
Avalanche survivor marks 10 years since Nepal quake by scaling 446 UK mountains
Adventurer Alex Staniforth was 19 when he survived an avalanche on Mount Everest after a 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck Nepal on April 25 2015, killing thousands of people and injuring thousands more.
Mr Staniforth recalled the moment he believed he would lose his life after hearing a loud crack before being hit by the avalanche during his second climb of the world's highest peak.
Speaking over the phone from North Wales, he told the PA news agency: 'At this point, I wasn't aware of an earthquake. I didn't feel the ground shaking, but my teammates did. I was completely on my own, and I remember feeling something was wrong.
'I could sense there was an avalanche coming towards us, but I couldn't see it because the cloud was so bad… I remember feeling really confused, and then feeling this massive blast of white just knocking me off my feet.
'For the first time in my life, at 19, (I remember) thinking 'This is it, game over', and that sickening feeling of fear that I've never really felt before.'
The motivational speaker, who lives in Kendal, Cumbria, said he is 'grateful' to have survived the avalanche and is now commemorating 10 years since the earthquake by scaling 446 mountains across England and Wales in 50 days for charity.
In the UK, a mountain is generally considered to be a summit of more than 2,000ft (600m), according to the Ordnance Survey.
Mr Staniforth said: 'I'm very grateful that I survived that day, but I think, ever since then, I've just tried to make it count and try to give something back, and I hope that this challenge will do that.'
He is raising money for Mind Over Mountains, the charity he founded in 2020, which focuses on using walks in nature and venturing outdoors as a tool to support people with mental health issues.
He said the charity helps to 'give people the tools to stay mentally and physically well' by providing safe spaces for people to walk and talk about challenging topics around mental health and suicide.
'The outdoors has always been my natural health service, and I want other people to have access to that,' he said.
'By doing this challenge, it's not only opening conversations around mental health and suicide, but it's actually directly providing more access to (the outdoors), which, for me, is what makes it all worthwhile.'
The challenge started on Friday with the mountains of Yes Tor and High Willhays in Dartmoor, Devon, and Mr Staniforth is expected to finish in the Lake District at the end of June to mark his 30th birthday.
The whole journey will be human-powered because he is running and cycling to every mountain before scaling each one.
His bike ride was 103 miles (166km) and his longest run to come will be 36 miles (58km), while his highest mountain climb will see him tackle 11,483ft (3,500M) of ascent.
He said he wants his challenge to provide a 'bit of hope' for young people, particularly those approaching their 30s, who might be struggling to find a sense of purpose in life.
'I think when a lot of people reach 30… they feel like they're not where they should be or they feel like they're not where they want to be,' he said.
'There's a lot of mental health challenges and depression, and I just wanted to be a bit of hope for those people that things can go wrong but you can always pick yourself up and find another way.
'I think Everest, for a long time, was like my idea of success. It was like the be all and end all, and actually it's given me much bigger opportunities.'
The adventurer has already faced ankle issues and feeling sick from the 6,500 calories he is eating daily, but said the recent good weather and support from his team has encouraged him to persevere.
The journey will see him travel from Dartmoor to Bristol and through the Brecon Beacons and North Wales, before reaching the Peak District, the Yorkshire Dales, Northumberland and the Lake District.
So far, Mr Staniforth has raised nearly £12,000 of his £100,000 target which forms part of Mind Over Mountains' Project 500 campaign to raise £500,000.
To support his fundraiser, you can visit https://www.justgiving.com/page/446challenge and track his journey here https://z6z.co/alexstaniforth/446-challenge

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Glasgow Times
2 hours ago
- Glasgow Times
Glasgow's drug consumption room works says health secretary
Neil Gray was giving evidence to the House of Commons Scottish Affairs Committee inquiry into the Thistle Centre. He said it was saving lives and is not the reason for discarded needles and drug-taking equipment in the surrounding area. READ NEXT: Glasgow's drug consumption room to come under scrutiny at Westminster next week (Image: PA) The centre, which opened in January, has come under scrutiny in recent weeks with some nearby residents complaining there has been an increase in dumped needles on streets, gardens and waste ground. Gray defended the facility, stating it has already kept people alive. He said: 'Initial evidence suggests that the facility is proving to be successful. 'It has had seven ambulance call-outs and 35 medical emergencies. In all cases, the service user survived to return. 'Were these service users not within the Thistle, they would not have survived. 'Early evidence is that it is working. I want to see them alive to get onto a recovery journey. Clearly, you can't get into recovery if you're dead.' READ NEXT: Big rise in people taken to hospital in Glasgow for cocaine use The centre in Hunter Street in the East End is almost six months into a three-year pilot aimed at tackling drug deaths through overdose and blood-borne infection rates in the city. Gray said: 'It's better that this facility is embedded within the community and has good community outreach. 'It is necessary for a level of trust among those using the facility and those neighbouring it has no exclusion zone, that is the right approach and I support it. Gray was asked by Elaine Stewart, MP for Ayr, Carrick and Cumnock, about a reported increase in drug paraphernalia, including discarded needles, since the centre opened. Gray said the Thistle is located in the Calton area because of the historic levels of public injecting over a period of years. He said: 'It has not arrived alongside the Thistle. The policy intention is to see people injecting inside the Thistle, not in the community. 'It's for the local authority, local ADP and the facility to engage with the community and make sure that where there is discarded paraphernalia, it is cleaned up. 'It has not arrived with the facility. It is why it is there.' READ NEXT:'Devastating': drug deaths show a huge rise over the last year Diana Johnson, UK Minister for Drugs, told the committee the UK Government did not support drug consumption facilities and had no plans to change the law. She said: 'We are not going to be amending the Misuse of Drugs Act. We look at the evidence on harm reduction. 'We don't support drug consumption facilities. It is not our policy to be very clear.'


Scottish Sun
4 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
Anthony Joshua lined up to fight two heavyweight rivals in new deal… but they are NOT Tyson Fury or Daniel Dubois
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) ANTHONY JOSHUA is in talks over a new two-fight deal - but it may not include Tyson Fury or Daniel Dubois. AJ has been out since September when he was knocked out by Dubois at Wembley. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 3 Anthony Joshua is in talks over a new two-fight deal Credit: PA An arm injury has ruled him out of returning - leaving Joshua to have surgery on his elbow in May. And promoter Eddie Hearn revealed talks with Saudi boxing boss Turki Alalshikh have taken place in the meantime. Hearn told BoxingScene: "We are actually discussing a two-fight deal with Riyadh Season. 'We've been doing that, [Turki Alalshikh] said that on the night of Canelo [vs. William Scull, May 3], when we had our meeting, and that's the plan really. READ MORE IN BOXING OR NOT Anthony Joshua pleads with Team GB Olympian Delicious Orie not to retire "We want to box sometime this year, October, November, December.' Joshua, 35, snubbed a rematch with Dubois, 27, the IBF champion. Dubois now rematches Oleksandr Usyk on July 19 at Wembley two years after losing to the Ukrainian. Fury, 36, was twice beaten by Usyk, 38, in 2024 and announced his shock retirement in January. CASINO SPECIAL - BEST CASINO BONUSES FROM £10 DEPOSITS It dashes hopes of a British blockbuster with AJ but Hearn said: 'We'll see what happens with Dubois-Usyk, we'll see what happens with Fury. 'And if we don't fight those guys, we'll fight, and then maybe we'll follow one of those guys next year.' Josh Kelly played against Jordan Pickford but now eyes title fight against 'freak' champ who's as tall as Anthony Joshua Two names also on Joshua's radar is Dillian Whyte and American Jared Anderson. Hearn said: 'Two guys that have been discussed, but nothing concrete." AJ knocked out Whyte in 2015 and they were due to meet in a rematch in August 2023. That was until Whyte returned "an adverse finding" in his pre-fight drug test - having to subsequently withdraw. He blamed the failed test on a tainted supplement and returned last year with wins in Ireland and Gibraltar. Anderson, 25, meanwhile was KO'd by Martin Bakole, 31, last August but beat Marios Kollias in his February comeback. 3 Joshua was due to rematch Dillian Whyte in 2023 Credit: Richard Pelham / The Sun


Scottish Sun
7 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
Katherine Ryan pregnant with FOURTH child after hiding last pregnancy from BBC
Katherine's baby news comes two months after her skin cancer diagnosis BABY JOY Katherine Ryan pregnant with FOURTH child after hiding last pregnancy from BBC Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) COMEDIAN Katherine Ryan has revealed she's expecting baby number four. The 41-year-old and her partner Bobby Koostra will welcome another baby together, in an exciting addition to their family. Sign up for the Entertainment newsletter Sign up 2 Comedian Katherine Ryan has revealed she's expecting baby number four Credit: Getty 2 The star shares two children with her partner Bobby Credit: PA Katherine has three children with her husband Bobby, including son Fred, three, and daughter Fenna, two, as well as 15-year-old Violet from a previous relationship. And now, she'll be adding baby number four to the brood, as reported by Hello! The Sun has contacted Katherine's representative for comment. In 2022, the comedian admitted she hid one of her pregnancies from the BBC. She admitted to being so terrified of losing work when she was expecting her baby that she lied to TV bosses. The star was eight months pregnant when she presented ITV reality dating show Ready To Mingle — but no one had a clue she was even having her second child. Katherine revealed: 'During my pregnancy I wasn't telling anyone. "You can't get insured on any production if you are pregnant. 'Sometimes, if you are important enough, they go the extra mile. You see Holly Willoughby pregnant and that's because she's worth it. 'I tried to keep it secret. People just thought I was really fat for ages. I had to keep it quiet. I still needed to work to feed my family. 'I had been off for the whole pandemic. I walked on to set for Ready To Mingle eight months pregnant. 'If you go on the BBC's insurance site it says it doesn't insure for any matters of the womb. If your vagina falls off on set, that's it. 'You don't want to let down a production if you have some complication of pregnancy. 'Let's say you are on a sitcom and the whole day gets cancelled — you won't be insured. 'If you had an eye infection and they couldn't film you, that day would be insured and everyone would get paid and go home. 'It is so weird, so I just lied.'