Only last week Nepalese mountain guide Kami Rita Sherpa set a new record by climbing Everest a 23rd time. On Tuesday for good measure, he did it again, expedition organizers said.
“This is historic. He made his record climb this morning, guiding a team of Indian police,” Mingma Sherpa of Seven Summit Treks told reporters.
A guide for more than two decades, Sherpa first summited the 8,848m peak, the world’s highest, in 1994 while working for a commercial expedition.
Photo: Reuters
In the 25 years since, the 49-year-old has made 35 summits on five 8,000m peaks, including the world’s second-highest mountain, K2 in Pakistan.
Last year, he ascended Everest for the 22nd time, breaking the previous record of 21 summits that he shared with two other Sherpa climbers, both of whom have retired.
Returning last week to a colorful welcome at base camp after his 23rd climb, Sherpa had already said that he wanted to go up for a second time this season.
“I am very happy and proud. I think I might go up the mountain again this season,” he had said over a crackly telephone line after his descent.
The accomplished climber has often said that he did not intend to make records, but accumulated his summits in the course of his work as a guide.
“I did not climb for world records. I was just working. I did not even know you could set records earlier,” he said last month before setting off for the Everest base camp.
With their unique ability to work in a low-oxygen, high-altitude atmosphere, ethnic Sherpa guides are the backbone of Nepal’s climbing industry, helping climbers and hauling equipment up Himalayan peaks.
Mountaineering has become a lucrative business since Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay made the first ascent of Everest in 1953. Nepal has issued a record 381 permits costing US$11,000 each for this year’s spring climbing season, sparking fears of bottlenecks en route to the summit if poor weather cuts down the number of climbing days.
Most Everest hopefuls are escorted by a Nepalese guide, meaning that more than 750 climbers plan to tread the same path in the coming weeks, while at least 140 others are preparing to scale Everest from the northern flank in Tibet, expedition operators said.
This could take the total past last year’s record of 807 people reaching the summit. Many Himalayan mountains — including Everest — are at peak climbing season, with the window of good weather from late April to the end of May.
However, the death toll is already mounting.
An Indian climber last week died on Everest while a search continues for an Irish mountaineer who slipped and fell close to the summit. Six other foreign climbers have died on other 8,000m Himalayan peaks while two are missing.
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