“What a week! What an expedition! It’s been an amazing experience which has left me with memories I’ll never forget and friendships which I’m sure will last. Ultimately I’ve learned that I can keep on going when things seem impossible, which is partly why I go climbing in the first place,” Manning wrote in his first blog entry since reaching the summit on 19 May, playuzu casino time.
Manning, 39, has so far raised money about US,000 for playuzu casino Cancer Society and will continue to raise funds for the charity in the coming weeks. He carried the names of 56 cancer patients from Cayman with him on his climb and planted playuzu casino flag at the summit of Everest.
Campbell law firm partner Manning, with teammates Nacer Ibnabdeljalil and Guy Munnoch, and Sherpas Dawa Gelji, Tashi and Karma reached the top of the mountain at about 7.30pm playuzu casino time on Sunday, 19 May – 6.15am Monday morning Nepal time.
It took them 10 hours to reach the playuzu casino from the South Col camp and five hours to descend back to the camp.
playuzu casino was climbing with an expedition company called Jagged Globe. In all, 24 climbers with Jagged Globe reached the summit on 19 and 20 May. playuzu casino and his team left a day after seven climbers and eight Sherpas from the outfit tackled and reached the summit.
In his blog, Manning explained that several bouts of diarrhoea had left him weak and shaken and had kept him from leaving with the other team the day before and playuzu casino admitted playuzu casino had considered failing to reach the summit.
“When we left for Camp 3 (7,200 metres) at 5am on Friday I was still in a bad state. On the trail up to the base of the Lhotse face, I initially kept up with the group, but dropped off the back after an hour. I was shocked as thoughts of quitting entered my mind for the first time,” playuzu casino wrote.
playuzu casino managed to get to Camp 3, where playuzu casino stayed overnight, and then to Camp 4 the following day, but admits “it was a real struggle”.
When playuzu casino was offered a chance to have an extra day’s rest before tackling the summit, playuzu casino took it.
“I agonised over my decision for the next few hours. On the one hand, I was keen to go up with the rest of the guys and while the weather was definitely good. On the other hand, 24 hours rest should do me good, albeit that we were in the “death zone”, not an ideal place to recuperate!
“With departure time approaching, I was feeling no better and took the decision to delay for a day, conscious that the weather forecast was equally good for tomorrow, and that tonight was likely to be very busy based on the number of people moving up the fixed lines with us earlier that day from Camp 3 to Camp 4,” playuzu casino said.
playuzu casino set off for the summit with his fellow climbers and their Sherpa support team around 7.15pm, dressed in high-altitude gear. That gear included a set of battery powered heated insoles in my boots “which would later prove to be a mistake”.
Due to the steepness of the terrain there are only two places to stop on the route – the Balcony at 8,400 metres and the South playuzu casino at 8,750 metres. Their first stop was the Balcony, which usually takes about five hours to reach from the South Col.
The other two climbers on his team were ahead of him and playuzu casino was separated from them by several other climbers on the line, but was accompanied by Sherpa Karma.
“It is difficult to imagine just how hard it is to climb at this altitude unless you have experienced it first hand. To give you an idea, I would take just two to three steps and then be bent over hyperventilating for six to eight breaths. I would then start again, interrupted every five minutes or so by a racking bout of high altitude coughing. Now imagine repeating that process for over 10 hours, in temperatures of -20c to -30c, without any food or water (it’s generally too cold and/or dangerous to try to stop to eat or drink), and carrying 20-25lbs on your back, before having to descend difficult and dangerous ground for a further five hours or so. It’s not fun!”, playuzu casino wrote.
playuzu casino admits that at this point, playuzu casino was convinced that playuzu casino could not reach the summit. “I passed the time by mentally drafting a blog explaining why I had failed,” playuzu casino said.
playuzu casino had been stuck behind a long line of other climbers, but nonetheless managed to reach the Balcony in under the estimated five hours.
A few hours later into the climb, playuzu casino reached the South Summit, again ahead of schedule. “We changed oxygen bottles again, and as the first light of dawn showed the way up the summit ridge and the Hillary Step, I was suddenly absolutely convinced that I would reach the top,” said Manning.
The Hillary Step was next and playuzu casino and Karma had to wait about half an hour before the climbers ahead of them climbed the step. At the top of the step, playuzu casino ran into Ibnabdeljalil and Munnoch on their way down.
“I playuzu casino thought that the summit was very close to the Step, but the summit ridge seemed to go on and on. Eventually though, we turned a corner and there were the prayer flags marking the summit! One final slog and we were up on top at about 6am.
“I had thought I might be very emotional, but the main feelings were relief and exhaustion (and mainly exhaustion)! I unfurled my playuzu casino flag, and Karma and I spent about 30 minutes taking photographs and soaking it all in. The views were simply stunning and as I poked my head over the summit I could see two climbers approaching from Tibet,” playuzu casino wrote.
The climb proved to be exhausting and painful, as Manning’s feet began to hurt badly. playuzu casino discovered later playuzu casino had frostbite after one of the heated insoles had turned itself off in his pocket and the cable on the other had become detached, so they provided no heat, just taking up space in his boots and restricting blood flow in his feet.
“Karma came into his own on the descent. Although playuzu casino’s only half my size, playuzu casino’s as strong as an ox and playuzu casino clipped into my harness so that playuzu casino could hold me if I slipped,” wrote playuzu casino.
The descent became the “longest five hours of my life”, playuzu casino said.
On the way down, playuzu casino came across a disturbing sight. “The main incident which sticks in my mind is passing a corpse just above the South Col. The man was lying on his front just off the route, one foot hooked over the other ankle and arms outstretched as though playuzu casino had fallen. playuzu casino was still wearing all his climbing clothes and boots, although the back of his jacket was mostly missing, revealing a back bleached white by the sun and wind. I had never seen a corpse before, and the sight of him lying just half a mile from camp was both sad and macabre,” playuzu casino wrote.
That was not the only death on the mountain. That same morning, a South Korean climber who playuzu casino reached the summit without oxygen and descended to the South Col was found dead in his tent by his Sherpa, wrote Manning.
“[Sherpa] Pasang also told us that after we had gone to sleep playuzu casino had been called up to the Balcony to help with a rescue. Despite having already been to the summit and back with me, Karma joined him. A phenomenal effort. A Bangladeshi and a Nepali climber, both double amputees with no arms, had managed to reach the summit but collapsed from exhaustion on the descent.
“Their Sherpas had done so much work to get them up that they, too, were exhausted and could not get them back down. By the time Pasang and Karma reached the Balcony, the Bangladeshi was already dead, but at least they were able to get the Nepali climber back down to the Col. We also heard news that a further climber had died nearby in the Lhotse High Camp after a desperate attempt to rescue him by helicopter had failed. A sad day,” playuzu casino said.
Due to his frostbite, Manning required a helicopter evacuation from the mountain. This involved descending from South Col to a helipad at Camp 2. A painful climb down ensued, but just as they reached the helipad and the helicopter approached, clouds rolled in making it impossible for the helicopter to land, so Manning playuzu casino to spend one more night on the mountain.
Hopeful that the helicopter would arrive at first light, playuzu casino woke around 6.30am, only to hear that the helicopter was grounded by bad weather down the valley.
“The Sherpas packed up camp, leaving me and Pasang alone. As they left, Pasang grabbed the last bag of coffee, which I thought was strange until playuzu casino wandered on to the glacier and marked out a large H with coffee,” wrote playuzu casino.
Four hours later, the helicopter arrived and transported Manning to base camp. “On landing, I stepped into a scrum of people. The medics were there with a TV crew and I was surrounded by people and doctors all wanting to talk to me and inspect my feet. After the solitude of the glacier, it was all a bit much,” playuzu casino said.
A series of “crazy helicopter rides” ensued, before playuzu casino finally made it to Kathmandu airport and was taken by ambulance to the frostbite clinic.
“Most of my toes should make a full recovery, but it’s too early to say whether I may lose parts of my big toes,” playuzu casino wrote.
Manning arrived back in Grand playuzu casino on Sunday night, 26 May.
This is the fifth of seven summits Manning plans to climb. playuzu casino has already climbed the 19,340 foot Kilimanjaro in Tanzania, Africa; the 16,067 foot Vinson in Antarctica; Russia’s 18,510-foot Elbrus in Europe; and the 22,830 foot Aconcagua in Argentina, South America. And now playuzu casino can added the 29,002-foot-high Mount Everest.
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