
A renowned mountain guide puts clients on Everest summit less than a week after they left London
The four British climbers flew from London to Kathmandu on May 16 and reached the 8,849-meter (29,032-foot) summit Wednesday morning local time, according to Lukas Furtenbach, who has been using different methods over the past five years to speed up the climb.
The climbers had put in months of preparation, training in hypoxia tents and undergoing xenon gas treatment at a clinic in Germany before heading to Nepal.
'Xenon improves the acclimatization and protects the body from altitude sickness and the effects from the hypoxic environment. Xenon makes the climb safer," Furtenbach told The Associated Press from the base camp at Everest.
He said all the climbers were safe and returning back to lower camps after the successful ascent on Wednesday
Climbers normally spend weeks at base camp to acclimatize to the higher altitude. They make practice runs to the lower camps on Everest before beginning their final attempt on the peak, so that their bodies are prepared for the low pressure and lower level of oxygen available.
The new method is likely to reduce the time climbers spend out of their home countries and cut the number of days they need to take off work, also cutting down on expenses.
Nepal does not have any rules on how many days climbers must spend acclimatizing or making practice climbs. Their permits, which cost $11,000 each, are valid for 90 days. Climbing season normally wraps up by the end of May, when the weather deteriorates and monsoon season begins. The ropes and ladders fixed to the mountain are then pulled out.
Hundreds of foreign climbers have been given permission to climb Everest this year. Roughly half of them have succeeded and the remaining will likely attempt their climb within the next few days.
Hashtags

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


The Independent
a day ago
- The Independent
Rescuers search for missing flash flood victims in remote Kashmir village
Rescuers searched for missing people in a remote village in India-controlled Kashmir on Friday after flash floods caused by torrential rains a day earlier left at least 60 people dead, officials said. Teams of disaster management officials, police and soldiers helped by local villagers scoured the devastated Himalayan village of Chositi on Friday. Officials halted rescue operations overnight but rescued at least 300 people Thursday after a powerful cloudburst triggered floods and landslides. Officials said many missing people were believed to have been washed away. More rescue teams were headed to the area to strengthen relief operations. At least 50 seriously injured people were treated in local hospitals, many of them rescued from a stream filled with mud and debris. Disaster management official Mohammed Irshad said the number of missing people could increase. Weather officials forecast more heavy rains and floods in the area. Chositi is a remote Himalayan village in Kashmir's Kishtwar district and the last village accessible to motor vehicles on the route of an ongoing annual Hindu pilgrimage to a mountainous shrine at an altitude of 3,000 meters (9,500 feet) and about an 8-kilometer (5-mile) trek from the village. Officials said the pilgrimage, which began July 25 and was scheduled to end on Sept. 5, was suspended. The devastating floods swept away the main community kitchen set up for the pilgrims, as well as dozens of vehicles and motorbikes. More than 200 pilgrims were in the kitchen at the time of the flood, which also damaged or washed away many of the homes clustered together in the foothills, officials said. Photos and videos on social media show extensive damage with household goods strewn next to damaged vehicles and homes in the village. Authorities made makeshift bridges Friday to help stranded pilgrims cross a muddy water channel. Sudden, intense downpours over small areas known as cloudbursts are increasingly common in India's Himalayan regions, which are prone to flash floods and landslides. Cloudbursts have the potential to wreak havoc by causing intense flooding and landslides, impacting thousands of people in the mountainous regions. Experts say cloudbursts have increased in recent years partly because of climate change, while damage from the storms also has increased because of unplanned development in mountain regions. Kishtwar district is home to multiple hydroelectric power projects, which experts have long warned pose a threat to the region's fragile ecosystem.


The Guardian
2 days ago
- The Guardian
Dozens dead and hundreds missing after cloudburst triggers flood in Kashmir
At least 34 people died and more than 200 were missing after heavy rain caused a flash flood in Indian Kashmir, officials said on Thursday. The incident occurred in the town of Chashoti in Kishtwar district, a stopover point on a pilgrimage rout up to the Himalayan shrine of Machail Mata. Many of those washed away by the sudden cloudburst are thought to be pilgrims who were about to trek to the temple


Telegraph
4 days ago
- Telegraph
Nepal waives fee for 97 mountains to coax climbers away from Everest
Nepal will waive the climbing fee for 97 remote Himalayan peaks for the next two years to draw tourists away from the increasingly congested Mount Everest. The move comes as the government debates stricter rules requiring climbers to first scale a 7,000-metre peak in the country before being allowed to climb 8,849m (29,030ft) Everest, the world's highest peak, where bottlenecks have fuelled concerns over safety, waste and environment. Authorities have also decided to increase the permit fee from $11,000 (£8,750) to $15,000 to summit Everest during peak season from September. Mountaineering is a lucrative business for Nepal, which home to 10 of the world's tallest mountains. In 2024, the climbing permits generated $5.9m, with Everest responsible for more than three quarters of that total. Nepal's tourism department has now opened 462 mountains for expedition with a hope to promote the country's 'unexplored tourism destinations'. The fee has been waived off for their 97 peaks, which are located in the remote areas of Nepal's Karnali and Sudurpaschim provinces, standing between 5,970m and 7,132m high. Both provinces, located in the far-western region of Nepal are among the country's poorest and least developed provinces. Himal Gautam, the director of Nepal's tourism department, told The Telegraph: 'These two provinces have not been able to reap the benefits of the huge tourism potential and remained socially and economically backward. So the main motto is to attract tourists to these regions and allow the local economy to flourish.' Climbers have historically shown little interest in these 97 remote peaks. In contrast, some 421 climbing permits were issued for Everest in 2024 alone. The expedition reports of the past three years reveal that only 15 out of 97 mountains in these two provinces have been summited, generating a paltry expedition royalty of $10,000. 'So by sacrificing that small amount of money, we hope to attract more tourists to these two regions,' Mr Gautam said. Everest has been plagued by overcrowding, environmental concerns and a series of fatal climbing attempts. In April 2024, Nepal's Supreme Court ordered the government to issue expedition permits and allocate time for expeditions based on the 'bearing capacity of our mountains', Gautam said. The order was aimed to limit the number of mountaineering permits issued for Everest and several other peaks, he said. He said several investigations have linked the increasing fatal accidents at Everest to the ' prevalence of inexperienced climbers '. 'This is the reason the government has proposed that anyone wanting to scale Everest to have first summited a mountain over 7,000m in the country,' he said. 'So it will help us reduce fatal accidents and also draw more climbers to other peaks as well,' he said.