Santa Fe New Mexican

World’s 14 highest peaks in 6 months: Nepali man smashes climbing record

- By Megan Specia

A Nepali climber has reached the summit of the world’s 14 highest mountains in just over six months, setting a record for a feat that took other climbers years to complete.

The climber, Nirmal Purja, 36, completed his goal early Tuesday morning when he reached the top of Shishapang­ma in Tibet along with a Sherpa team.

“Mission Achieved!” was the simple message he relayed in a post on social media.

“It has been a grueling but humbling six months, and I hope to have proven that anything is possible with some determinat­ion, self-belief and positivity,” Purja said in a statement.

A spokesman for Seven Summit Treks, a Nepal-based company that helped organize some of Purja’s expedition­s, said by phone that it was in touch with his climbing team and confirmed that he had reached the top of Shishapang­ma.

The attempt to be the fastest to reach the top of all the world’s known mountains over 8,000 meters, or about 26,350 feet, which Purja called Project Possible, started in April, when he scaled Annapurna. He then quickly tackled the 13 remaining mountains, all of which are in the Himalayan and Karakoram ranges that stretch across China, India, Nepal and Pakistan.

Climbing the world’s 8,000ers, as they are known, requires time in the so-called death zone, an altitude at which reduced oxygen levels make it difficult for humans to breathe effectivel­y and where climbers can die.

The previous speed record for scaling all 14 peaks was held by Kim Chang-ho of South Korea, who completed his climbs in seven years, 10 months and six days. He narrowly broke an earlier record held by Jerzy Kukuczka of Poland, who took seven years, 11 months and 14 days.

Kim later died in a storm on the Mount Gurja in Nepal, and Kukuczka died in 1989 while trying to scale the south face of Lhotse in Nepal.

A member of Purja’s team said she was still awaiting news of a safe descent and said he would be out of contact for several hours while he made his way back down the mountain.

Purja drew worldwide attention to his attempt in May, when he posted a photo of a traffic jam of climbers near the summit of Mount Everest.

Purja managed to reach the top of Everest — a climb he has made several times — but it was an exceptiona­lly deadly season on the world’s tallest peak, with 11 people dying during the window of several weeks with favorable conditions for climbing. At the time, he spoke from Everest base camp about the risks associated with climbing at such high altitudes.

“The mountains draw people, always have and always will,” he said in a message. “Everest is the highest mountain and has the highest draw. You can’t blame climbers for wanting to summit. You can’t blame guides for leading them.”

He said an exceptiona­lly short climbing window also limited the days that climbers could make a final push to the summit.

But he noted that some people were taking unnecessar­y risks and said that the number of permits, expedition­s, guides and climbers needed to be better regulated.

“The most important thing is safety — every person on the mountain, not just your own,” Purja said.

The government of Nepal is planning new restrictio­ns on permits to climb Mount Everest in an effort to limit traffic on the mountain. Purja took part in four unplanned rescues during his attempt at the 14 climbs.

Purja credits his endurance to his natural physiology and to his intense military training. He had served in the British armed forces for 16 years before leaving to attempt the record, including 10 years in the special forces. He was a member of the Brigade of Gurkhas — a unit made up of Nepali citizens that has been part of the British military for more than 200 years.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States