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Famed Sherpa guide climbs Mount Everest for record 31st time

Famed Sherpa guide climbs Mount Everest for record 31st time

Rhyl Journal27-05-2025
Kami Rita, 55, guided a group of clients reaching the summit in the early morning, according to Mingma Sherpa of the Kathmandu-based Seven Summits Treks. He was in good health and descending from the summit with other climbers to the base camp, he said.
Before heading to the mountain, Kami Rita had told The Associated Press he would try to climb to the top for the 31st or even possibly 32nd time. He made two successful climbs last year.
He had attempted to climb to the summit a few days ago but was forced to turn back due to bad weather.
Hundreds of climbers have attempted to climb Mount Everest from the Nepali side of the peak in the south this season, which ends this weekend. Most climbing of Everest and nearby Himalayan peaks is done in April and May, when weather conditions are most favourable.
Kami Rita, 55, first climbed Everest in 1994 and has been making the trip nearly every year since. He is one of many Sherpa guides whose expertise and skills are vital to the safety and success of foreign climbers aspiring to stand on top of the 8,849-metre (29,032-foot) mountain each year.
His father was among the first Sherpa mountain guides.
In addition to Everest, Kami Rita has climbed other peaks that are among the world's highest, including K2, Cho Oyu, Manaslu and Lhotse.
His closest competitor for the most climbs of Mount Everest is fellow Sherpa guide Pasang Dawa, who has made 29 successful ascents of the mountain.
Everest was first climbed in 1953 by New Zealander Edmund Hillary and Nepali Sherpa Tenzing Norgay.
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Luke Donald's Ryder Cup master plan: chartered planes and sleepovers
Luke Donald's Ryder Cup master plan: chartered planes and sleepovers

Telegraph

time6 hours ago

  • Telegraph

Luke Donald's Ryder Cup master plan: chartered planes and sleepovers

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Search for Scotland's first 'radical' skatepark lost in the undergrowth under Glasgow's Kelvingrove Park
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time9 hours ago

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Search for Scotland's first 'radical' skatepark lost in the undergrowth under Glasgow's Kelvingrove Park

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JIM SPENCE: I'm worried for future of Dundee FC as stadium exasperation grows
JIM SPENCE: I'm worried for future of Dundee FC as stadium exasperation grows

The Courier

time11 hours ago

  • The Courier

JIM SPENCE: I'm worried for future of Dundee FC as stadium exasperation grows

I'm worried for the future of Dundee FC. The owners, and perhaps the city council, could be doing much more to allay concerns that the club's safety is guaranteed, irrespective of what happens with the proposed new stadium at Camperdown Park. If the American owners called time and pulled the plug on their ownership of the club, who could or would step into the breach to save it? Managing Director John Nelms is exasperated with road planning authorities and the council over the hold ups to the project, and the war of words is becoming increasingly tetchy. But hoping to pressure planners in any public spat is inevitably doomed to failure. Nelms and the US-based Tim Keyes have owned the Dens Park club for 12 years and feel that its future can best be secured with the Camperdown project which will bring steady revenues in. Some critics have asked how much of the income will actually go directly to the football club as opposed to Dark Blue Property Holdings, the company behind the projects, which is owned by Keyes and Nelms. I'd ask a different question – if the Americans walked away from their long-term investment in Dundee FC who, if anyone, would step in to rescue the club? Six Scottish Premiership clubs are now American-owned. I suspect that's because owning a club is now too rich for the kind of local business folk who once did. I know of no one locally who would invest at Dens or probably any other Scottish club. Other than the ego trip and the fact that most owners have spare wealth, it's difficult to see why anyone would want to put hard earned cash into football. Previous owners at Dundee FC like Peter and Jimmy Marr found that their grand ambitions came at a heavy personal cost. I had a coffee with Peter last year and the money he told me he and his brother lost in their attempt to restore the dark blue glory years made my eyes water. Dens Park could undoubtedly be refurbished allowing the team to continue there. It would however require substantial investment in bringing the tired main stand and the Dens Road enclosure up to levels acceptable in the modern game. And it doesn't address the issue of how Dundee – in administration twice, in 2003 and 2010 – increase the revenue which the owners feel is needed to operate a top-flight football club. The way they reckon they can do that is by going ahead with a new stadium at Camperdown, where their plans for a crematorium, hotel and residential development will assist in generating revenue to help with the development of the football operation. As The Courier has previously revealed, the club looked at five other potential new stadium sites before choosing Camperdown. Those included the former gasworks earmarked for the Eden Project, two sites at Caird Park including where the Regional Performance Centre now stands, and at Drumgeith and also the land next to St John's High School. None met the criteria the club felt was required to incorporate all the desired elements. But what happens if the development doesn't get the go ahead? What is the future for Dundee FC? Before they bought the stadium from previous owner John Bennett, Dundee were paying almost half a million pounds a year in rental and energy costs. They may now be saving on the rent, but any money spent on maintaining Dens in its current dilapidated state is throwing good money after bad in trying to meet present day building standards. There doesn't appear to be any quick resolution in the pipeline on the stadium. But an affirmation from those involved that the club is safe, come what may, would help quell any understandable lingering fears for the future of a hugely important city institution.

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