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The queue at the top of the world: Dozens of climbers wait for their turn to reach the top of Mount Everest in human traffic jam

The queue at the top of the world: Dozens of climbers wait for their turn to reach the top of Mount Everest in human traffic jam

Daily Mail​6 days ago

Hundreds of climbers have been captured in striking images queuing to reach the summit of the highest mountain in the world.
Photographs taken from the snowy mountain showed adventurers in their orange protective gear forming a snaking queue to the peak on May 18.
The long line of climbers wound from Camp 4 to the summit, with the brave climbers huddling in the high winds.
'According to the Department of Tourism, over 500 climbers, including Sherpa guides, have successfully summited Everest so far this spring season,' the Everest Chronicle reported.
Many more climbers continued on throughout the rest of last week.
Stunning photographs of the queues of climbers saw the white snow-capped mountains dotted with bodies as a white mist hovered overhead.
One image even captured a group of five taking a selfie in their thick winter coats, ski masks and goggles.
'It started out a little blustery, but the winds abated by midday when we reached Camp 3,' American mountaineer, guide and expedition leader Garrett Madison reported.
'Forecasts are challenging, [but] our summit itinerary stays,' a Brazilian team wrote from Camp 2. It estimated summiting on May 22.
In May last year, experts feared overcrowding on the world's highest mountain may have played a role in causing the collapse of a cornice - an overhanging mass of hardened snow on the edge of a precipice - which led to the disappearance of Daniel Paul Paterson, 40, and Pastenji Sherpa, 23.
The pair had not been heard from since they reached the summit and were feared dead.
It comes as Nepal's mountaineering community celebrated the conquest of Mount Everest with a rally of climbers, guides and others who gathered for International Everest Day.
The event Thursday marked the 72nd anniversary of the first summit climb of Mount Everest on May 29, 1953, by New Zealander Edmund Hillary and Sherpa guide Tenzing Norgay.
Nepal's minister for culture and tourism led the celebration in the capital, Kathmandu, that included a walk around the city and a gathering at the old palace.
'We are celebrating May 29 as the international Sagarmatha (Everest) day because the world needs to continue to recognise the achievement and contribution of Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay,' said Ang Tshering, who runs Kathmandu-based Asian Trekking.
The event was not just a celebration for the mountaineering community but also a festival for Nepal and the world, said Tshering, who has helped hundreds of clients scale the Himalayan peaks.
Oxygen cylinders are kept on a slope on the way to the summit of Mount Everest in Nepal, May 18, 2025
Nepal contains eight of the highest peaks in the world and every year hundreds of foreign climbers fly to the country in South Asia to tackle the mountains.
The climbers hire thousands of people in Nepal to assist their climbs by carrying gear, cooking food and generally taking care of them as they spend weeks in the mountains.
Nepal's government collects money from the climbers through permit fees.
The end of May also marks the end of the popular spring mountaineering season, when climbers finish their adventures and retreat from the peaks before the monsoon season brings foul weather.
'This day is celebrated also to mark the end of the climbing season where we gather climbers and the community,' Jiban Ghimire of Shangri-La Nepal Trek said.
According to Nepal's Department of Mountaineering, 468 foreign climbers from 57 countries received permits to climb Everest by the end of May, along with a roughly equal number of Nepalese mountain guides.
Many were able to scale the peak, but officials were still working to verify how many reached the 29,032ft summit.
Climbers must report to the department with proof they reached the summit and cleared their garbage before they are issued the official certificate.
Famed Sherpa guide Kami Rita reached the Everest summit for the 31st time Tuesday, breaking his own record for the most climbs to the top of the famed mountain.

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