrong of Yorba Linda reached the summit on Christmas Eve with his father, Kevin, and a Tibetan sherpa, Lhawang Dhondup, who has climbed Mount Everest multiple times. They were in fine spirits on Friday as they left Aconcagua, whose sheer precipices and bitter cold have claimed more than 100 climbers’ lives.
“You can really see the world’s atmosphere up there. All the clouds are under you, and it’s really cold,” Tyler said, describing the summit to reporters. “It doesn’t look anything like a kid’s drawing of a mountain. It’s probably as big as a house at the summit, and then it’s a sheer drop.”
Only 30 percent of the 7,000 people who obtain permits to climb Aconcagua each year make the summit, said Nicolas Garcia, who handled their logistics from down below.
No one under 14 is usually allowed, so the family had to persuade an Argentine judge that Tyler could safely accomplish the feat.
In their case, they took the “Polish Glacier” route, which does not require climbing, and roped themselves together only when crossing steep ice-covered slopes.
“Any kid can really do this, all they have to do is try. And set their mind to the goal,” said Tyler, who worked out twice a day for a year and a half to prepare for the climb. He also held fundraisers, not only to defray the cost, but to raise money for CureDuchenne, which funds muscular dystrophy research.
“I think Tyler’s record speaks for itself and because I think he’s doing it for a good cause, he’s doing it to help other people, I think the judge recognized that,” said his father, an emergency medical technicians.
Tyler’s mother is a pediatric neuropsychologist, and they also have another younger son, Dylan.
“Most people think we as parents are pushing Tyler to do this, when it’s completely the opposite. I wouldn’t climb it if I didn’t have to, but my wife makes me do it to keep watch on him,” he said.
“He’s a great dad,” Tyler said. “At 20,000 feet [6,096m], he wanted to turn around, but I kept him going. And the day we were getting off the mountain, he had a blister and it popped ... He made it to the summit and everything, but that dang blister made him ride a mule.”
Aconcagua’s previous record-holder was Matthew Moniz of Boulder, Colorado, who was 10 when he reached the summit in 2008.
There was one younger boy who climbed the lower slopes of Aconcagua, Garcia said: An Inca boy was sacrificed 500 years ago at 5,300m on Piramide, one of the mountain’s lower peaks.
Scientific tests on the mummy, recovered in 1985, put his age at about seven.
Tyler had already climbed the 5,895m Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania at the age of eight, and with Aconcagua conquered, is determined to reach all “seven summits,” the highest mountains on each of the seven continents.
Luckily for Kevin Armstrong, who also coaches his kids in soccer, his younger son prefers a more earthly sport.
“I was not a climber. He got me doing this because he wanted to, and I wanted to experience it with him,” Armstrong said.
Financially, these mountaineering expeditions have been difficult, Armstrong said.
“My wife and I have just kind of scraped everything we can together and put off family vacations and everything else so that Tyler can do this,” he said.
“I’ve had to charge half of this on my credit card, but he did what he needed to do, so I felt I needed to support him,” Armstrong added.
Next on Tyler’s list is Mount McKinley in Alaska, North America’s tallest peak.
“I do want to be the youngest for that, but we don’t have the money,” Tyler said. “If we get a sponsor, we can do it. If not, we can’t, because we’re broke.”
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