Latest news with #Egloff
Yahoo
27-05-2025
- General
- Yahoo
Egloff Abandons Everest Race; Andrews Continues & Nears South Col
Karl Egloff of Ecuador, climbing without supplementary oxygen, turned around shortly before Camp 3. According to his home team, he is okay and descending to Base Camp. "Conditions were not suitable for a no-O2 ascent," Egloff's wife told ExplorersWeb. "He followed his instinct and experience to go down when necessary." She explained that Egloff had a bad feeling and decided to listen to it and retreat. He informed his team in Base Camp that he had already passed Camp 2 on the way down. Egloff is continuing all the way back to Base Camp. He wants to avoid being in the Khumbu Icefall during the warm day, when it is more unstable. The Ecuadorian had hoped to set a Fastest Known Time on Everest from Base Camp to the summit and back to Base Camp. Tyler Andrews of the U.S. abruptly changed his plans shortly before starting, but the conservative decision may have given him a chance to come away with a partial success. Like Egloff, he had originally planned to do without bottled oxygen, but today, he decided otherwise. Andrews started using oxygen at Camp 2 and is carrying on, despite high winds. There is no recent news from Andrews, as his tracker's signal froze when the climber was nearly at 7,500m, midway between Camp 3 and Camp 4. Tyler Andrews' progress can be tracked here. Egloff's tracker is here.
Yahoo
13-05-2025
- Climate
- Yahoo
Everest: Waves of Climbers Move Up From Base Camp
High winds on Everest's upper slopes make it too early to go for the summit, but it's not too early for climbers to position themselves for when the winds die down around May 17. Hundreds of tents in Base Camp are disgorging their climbers, who are heading up to the lower camps, where conditions are still fine. Lukas Furtenbach's teams on both sides of Everest will go up in the next few days. "They might meet on the summit," he said. "About 700-1000 people are expected to summit in the next few days," Karl Egloff of Ecuador posted on social media. Like Tyler Andrews of the U.S., he intends to attempt an FKT (Fastest Known Time) on Everest without supplemental oxygen. He and Andrews are not in direct competition, since Andrews is attempting a one-way; he stops timing at the summit. Egloff will speed both up and down and measure his total time back at Base Camp. On Instagram today, Andrews says that he will make his second attempt "after May 18." Egloff will also wait until the main wave of climbers passes. "[I hope] to climb at the end of the month, without masses, traffic, and with higher temperatures," says Egloff. Valeri Babanov, also climbing without oxygen but keeping a normal pace and with Sherpa support, is not so patient. He is back at Base Camp and about to head up after recovering downvalley from a respiratory illness for four days. Marcelo Segovia of Ecuador will also climb without bottled gas as soon as the weather allows. Tim Howell of the UK is also ready to climb to 8,300m on the Lhotse summit ridge in order to do his record wingsuit jump down the South Face toward Chukhung. Last year, Howell reached 8,200m, supported by UK guide Jon Gupta and two Sherpa climbers, but poor conditions prevented the flight. Howell's team has everything prepared: camps, oxygen, supplies, and ropes up to around 8,000m. At some point, the team will have to find a passage to the exit point. "All that remains is 200 meters of unknown, technical climbing, and finding a suitable exit for Tim to jump," Gupta said. "Then the weather has to play ball. We need low winds, no cloud, stability, and a narrow window to pull off something that's never been done. If we can do it, it will be extraordinary."