Mt. Everest Trekking in Nepal ( Archived) (21)

Jul 20, 2009 11:41 AM CST Mt. Everest Trekking in Nepal
Deep_Heart
Deep_HeartDeep_HeartKathmandu, Central Nepal Nepal7 Threads 1 Polls 33 Posts
Trekking Regions oF Nepal
Everest Trekking
Elevation (feet): 29029
Elevation (meters): 8848
Range: Himalaya
SubRange: Central Nepal Himalaya
Country: Nepal
Continent: Asia
Latitude: 27.9881
Longitude: 86.9253
Difficulty: Major Mountain Expedition
Best months for climbing: April, May
Year first climbed: 1953
Convenient Center: Namche Bazar, Nepal
Nearest major airport: Kathmandu, Nepal


Mount Everest is the highest mountain in the world. Its elevation of 29,035 feet (8,850 meters) was determined using GPS satellite equipment on May 5, 1999. It was previously believed to be slightly lower (29,028 feet /8,848 meters), as determined in 1954 by averaging measurements from various sites around the mountain. The new elevation has been confirmed by the National Geographic Society.

The first seven attempts on Everest, starting with a reconnaissance in 1921, approached the mountain from Tibet, where a route to the summit via the North Col and North Ridge seemed possible. All were unsuccessful. George Mallory, who spearheaded the first three expeditions, lost his life with Andrew Irvine during a failed ascent in 1924. Unsuccessful attempts continued through 1938, then halted during World War II. By the war's end, Tibet had closed its borders, and Nepal, previously inaccessible, had done the opposite. Starting in 1951, expeditions from Nepal grew closer and closer to the summit, via the Khumbu Icefall, over the Geneva Spur to the South Col, and up the Southeast Ridge. In 1953 Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay reached the summit. Since the first successful ascent, many other individuals have sought to be the first at various other accomplishments on Everest, including many alternative routes on both the north and south sides.

Italy's Reinhold Messner has climbed Everest twice without oxygen, once in four days. He is also the first to solo climb Everest, which he did in 1980. Ten years earlier, Yuichiro Miura of Japan had been the first person to descend the mountain on skis. In 1975, Junko Tabei, also of Japan, was the first woman to climb Everest. The first disabled person to attempt Everest was American Tom Whittaker, who climbed with a prosthetic leg to 24,000 feet in 1989, 28,000 feet in 1995, and finally reached the summit in 1998. The first blind man to reach the summit was Erik Weihenmayer in 2001. The record for most ascents belongs to Sherpa Ang Rita, who has reached the summit ten times.

Overall, more than 600 climbers from 20 countries have climbed to the summit by various routes from both north and south. Climbers' ages have ranged from nineteen years to sixty. At least 100 people have perished, most commonly by avalanches, falls in crevasses, cold, or the effects of thin air.

Climbing on Everest is strictly regulated by both the Nepalese and Chinese governments. Permits cost thousands of U.S. dollars ($50,000 for a seven member party in 1996), and are difficult to obtain, and waiting lists extend for years. Treks to Everest base camp, minus the summit attempt, are becoming increasingly popular on both the north and south sides of the mountain. On the north side, a Buddhist monastery stands at the foot of the Rongbuk Glacier, beneath Everest's spectacular north face. The monastery is one of two whose locations were selected specifically to allow religious contemplation of the great peak. The other is the Tengboche Monastery in Nepal. The once-active Rongbuk monastery in Tibet has required much rejuvenation from the destruction it experienced following China's invasion of Tibet.

Mount Everest is also known by the Tibetan name Chomolungma (Goddess Mother of the Snows), and by the Nepali name Sagarmatha (Mother of the Universe).
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Jul 20, 2009 11:50 AM CST Mt. Everest Trekking in Nepal
rizlaredonline today!
rizlaredonline today!rizlaredNot in Cebu City, Central Visayas Philippines89 Threads 2 Polls 5,588 Posts
Okay, and the point of all this is???????????????
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Jul 20, 2009 12:03 PM CST Mt. Everest Trekking in Nepal
goldstone
goldstonegoldstoneSomewhere Inn, Colorado USA2 Threads 243 Posts
Because it's there!!
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Jul 20, 2009 12:14 PM CST Mt. Everest Trekking in Nepal
rizlaredonline today!
rizlaredonline today!rizlaredNot in Cebu City, Central Visayas Philippines89 Threads 2 Polls 5,588 Posts
goldstone: Because it's there!!


Of course, how stupid of me to have missed that

Now, How much do you know about mount kilimanjaro

Kilimanjaro with its three volcanic cones, Kibo, Mawenzi, and Shira, is an inactive stratovolcano in north-eastern Tanzania rising 4,600 m (15,100 ft) from its base (and approximately 5,100 m (16,700 ft) from the plains near Moshi), and is additionally the highest peak in Africa at 5,891.8 metres (19,330 ft), providing a dramatic view of the surrounding plains.
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Jul 20, 2009 12:17 PM CST Mt. Everest Trekking in Nepal
bodleing
bodleingbodleingGreater Manchester, England UK238 Threads 8 Polls 13,810 Posts
And for the best views, climb Kala Pattar...piece of cake.

Or go to Tibet.grin


dancing
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Jul 20, 2009 12:21 PM CST Mt. Everest Trekking in Nepal
bodleing
bodleingbodleingGreater Manchester, England UK238 Threads 8 Polls 13,810 Posts
rizlared: Of course, how stupid of me to have missed that

Now, How much do you know about mount kilimanjaro

Kilimanjaro with its three volcanic cones, Kibo, Mawenzi, and Shira, is an inactive stratovolcano in north-eastern Tanzania rising 4,600 m (15,100 ft) from its base (and approximately 5,100 m (16,700 ft) from the plains near Moshi), and is additionally the highest peak in Africa at 5,891.8 metres (19,330 ft), providing a dramatic view of the surrounding plains.


Sadly the instantly recognisable snow capped summit
of Kili is now almost devoid of snow.
Yet another testement to global warming.sigh
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Jul 20, 2009 12:32 PM CST Mt. Everest Trekking in Nepal
OUTRAGEOUS
OUTRAGEOUSOUTRAGEOUSPanama, Panama44 Threads 1 Polls 1,768 Posts
I'll stick to Volcan Baru. It has been dormant forever and I don't foresee any princes or princesses coming to wake it. It doesn't snow up there, and I can take the flight back to Panama City and be in my own bed that night.

Lazy bones, that's who I am...
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Jul 20, 2009 12:32 PM CST Mt. Everest Trekking in Nepal
rizlaredonline today!
rizlaredonline today!rizlaredNot in Cebu City, Central Visayas Philippines89 Threads 2 Polls 5,588 Posts
bodleing: Sadly the instantly recognisable snow capped summit
of Kili is now almost devoid of snow.
Yet another testement to global warming.


As a child we used to stay at an hotel at the foothill of Jaro, it was a magical place to me, and with its white cap a fascination that was not thwarted until we moved to the UK and I actually saw and touched snow for the first time
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Jul 20, 2009 6:05 PM CST Mt. Everest Trekking in Nepal
lorax888
lorax888lorax888richmond, Virginia USA8 Threads 294 Posts
I may be mistaken but someone attempted to climb Everest naked, they did not get to far. An American tried to climb it and put a politicaly unpopular flag on the summit, he was jailed briefy and banned for several years from attempting the summet again.

Dennis
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Jul 20, 2009 6:23 PM CST Mt. Everest Trekking in Nepal
bodleing
bodleingbodleingGreater Manchester, England UK238 Threads 8 Polls 13,810 Posts
lorax888: I may be mistaken but someone attempted to climb Everest naked, they did not get to far. An American tried to climb it and put a politicaly unpopular flag on the summit, he was jailed briefy and banned for several years from attempting the summet again.

Dennis


Its a pity K2 isnt just a few feet higher.

Then it could be said, the only people who

have stood on the 'roof of the world'

were mountaineers.sigh
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Jul 20, 2009 6:44 PM CST Mt. Everest Trekking in Nepal
lorax888
lorax888lorax888richmond, Virginia USA8 Threads 294 Posts
bodleing: Its a pity K2 isnt just a few feet higher.

Then it could be said, the only people who

have stood on the 'roof of the world'

were mountaineers.


Mahap if someone brings a step ladder with them.

Dennis
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Jul 21, 2009 10:58 PM CST Mt. Everest Trekking in Nepal
friends4now
friends4nowfriends4nowMelbourne, Florida USA73 Threads 10 Polls 2,366 Posts
bodleing: Sadly the instantly recognisable snow capped summit
of Kili is now almost devoid of snow.
Yet another testement to global warming.


global warming....this is not something new or original...are people still buying this crap-wow Gore did a better job than I thought mumbling
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Jul 22, 2009 3:18 AM CST Mt. Everest Trekking in Nepal
lorax888
lorax888lorax888richmond, Virginia USA8 Threads 294 Posts
friends4now: global warming....this is not something new or original...are people still buying this crap-wow Gore did a better job than I thought


Please, its real. Gore may be an idiot but the crap is real. This enviromental thing is not a new concept, the Emorytes destroyed their enviroment thousands of years ago. Look it up.

Dennis ( were also well past due for a super volcano )
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Jul 22, 2009 3:24 AM CST Mt. Everest Trekking in Nepal
mike69spain
mike69spainmike69spainAlmuñécar, Andalusia Spain34 Threads 6 Polls 4,110 Posts
bodleing: Sadly the instantly recognisable snow capped summit
of Kili is now almost devoid of snow.
Yet another testament to global warming.


moping
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Jul 22, 2009 3:28 AM CST Mt. Everest Trekking in Nepal
mike69spain
mike69spainmike69spainAlmuñécar, Andalusia Spain34 Threads 6 Polls 4,110 Posts
friends4now: global warming....this is not something new or original...are people still buying this crap-wow Gore did a better job than I thought


Gore did more than we can thank him for by raising awareness in such an otherwise boring subject as a degree more or less for tomorrow.

What have happened is that finally countries are seriously working on getting out of the oil-trap, contemplating use of chemical substances, avoiding obvious pollution and created funds to restore natural habitats.

The latest development in Bagua, Peru, shows what it have done to the mind of people around the world. It is no longer ok to bulldoze peoples backgarden, just because they do not owned into our materialistic world.

Global warming or not, we have finally got a mood of "clean the mess up", and I say it is about time.

wine
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Jul 22, 2009 3:29 AM CST Mt. Everest Trekking in Nepal
mike69spain
mike69spainmike69spainAlmuñécar, Andalusia Spain34 Threads 6 Polls 4,110 Posts
lorax888: Mahap if someone brings a step ladder with them.

Dennis


That in itself would make a movie rolling on the floor laughing
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Jul 22, 2009 4:25 AM CST Mt. Everest Trekking in Nepal
bodleing
bodleingbodleingGreater Manchester, England UK238 Threads 8 Polls 13,810 Posts
lorax888: Mahap if someone brings a step ladder with them.

Dennis


A 786ft ladder???


laugh
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Jul 22, 2009 7:28 AM CST Mt. Everest Trekking in Nepal
bodleing
bodleingbodleingGreater Manchester, England UK238 Threads 8 Polls 13,810 Posts
friends4now: global warming....this is not something new or original...are people still buying this crap-wow Gore did a better job than I thought



confused
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Jul 22, 2009 5:55 PM CST Mt. Everest Trekking in Nepal
lorax888
lorax888lorax888richmond, Virginia USA8 Threads 294 Posts
bodleing: A 786ft ladder???


LOL thats not going to fit in the pack to easily.

Dennis
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Jul 22, 2009 6:05 PM CST Mt. Everest Trekking in Nepal
bodleing
bodleingbodleingGreater Manchester, England UK238 Threads 8 Polls 13,810 Posts
lorax888: LOL thats not going to fit in the pack to easily.

Dennis


No, let them stick to Everest.

Any reasonably fit person with $50000 has a chance

to knock that one off.

On K2 they would just die, ladder or no ladder.








grin
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by Deep_Heart (7 Threads)
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Created: Jul 2009
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