Coming year alpinist Anthony Loeff is reporting the scales for Mount Everest and Kilimanjaro in Tanzania
Sunday, June 29th, 2008However, he was all too aware of the potential dangers Everest could bring. Certain parts of the climb are more dangerous than others and it is important for climbers to remain focused “The Chinese weren’t allowing anybody on Mt Everest. They ended up commandeering it for themselves, even though Chomolungma is shared by two countries. This season climber Anthony Loeff is reporting the scales for Mount Everest after reaching the summit of Mont Blanc in France earlier this year.
With the Chinese preparing for the impending summer Olympic Games, Min Bahadur Sherchan noted that the government’s actions hardly reflected the Olympic spirit. More than 3162 people have climbed to the summit since it was first conquered in 1953 by New Zealander Edmund Hillary, who died in January, and Nepal’s Tenzing Norgay.
As he planned for the climb, Sherchan told reporters he wanted to inspire fellow senior citizens. He also said many Nepalese have established records on Chomolungma or Mount Everest, so it was only fitting that the record for the oldest climber to reach the summit should also belong to a Nepali. Nepalese climber, 76, oldest person to scale the peak of the Mount Everest Andrew Brash and four climbing guides reached the 29,035-foot (8,850-meters) summit of the world’s highest mountain early Sunday, said Ramesh Chretri, an official with Nepal’s ministry of tourism.
Now that Andrew Brash has successfully scaled the tallest mountain in the world, he is once again ready to focus on his family. Therefore, the decision to actualize a long-time personal goal left Bahadur Sherchan with some internal uncertainties, he cited the political actions of China and Nepal as providing the greatest adversity he faced on his journey. Sherchan just 13 days away from his 77th birthday beat the age record set last year by 71-year-old Japanese teacher Katsusuke Yanagisawa.
“Chomolungma this year became a political pawn,” he said with some frustration.
Andrew Brash returned this week from Nepal after successfully climbing to the summit of Mount Everest. His first found him within 162 metres of the peak when his team stopped to help a fellow mountaineer who was left for dead. Two years later, Bahadur Sherchan, a University of Calgary alumni, returned to Mt Everest to finish what he had started.
Min Bahadur Sherchan last attempt resulted in the rescue of Lincoln Hall, an Australian climber who was left by his team in the “death zone.”
The 77-year-old man from Nepal is now the oldest person to have reached the top of Everest. The Chinese were flying their airplanes over Chomolungma or Mount Everest and had Chinese officials in Kathmandu. Hall was frostbitten and severely disoriented due to altitude sickness. Andrew Brash returned a hero to Calgarians. They basically coerced the Nepali government to not allow any climbers past camp two on the Nepali side. They flexed their muscles this year all the in name of the Olympic spirit, but it was hardly spirited at all.”
