Giddy_up wrote:Climbing season is about to start at Everest, let's hope that it's a much safer season than the last two.
2014 had 17 deaths and 2015 had 22 but they all mostly happened under very unusual circumstances. If you're keen to have a go, you have about a 50% chance of success, you also have a 4% chance of not coming home.
I wonder how many people will attempt Everest this year?
Happy Pirate wrote:I just saw 'Sherpa' yesterday.
It was eye-opening and slightly sickening to see Sherpas carrying Televisions, tables and chairs and other absurd luxuries to the base camp whilst the 'climbers' carried daypacks on easier routes.
RonK wrote:Happy Pirate wrote:I just saw 'Sherpa' yesterday.
It was eye-opening and slightly sickening to see Sherpas carrying Televisions, tables and chairs and other absurd luxuries to the base camp whilst the 'climbers' carried daypacks on easier routes.
Sickening? It would be wrong to form an opinion based on this movie. You need to go there yourself.
It's pretty unlikely that people shown carrying TV's were Sherpas. The Sherpa people are for the most part relatively affluent and don't need to carry to earn an income.
It's also quite unlikely that they were sherpas - guides (not necessarily Sherpas) with climbing skills who work on the mountains.
Nope, they were porters - unskilled workers who earn a living carrying a load. Yes, apart from the odd yak train or chopper run, the only way anything gets into the high Himalaya is on someone's back.
As for climbers carrying backpacks - it's generally frowned upon to carry your own gear. It's expected you give a porter an opportunity to earn an income by carrying your gear for you. Carrying a TV to base camp may well feed a porters family. I do question this event actually happened, but it's true I have seen a refrigerator with legs on the trail.
I have no problem at all with having gear carried so long as the loads are reasonable, the porters are paid a fair rate, are well-treated and are provided with appropriate clothing and footwear for the altitude.
True there are unscrupulous operators who rip off the Nepali staff and treat them poorly, but there are plenty such people right here too.
Perhaps the most objectionable failure on the part of the climbing expeditions is their failure to publicly acknowledge the contributions made by the sherpa guides in particular.
Happy Pirate wrote: 'it seems to me the experience should be transformational and take you as far out of your comfort zone as you can possibly endure.'
Best
Steve
Giddy_up wrote:Happy Pirate wrote: 'it seems to me the experience should be transformational and take you as far out of your comfort zone as you can possibly endure.'
Best
Steve
Hi Steve, being at base camp makes most people ill one way or another, camp one is tough, two is the work horse camp where you rest and resupply, three is genuine acclimatization and at camp four you are dying, literally. At 26,000 ft your body is eating itself from within, deprived of oxygen, your brain shuts down and even simple things take Herculean effort. Everest takes anyone who attempts to climb it way beyond any conceivable comfort zone you or I can envisage.
Yes it's commercial, probably more than we would like but there is no other way to do 8,000ers'.
Happy Pirate wrote:Nonsense on Stilts
I said I was slightly sickened. Are you telling me what to feel? I already said I will never go there.
[To Paraphrase you]It would be wrong to form an opinion based on reading a post without having watched the movie. You need to watch the movie yourself.
'Sherpa' is an ethnic group not a job description. And 'Nope' they weren’t porters. And they were all relying on the climbing season for income. Again - watch the movie.
The TV was shown being unpacked at Basecamp. I don't care who carried it (but at a guess - they weren’t rich Westerners) it's the fact that it was there at all that offended me. Along with the hot towels delivered to climbers' at sunrise.
I mean - seriously - if we 'rough it' to walk or climb a local trek, and we want a valid and important experience by taking on something bigger and harder; shouldn't the experience be as challenging as the accomplishment? Otherwise we should just helicopter people to the summit and give them a certificate.
And -Yes - you should actually watch the movie before levelling such criticism
And of course I still have a problem with any people claiming to have 'climbed' a mountain if most of the work was done by someone else. As I'll reiterate as you seemed to have missed in your (I'm guessing self-defencive) attack:
'it seems to me the experience should be transformational and take you as far out of your comfort zone as you can possibly endure.'
Best
Steve
GPSGuided wrote:Thanks Giddy_up. Yes, I fully appreciate the volume of supply and work to get climbers up the Everest, hence my question on who are promoting for the volume of climbers going up there. No surprise on the damage to the environment. If we apply our common 'leave no trace' mantra, then the mountaineers are failing miserably, no?
GPSGuided wrote:It's 'progress'! Next wait for space tourism and the orbital space junk that brings for the pleasure of a very few. (sarcasm)
RonK wrote:Happy Pirate wrote:I just saw 'Sherpa' yesterday.
It was eye-opening and slightly sickening to see Sherpas carrying Televisions, tables and chairs and other absurd luxuries to the base camp whilst the 'climbers' carried daypacks on easier routes.
Sickening? It would be wrong to form an opinion based on this movie. You need to go there yourself.
It's pretty unlikely that people shown carrying TV's were Sherpas. The Sherpa people are for the most part relatively affluent and don't need to carry to earn an income.
It's also quite unlikely that they were sherpas - guides (not necessarily Sherpas) with climbing skills who work on the mountains.
Nope, they were porters - unskilled workers who earn a living carrying a load. Yes, apart from the odd yak train or chopper run, the only way anything gets into the high Himalaya is on someone's back.
As for climbers carrying backpacks - it's generally frowned upon to carry your own gear. It's expected you give a porter an opportunity to earn an income by carrying your gear for you. Carrying a TV to base camp may well feed a porters family. I do question this event actually happened, but it's true I have seen a refrigerator with legs on the trail.
I have no problem at all with having gear carried so long as the loads are reasonable, the porters are paid a fair rate, are well-treated and are provided with appropriate clothing and footwear for the altitude.
True there are unscrupulous operators who rip off the Nepali staff and treat them poorly, but there are plenty such people right here too.
Perhaps the most objectionable failure on the part of the climbing expeditions is their failure to publicly acknowledge the contributions made by the sherpa guides in particular.
Joel wrote:RonK,
If you've spent so much time in Nepal and your wife was a trekking guide, how can you possibly say that the Sherpa are relatively wealthy and don't take on work as porters? That is definitely true for Sherpa that work as climbing guides, however they are a tiny percentage.
As stated Sherpa is an ethnic group.
You must have had your head buried in the snow on your numerous trips.
RonK wrote:The Sherpa people are for the most part relatively affluent and don't need to carry to earn an income.
how can you possibly say that the Sherpa are relatively wealthy and don't take on work as porters?
The Sherpa people are for the most part relatively affluent and don't need to carry to earn an income.
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