The 7-Day Mission Everest -- Oh, and the Sherpas
"The guys just rallied around and put in rescue techniques to be able to get me down the mountain very quickly. The team ethos of having a team of operators that have such incredible skills, but also leave no man behind, get it done, let's move quickly.""Garth noticed my oxygen had run out. And Staz was putting rope systems in place to make sure I got down the hill quickly.""It wasn't that I'd become a liability yet, but it was mitigating the chance that I could become one. Those are the things that make these sorts of seven-day things possible because everybody's constantly awake and alert.""You're only getting three hours' sleep a day and it's very cold, very windy, very bleak, and your body's degrading.""Back now in Kathmandu, we've still not processed what we've just experienced. It's a bit like soldiering. Often you find yourself in very kinetic environments and it takes a while to process because things are moving so quickly."Kevin Godlington, one of four British men to set a time-record mounting Mount Everest
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| Traditionally climbers have spent weeks between base camp and higher camps before summiting Everest Reuters |
Special British Forces veterans Al Carns, Garth Miller, Kevin Godlington and Anthony (Staz)
Stazicker left London on May15, and reached the summit of Mount Everest
on Wednesday morning, May 20 -- with them five Sherpas and a cameraman.
The usual climbing time clocks in from weeks to days following
acclimatizing beyond the mountain's base camp, timing the climb up the
mountain in gradual rests at camps set up along the way to the summit.
The need to acclimatize in gradual steps as progress is made toward the
final summit, is to allow the human body to adjust itself to thinner
air at higher points of the atmosphere, and in the process avoid a
cerebral or pulmonary edema.
The
British team set out to eliminate that typical, gradual process of
acclimatization, in a bid to mount the 29,032-foot summit through a more
direct and expeditious trip. Their goal was to achieve the total
enterprise, from their homes in Britain to a return, goal achieved, with
the summit sandwiched between departure and arrival back home. And they
succeeded. Their preparations consisted of challenging their bodies
before even setting out, by sleeping in hypoxic tents for months prior
to arriving in Nepal. As well, they were treated with xenon gas, under
the direction of Lukas Furtenbach who has experimented for years with
methodology to cut short time spent on Everest.
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They put in a total of 50 hours of climbing and returning to base camp during their "door-to-door" success
in achieving their goal whose itinerary mapped out two days of travel,
three days ascending the mountain and two days descending. The first day
of climbing saw them challenged by an avalanche, while the "meandering of the jet stream"
around the mountain kicked up ferocious winds that threatened to force
the team back down the mountain precipitously. Of their number only
Godlington became ill, with vomiting and diarrhea.
The
use of xenon gas was promoted by German physician Michael Fries who had
persuaded Furtenbach it had the potential for neuro-protection. And
with its use, according to Furtenbach, the expedition managed to succeed
in their enterprise to the extent that it "went better than expected".
The four climbers inhaled the gas on May 5, its protective properties
assessed to peak in synchronicity with their push to the summit of the
mountain.
Al Carns spoke of his impression of the climbing experience, comparing it to climbing "30 100-story buildings"
over a three-day period. The men's military experience came into play
as they focused themselves solely on the goal. In the process they
committed to raising funds for veterans and military families. Their
decision to make use of xenon to minimize physiological risks in their
unheard-of attack on the mountain in mere days has raised charges of the
use of unconventional new fixes verging on 'cheating' to achieve their
goal.
"When you sort of challenge the status quo, it does become something
that people immediately start to defend against. For us, the use of the
xenon gas has always been about the only two things that kill you in the
mountain physiologically: a pulmonary edema or a cerebral edema",
countered Godlington. Everest's 'death zone' -- above 26,000 feet -- is
notorious for the very real risk of cerebral edema, which xenon offered
protection against. There is an annual death count where climbers have
not made it off the mountain alive.
| The team's rapid ascent has drawn sharp scrutiny from Nepali authorities for the controversial use of xenon gas prior to their arrival. PHOTO: AFP |
There
are bodies of those who were unable to complete their personal goals of
a successful climb and a safe descent, that successive climbers are
exposed to. Those corpses are left there on the mountain slopes simply
because it is too difficult and dangerous to remove them, and they rest
there in their eternal presence as testament to humanity's curiosity and
search for challenges to surmount. Godlington pointed out that his team
did not, as charged, use xenon "fundamentally to cheat, and it's never been about that".
And
then, there is another kind of reality, one that has overlooked the
role of Nepal's taken-for-granted guides, the Sherpas, five of whom
accompanied the four British climbers, sharing with them the trials and
difficulties encountered. Little fame attaches to their service to the
British climbers who, without the attendance and assistance of the
Sherpas likely would never have been able to make that enterprise a
success. And while the British men made use of the protective gas, the
Sherpas would not have.
In
2003, Lhakpa Gelu Sherpa climbed from base camp to the summit in 10
hours, 56 minutes after acclimatizing on Everest. In comparison, it took
the four men four days and about 18 hours to go up and back, according
to Furtenbach's estimate.
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| The four British former soldiers aim to be back in London within the week Photo: Sandro Gromen |
"Immediately after taking the xenon, I didn't have noticeable physiological changes, so there's nothing really there to report.""We're very fatigued, but when we were on the mountain there were no headaches so it seems as if the neuroprotective properties and everything else must have been working.""We felt great from that respect because over a long time at altitude your body just degrades so maybe we can attribute some of that to xenon.""Climbing Everest is never just about reaching the summit. It's about pushing human boundaries safely, responsibly, and with integrity.""The 7-Day Mission Everest was never a stunt ... it was a meticulously planned scientific and medical expedition designed o explore the future of high-altitude mountaineering.""...Every step was calculated, every risk mitigated. Our goal? To improve mountain safety for everyone, not to glorify speed."Lukas Furtenbach, climb director
Labels: 7-Day Everest Expedition, Ascending Everest At Speed, Cerebral Edema, Experimental Gas, Four British Climbers, Nepali Sherpas



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