When INEXPERIENCE Meets MOUNT EVEREST - The Shriya Shah-Klorfine Story

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Adventures Gone Wrong

Adventures Gone Wrong

8 ай бұрын

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Shriya Shah-Klorfine was born in Nepal and later moved to Canada. She had a childhood dream to climb Mount Everest and it seemed nothing would stop her. Despite having ZERO alpine experience, she forged ahead with her dream. Here's her story.
Be respectful in the comments otherwise your comments will promptly end up in the DEATH ZONE.
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Пікірлер: 4 500
@adventuresgonewrong
@adventuresgonewrong 8 ай бұрын
🔴Like this EVEREST video? 🔴Check out this video about a skilled climber and the 1996 Mount Everest disaster kzbin.info/www/bejne/n3qrpWeYr5qrZ7Msi=f2ByZb6ewyoaQa1v ⛑
@aaronburratwood.6957
@aaronburratwood.6957 6 ай бұрын
Can you just have a helicopter take you to the summit of Mt Everest?
@nickwells20
@nickwells20 6 ай бұрын
These photos with hundreds of people lined up kinda defeats some of the purpose of being on Everest. This is supposed to be the most alone place on Earth that's not in water. All those people really messes up the emersive experience. After getting to the top it's such a kick in the dic to not be able to spend a lot of time up there. You need to leave pretty quickly or you will die. The lucky ones get up there well before noon so they can embrace that Godly moment. How the heck was she laying there saying save me to people that were still ascending? I thought you can't keep going up once it's dark during the last leg at night. I'm sorry to my family but if I was to die on the mountain I would not want my body brought down for burial. In my opinion, to be immortalized on the top of Mount Everest is the second coolest way to be put to rest. Imagine what the next dominate species on earth will think finding alien human bodies on top of the earth lol. My top way though would be to get let out into outer space. I guarantee sending bodies into space as a burial will become a thing someday. TBH I think this might already be a thing rich people do. I mean the Amazon guy took a trip to outer space and commercial flights are a very near future.
@bobgeorge8382
@bobgeorge8382 5 ай бұрын
@@aaronburratwood.6957 I think there's an elevator on the South face.
@America-Is-Doomed
@America-Is-Doomed 3 ай бұрын
@@aaronburratwood.6957No, actually you can't. There are far too many variables to list in this comment but a few of the primary reasons are obviously altitude and weather (hurricane-force winds and sub-freezing temperatures). Another is the air is just too thin for most helicopters to generate enough lift to remain airborne and a single landing is enough to spark an avalanche that would kill everyone attempting the climb.
@GrzegorzDurda
@GrzegorzDurda Ай бұрын
@@America-Is-Doomed May 14, 2005, Didier Delsalle became the first and only person to land a helicopter on the summit of Mount Everest. Now hovering over the summit is very possible. The heli will just have reduced power and lift so it can't be overloaded OR it could have more powerful engines with more rotor head speed.
@undasea
@undasea 8 ай бұрын
I'm thinking of climbing Everest as well. The only drawbacks are I hate the cold, I get dizzy looking down from great heights, I'm kind of old and out of shape (I can barely bend over and touch my toes), I get really impatient being held up in crowds, and I don't like camping or hiking. But other than that, I'm good to go. Wish me luck!
@adventuresgonewrong
@adventuresgonewrong 8 ай бұрын
🤣🤣
@TwinsBigLikeTia
@TwinsBigLikeTia 8 ай бұрын
Someone with no legs could climb it at this point
@mexxicokitty
@mexxicokitty 8 ай бұрын
You'll be fiiine..what could go wrong?
@nancyayotte2297
@nancyayotte2297 8 ай бұрын
My hips are bad and I can't see so well but I'm down for going too.....
@Popevangel83
@Popevangel83 8 ай бұрын
Well at least you didnt complain about stepping in the frozen poop and urine, rubbish and dead bodies.
@alexgian9313
@alexgian9313 6 ай бұрын
They say this woman was "determined". She was no such thing! A determined person is one who is willing to put in the necessary work. She never bothered even to get herself to the necessary fitness level; constantly slowing everybody down, the only thing she displayed was entitlement: "I've paid my money, now you must all pander to my uselessness". There is a huge abyss between "determination" and "delusion".
@ththththththththth
@ththththththththth 6 ай бұрын
I'm not surprised she had a stint in politics.
@mitchand9
@mitchand9 6 ай бұрын
The fact that she chose to ignore everything required to reach her goal is correct when described as determined. Willingness is someone who does what is needed step by step to achieve their goals.
@mel999.
@mel999. 6 ай бұрын
A narcissist trying to show the world what she can do to gain the most attention. I bet she hated every step
@soberserotonin1850
@soberserotonin1850 6 ай бұрын
She was determined. Your definition is wrong lol but I see your point. One can be both determined and foolish, determined and lazy, determined and willing to cut corners. Determination in this context is the act of deciding (or determining) to do something and remaining resolute and unchanging in that decision. The point is that she was irrationally determined. She was too determined. Determining to do something no matter what even when it risks your life for selfish reasons is obviously foolish and egotistical, but it is what it is. She was a clinical narcissist, it seems so to me.
@ts7371
@ts7371 5 ай бұрын
@@soberserotonin1850 pigheaded more like it.
@WorldTravelA320
@WorldTravelA320 3 ай бұрын
Every frozen corpse on Everest was once an extremely motivated person.
@forsaken841
@forsaken841 2 ай бұрын
I remember watching the Everest movie and getting super pissed at everyone of those morons with families dying on the top of a mountain for no reason but ego.
@Bettersucksaul
@Bettersucksaul 2 ай бұрын
@@forsaken841 Nothing wrong with climbing Mt Everest. It’s an adventure. But you definitely have to know when to stop and turn back, as well as if you’re even able to climb in the first place. She should’ve listened to her guides instead of her ego
@Garde538
@Garde538 2 ай бұрын
So accurate
@pooolish334
@pooolish334 2 ай бұрын
​@@forsaken841 It's the easiest way to commit suicide while looking brave in the process.
@MissX905
@MissX905 2 ай бұрын
Some were likely also fool hardy. Chasing a "dream" (except the Sherpas) which ended up claiming their lives. Mt. Everest can be a "beast" when it wants to be. Climb at own risk
@Clau1982
@Clau1982 4 ай бұрын
As Ed Viesturs once said "Getting to the top is optional. Getting down is mandatory” People who ultimately decide to come back despite not reaching the summit are way wiser than those who persist and die
@warwickpadmore4644
@warwickpadmore4644 3 ай бұрын
Wiser - and affluent.
@Sara-wf6lh
@Sara-wf6lh 3 ай бұрын
There’s signs like that all over the gran canyon in the USA. “Going down is optional, coming up is mandatory” with graphic images of people throwing up and dying.
@ElizabethT45
@ElizabethT45 2 ай бұрын
Agreed. I think the achievement is climbing as high as you can, coming back down, and then going home to tell your friends and family about it.
@MichaelBakay-pj2nr
@MichaelBakay-pj2nr Ай бұрын
I think the statistics are that everyone who turned around made it down. The ones that died are all ones that summited. Not sure if that's true
@Adamantium93
@Adamantium93 7 ай бұрын
I cannot fathom the thought process of someone who says "I have absolutely no experience climbing mountains but I'm going to choose Everest as my first".
@TTFerdinand
@TTFerdinand 7 ай бұрын
Apparently she wasn't interested in any other peaks or mountain climbing in general, she just had an obsession with Everest. It's like finding the deepest cave to go diving in after trying on fins in a pool.
@cv2938
@cv2938 6 ай бұрын
Narcissism. It's that simple.
@sdrape4964
@sdrape4964 6 ай бұрын
It's the result of being told you can do anything and backing that up with no accountability for making poor decisions.
@penitent2401
@penitent2401 6 ай бұрын
Ego and a life time of not being told no and a circle of enablers.
@DBBMed
@DBBMed 6 ай бұрын
@@penitent2401 but she was told she was going to die
@SaltyChip
@SaltyChip 8 ай бұрын
It’s not that they told her that she would die that is bad, but they also said she WOULD KILL sherpas if she went up and STILL did it tells me everything I need to know about this person.
@rigelb9025
@rigelb9025 8 ай бұрын
Me too. And to further drive the point home : She's now dead.
@NickanM
@NickanM 7 ай бұрын
_"Me, Me, Me, and meeee!_ 😮
@sleepyearth
@sleepyearth 7 ай бұрын
yep and she photoshopped her own pic to as promotion is such an egotistical act.
@SpicyGramCracker
@SpicyGramCracker 7 ай бұрын
It’s common. I have quite a few friends from Nepal. One is a trek guide. People who climb Everest are usually inexperienced ego driven selfish humans who step over the bodies of sherpas every single climb.
@kkittycatkat1990
@kkittycatkat1990 7 ай бұрын
👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
@emmajay2401
@emmajay2401 6 ай бұрын
"Saving lives is really the only job the expedition leader has" that's what he was trying to do by stopping Shriya from continuing to climb.
@Loki431
@Loki431 5 ай бұрын
Her husband is wrong. Once you're in the death zone, no one else is responsible for you because it's so incredibly dangerous, you're lucky to make it out yourself. Suggesting that the expedition leader wait for her is absurd. Everest isn't like taking a hike through the woods.
@trli7117
@trli7117 5 ай бұрын
Guy even gave her his spare oxygen tank. He put himself at serious risk to give her the slimmest chance.
@vinnynj78
@vinnynj78 4 ай бұрын
@@Loki431 Absolutely. Even recovering bodies is dangerous as they are frozen and often weigh in excess of 200 lbs--after being chopped free of the ice that basically cemented to the mountainside. It is very tragic the number of individuals who have lost their lives during these rescue attempts.
@jet_GraveWhisperer
@jet_GraveWhisperer 4 ай бұрын
What did her husband want him to do? Pull her down the mountain kicking and screaming that she wouldn't turn back? She failed to heed his warning
@MrPaddyF
@MrPaddyF 3 ай бұрын
Yeah, i hate this arrogant shit.
@luzvazquez4189
@luzvazquez4189 4 ай бұрын
This might sound extreme butI genuinely think it takes a huge sense of self importance and narcissistic tendencies* to do what she did. She put others in danger, it wasn't like she went there and got out by herself. She made people climb with her, forced them to babysit her and ultimately recover her body all because she wanted to. It takes a certain lever of delusion and sense of grandiosity to do that.
@numbereightyseven
@numbereightyseven 3 ай бұрын
Narcissistic, yes definitely.
@izzymmm
@izzymmm 3 ай бұрын
Textbook example
@jamesfrench7299
@jamesfrench7299 3 ай бұрын
You can tell just by looking at her.
@Not_Always
@Not_Always 2 ай бұрын
but she would've been the first Nepalese woman who lived in Canada to go back to Nepal and climb everest...
@flowerflower1392
@flowerflower1392 2 ай бұрын
Did they recovered her body? Lots of bodies there. It costs a fortune to get a body down. Most dead climbers are just left.
@EmperorNerox
@EmperorNerox 8 ай бұрын
The fact she made it to the top shows how unskilled the entire climb is. Anyone can climb it ...the Sherpas haul your gear, lay the ropes, show u where to step, you just walk up the mountain being guided. " I climbed mt everest" no you didn't, you hiked up it. Theres no romance or triumph in getting to the summit.
@adventuresgonewrong
@adventuresgonewrong 8 ай бұрын
I know, like let’s see them all lay the ropes, ladders over the crevasses, etc. Then they might deserve some respect.
@nickl5658
@nickl5658 8 ай бұрын
The real adventure and test of human endurance is climbing back down.
@robertfreeman3831
@robertfreeman3831 8 ай бұрын
really.....have you checked the death ratio to attempts? perhaps you should walk up it....stupid response
@nickreed3031
@nickreed3031 8 ай бұрын
If you "hiked" up everest I guess you wouldn't feel accomplished. Bs lol
@Elijah8890
@Elijah8890 8 ай бұрын
well you can’t make that conclusion by judging one single person not considering thousands of others making it only to Advanced Base Camp on South Col. (Camp 2)
@orfamayQ
@orfamayQ 8 ай бұрын
This whole "the first this and that" is getting ever more ridiculous. Soon it will be "the first left-handed Asian 24 yr old woman from New Zealand with 5 kids and 3 degrees who likes dolphins and has met Kevin Bacon once to summit Mt. Everest".
@adventuresgonewrong
@adventuresgonewrong 8 ай бұрын
So true! I was reading an article that said just that ‘all the firsts are pretty much gone on Everest”
@notmyrealname3167
@notmyrealname3167 8 ай бұрын
Right. First Asian woman from Canada? Who cares. Hundreds of Asians and Asian women have summited. Is being a Canadian citizen meant to be some kind of major life handicap?
@nightowl7261
@nightowl7261 8 ай бұрын
Lol
@punkybrewstar83
@punkybrewstar83 8 ай бұрын
Yeah- notice how none of the dead people are from Aotearoa? We aren't like that here- people like that woman get schooled before it gets out of hand. If she started fundraising here for her holiday to Everest 😒😬 no- we would eat her... and it turns out that little bit of humanity, and humbleness that gets beaten into you in our country that doesn't in the places like the USA & Canada, actually saves lives... breeding 5 kids anyway- Jesus- we don't need more fuckers doing that kind of reckless, shelfish shit in our country anyway... again- people can go be over-consumptive climate deniers in Canada or USA or Britain or something... stay away from Aotearoa, we already have enough stupid & selfish & disgusting people trying to move here.
@josevilla3709
@josevilla3709 8 ай бұрын
Haha thats exactly what I was thinking
@roadrunner9622
@roadrunner9622 5 ай бұрын
Can't imagine the frustration of waiting in that line, feeling your energy sap away minute by minute, knowing there's some unqualified person up there whining and holding everybody back.
@Zodroo_Tint
@Zodroo_Tint 3 ай бұрын
Exactly. I am one of those person who like to do things fast and effective manner and if I have to wait for somebody to move I feel I'm burning fuel for nothing. I couldn't climb the Everest ever, not because of the mountain but because of the people.
@mindrolling24
@mindrolling24 2 ай бұрын
I’m surprised she was allowed to stay at the summit for 30 minutes: I understand that every climber would want to stay up there longer but 30 minutes in the death zone, with scores of people waiting for you to get down so that they can get up there- that’s so selfish. Leaving 20 minutes earlier might have been enough to get her out of the death zone and saved her life.
@whitedragoness23
@whitedragoness23 2 ай бұрын
@@mindrolling24I was shocked at that part too! I had seen other videos and I knew that the toughest part is coming down and she wasted so much time when she needed to beat the weather, have less oxygen, be tired as hell, and she tested it like a sight seeing experience. I do wonder if anyone died because she caused them to be delayed being able to go back down.
@woofna1948
@woofna1948 2 ай бұрын
That long line alone should be enough to persuade any sensible mountaineer that climbing Everest has gone to shit. The only reasonable thing to do is cross it off your list.
@user-ql4ud9zr7m
@user-ql4ud9zr7m 2 ай бұрын
I don’t feel sympathy for people being frustrated. They paid for this.
@America-Is-Doomed
@America-Is-Doomed 5 ай бұрын
I have been a mountain rescue operator for over 35 years all over the world as a civilian and an instructor at the Marine Corps Mountain Warfare Training Center for a decade before that and I have no desire to attempt Everest. Not because I'm afraid of it, but because of the amount of inexperience that is allowed on that mountain. I believe it's just another deadly by-product of social media and the need to feed ones narcissism.
@svenskanorsk
@svenskanorsk 3 ай бұрын
Spot on
@NilezII
@NilezII 3 ай бұрын
Previously, the desired reward was the sense of accomplishment for doing something in the real world. Now the goal is to get a zillion Facebook Likes and KZbin views.
@JoeyisDREADful
@JoeyisDREADful 3 ай бұрын
Idk, some of the really famous bodies are from before social media. Rich people have always been stupid.
@1515cando
@1515cando 3 ай бұрын
Someone tell Trump he's a mountaineer!
@ThatOpalGuy
@ThatOpalGuy 3 ай бұрын
​@@1515candomountain of bs, yes!
@margaretcollins9382
@margaretcollins9382 7 ай бұрын
This woman was from Toronto. She took to the streets and (illicitly) claimed to be raising money for the local Hospital for Sick Children, which is how she funded her climb. She was a con beginning to end. Even after her death her local fan base tried to keep up the scam. I do feel sorry for her husband, but regret she was not stopped early in the game.
@matthewbrightman3398
@matthewbrightman3398 7 ай бұрын
She would have been the first southeast Asian woman from Canada! Wow!
@MistaCUNextTuesday
@MistaCUNextTuesday 7 ай бұрын
@@matthewbrightman3398 Nepal isn't south east Asia.
@lith4498
@lith4498 7 ай бұрын
She put others life at risk. She sounds like she cared a lot for herself and no one else
@motaman8074
@motaman8074 7 ай бұрын
@M.T_323 Yes. It is.
@causeitsthere
@causeitsthere 7 ай бұрын
Classic pay for death. Doubt she could even lead a 5.8 crack and build a natural anchor.
@dupeesfashionconsultant4204
@dupeesfashionconsultant4204 8 ай бұрын
Her leaders saying if she climbed she would kill them....and she went?!! That's so incredibly selfish. I already am opposed to the business of climbing Everest but this woman was near sociopathic levels
@RideAcrossTheRiver
@RideAcrossTheRiver 8 ай бұрын
She also ran for public office.
@stefstef2418
@stefstef2418 8 ай бұрын
So was the leader saying that and letting his less experience staff go with her anyway is the most uncomprensible decision.
@velvetbees
@velvetbees 8 ай бұрын
I have no trouble thinking she would have forced the sherpas to carry her back down the mountain and sacrifice their lives if necessary so she could glory in the magnificence of her achievement, never giving them another thought. Sherpa don't play that game.
@garyreams8123
@garyreams8123 7 ай бұрын
"Near"? Exceeded.
@lala71171
@lala71171 7 ай бұрын
Life can be a bitch, and sometimes you get to meet her in person...
@noelleirina5628
@noelleirina5628 6 ай бұрын
Shriya knew others would feel inclined to risk their lives to save hers if something went wrong. She counted on it. It's sick.
@JulieRushworth
@JulieRushworth 5 ай бұрын
Some say ego and other day Narcism
@kaze_cat
@kaze_cat 4 ай бұрын
Obviously, that didn’t happen. I believe she is now a permanent fixture on that infamous mountain.
@kaze_cat
@kaze_cat 4 ай бұрын
She didn’t “know,” she “thought.”
@VikingEyes
@VikingEyes 4 ай бұрын
Any caring and honorable person would “Think “ others would help their fellow human being. But, at the end of the day these are egotistical fools daring to go where they aren’t meant to be. Only locals belong there. You don’t get my respect unless you go without oxygen, and without Sherpas. And even then I think it’s foolish and prideful.
@noelleirina5628
@noelleirina5628 4 ай бұрын
@@kaze_cat she knew. That's what normal human instinct is. Empathy.
@derekmclean5603
@derekmclean5603 3 ай бұрын
I climbed Kilimanjaro about 15 years ago. Looking back it was nothing more than a circus of performers. The tourist climbers, as I was, in all our little parties with guides, porters, cooks etc. All lead guides striving to get maximum numbers to summit in order to gain bragging rights in the cut throat marketing efforts to gain future clients. Any notion of solitude and tranquillity in that environment was well and truly shattered and any further notion I had toyed with about doing any Himalayan peak, never mind Everest, died on the trip home.I can only imagine the Everest experience would be like Kili on steroids. When I see pictures of a huge line of 10s of dozens of multi coloured climbers strung out waiting for hours on end for their shot on the Hilary step and the sight of the trash strewn over the mountain of abandoned camps kit, equipment and waste just makes me despair. We humans invade nature’s treasured spots then set about corrupting then destroying it.
@adventuresgonewrong
@adventuresgonewrong 3 ай бұрын
Well that changes my mind on wanting to do Kilimanjaro!
@derekmclean5603
@derekmclean5603 3 ай бұрын
@@adventuresgonewrong Sorry to shatter your dreams but the reality of adventure tourism is that it creates the antithesis of enjoyment of wilderness and wild spaces by drawing the in the masses. There’s many in these ranks who target the big iconic peaks without experiencing the lesser ones. Discarded litter which has to be collected by porters or “clean up teams” who are sent periodically up the mountains shows that there are a few who have no regard or respect for wild places and leave much more than their footprints. I’m not criticising everyone who goes on these trips (as I’m as culpable as anyone) as for many provide memories for life experiences and the jobs they create are huge economic contributors to local communities, it’s just my disillusionment that when we humans get busy “taming” mother nature and “conquering ” high mountains we have the uncanny knack of desecrating wild places by “Disneyfying” it with signs, handrails and “comfort stops”. I’d say to you, go do Kilimanjaro if it is your dream and enjoy it on your own terms, respect the mountain and if you’re lucky enough to get to the summit, savour that moment. ( but never say you conquered it!😉)
@uglytuco3829
@uglytuco3829 3 ай бұрын
This makes me so sad and it's spot on unfortunately. It's the monetization of everything that's ruined our society. The funny thing is you can find solitude and adventure by climbing a fourteener by yourself or with a buddy. They're challenging as hell for the average Joe and even someone in decent shape. But that's not very glamorous or IG worthy and it's not going to generate revenue for you as a "guide".
@jamesfrench7299
@jamesfrench7299 3 ай бұрын
Imagine if we spread to other stars. No one elsewhere in the cosmos would want a bar of us.
@samuraisharkie
@samuraisharkie 2 ай бұрын
It’s so incredibly sad what adventure tourism and entitlement to natural wonders has done to our planet. The people indigenous to these beautiful places watching as something once beautiful turns into a trash heap littered with bodies of people that went there for bragging rights at dinner parties and nothing more.
@carlosspicy-wiener6727
@carlosspicy-wiener6727 8 ай бұрын
I understand what the husband meant by saying that she was looking for something up on the mountain and it would have changed the way she saw herself. But at the same time it’s just a mountain, if you feel incomplete before you climbed Everest, being on the summit isn’t going to change that feeling.
@adventuresgonewrong
@adventuresgonewrong 8 ай бұрын
Great point.
@cremebrulee4759
@cremebrulee4759 8 ай бұрын
Whatever she was looking for was not on that mountain. It wasn't anywhere external. It was within herself.
@andrewkiggins3063
@andrewkiggins3063 7 ай бұрын
It depends what you are looking for. Everyone has different motivations.
@neilmattson9804
@neilmattson9804 7 ай бұрын
Climbing the highest mountain in my home state (Idaho) elevated my spirit, reminded me who I am, and gave me a level of confidence I didn’t have before. But it’s not worth dying for. It takes more guts to turn around than it does to keep going.She had summit fever, pure and simple.
@thedesensitizedsympathizer5307
@thedesensitizedsympathizer5307 7 ай бұрын
Celeste: Bad ending.
@shmeli
@shmeli 8 ай бұрын
Who puts a poster of themselves up at base camp? 4 minutes in and that tells me everything I need to know about this woman
@adventuresgonewrong
@adventuresgonewrong 8 ай бұрын
Exactly. Experienced climbers with multiple summits under their belt don’t even do that.
@RideAcrossTheRiver
@RideAcrossTheRiver 8 ай бұрын
I thought, "sounds like a GTA person." Surprised not at all that she was.
@henrymorgan3982
@henrymorgan3982 8 ай бұрын
"Vanity, definitely my favorite sin." -The Devil
@emichin7010
@emichin7010 8 ай бұрын
Narcissism kills. Everest doesn’t care.
@fowchiiiliedpuppiesdied
@fowchiiiliedpuppiesdied 8 ай бұрын
Who doesn’t? My house is plastered with my face, personally.
@MarsMellow84
@MarsMellow84 4 ай бұрын
I had 2 classmates of mine die at a treacherous mountain in Peru. They were only 21 and 23. They were athletic and thought of themselves as "experienced climbers" . But they had no guide with them and only made it half way up when they disappeared. 8 days later a rescue group found their bodies in a 100 ft crevasse . They think an avalanche happened or they both fell into it. So tragic. But when you're that young. You think you're invincible and smarter than you actually are.
@coco65548
@coco65548 4 ай бұрын
was it Huascaran? just curious
@elbagrau
@elbagrau 3 ай бұрын
Past a certain altitude, your experience doesn't matter. Only your luck does.
@ThatOpalGuy
@ThatOpalGuy 3 ай бұрын
In defense, you can die, slipping in the shower. Also, we all die, eventually.
@kitgin4504
@kitgin4504 Ай бұрын
To her credit she did surprisingly train for 2 years
@dogdad1997
@dogdad1997 3 күн бұрын
Sometimes I think about the unnecessary risks me and friends took outside when we were in our teens and early twenties. Makes my skin crawl. You just don't properly get that risk is real and can affect you.
@leninope9678
@leninope9678 4 ай бұрын
As a relatively experienced mountaineer (I live in the Alps) the pictures of Mount Everest are just so shocking, the best thing about climbing (IMO) is the solitude and connection with nature, It seems like that aspect is just lost there. Also everyone who's actually had experience in mountaineering can attest, that It docent really matter which summit you pick because the feeling is always amazing (gets better with the physical challenge of course but it does not have to be Everest is what I'm trying to say)
@TheKnoxvicious
@TheKnoxvicious 4 ай бұрын
Yes! I’m not even a mountain climber, but what’s great about nature is exactly the solitude! A place for just your thoughts. It’s a spiritual experience that most people don’t care about anymore
@davewade30
@davewade30 3 ай бұрын
It looks like they are standing in line to ride a rollercoaster at an amusement park instead of climbing a mountain!
@Zodroo_Tint
@Zodroo_Tint 3 ай бұрын
Isn't the climbing experience is better if you are not in the death zone and your brain got enough oxigen?
@hicktoni
@hicktoni 8 ай бұрын
A major problem is that the self-help/motivation industry pushes the idea that you can do ANYTHING if you are determined enough. If people are realistic about problems and shortcomings then they are called weak because they lack self-belief.
@RideAcrossTheRiver
@RideAcrossTheRiver 8 ай бұрын
Or movies that show a 115-lb. woman punching out a 225-lb. man.
@princessmarlena1359
@princessmarlena1359 8 ай бұрын
I despise those self help books and motivators. 👳🏼‍♂️ “I am ‘Coach Genghis’, and I am here to school you!”
@andreagriffiths3512
@andreagriffiths3512 8 ай бұрын
My lack of self-belief is what keeps me alive. As much as I’d love to climb a mountain taller than 800m, it ain’t going to happen. I hiked up my local mountain, did some rock scrambling, and went back down. I conquered the mountain but it’ll be the only one I do. I’m not cut out for uphill slogs. Knowing my weaknesses is what makes me strong.
@reettaelina
@reettaelina 8 ай бұрын
Maybe if just little respect the Creator and see we are only human
@Gizziiusa
@Gizziiusa 8 ай бұрын
you gotta be determined enough to get physically fit, get proper training, experience, and of course be mentally prepared for the stresses of Alpine climbing. iguess she missed those parts of the equation.
@BradGryphonn
@BradGryphonn 8 ай бұрын
When I was a child in the 60s, Everest was still one of those places that only the most intrepid and experienced would attempt to climb. Nowadays it's a free-for-all, and frankly, I feel it would just be like any other over-hyped, over-crowded tourist destination, full of obnoxious foreigners leaving garbage everywhere.
@adventuresgonewrong
@adventuresgonewrong 8 ай бұрын
I remember it being like that in the 80’s when I was first fascinated with it. The skill of the few people who made it was cool to watch, because it wasn’t like today - pay a ton of money and you get to go. No skill needed now.
@aldranzam3456
@aldranzam3456 8 ай бұрын
bunch of obnoxious tourists ready to kill themselves and their guides (that are very much exploited) on an ego trip. I want to go to Nepal to learn the culture, see the animals... not to leave my plastic covered corpse as an eternal reminder of my hubris.
@endlessdaze6054
@endlessdaze6054 8 ай бұрын
Yes. You basically pay a ton of money for some professionals to babysit your sorry, unprepared ass all the way up a mountainside so you can do the immature "I triumphed over all the odds" ego dance. It's a bit sad really...
@glorioskiola
@glorioskiola 8 ай бұрын
And the crowds just make it more dangerous for everyone. Stuck in lines, getting cold from not moving, wasting oxygen, . . . Yes, novices should be excluded.
@FranktheDachshund
@FranktheDachshund 8 ай бұрын
About the equivalent cachet as going to Burning Man or taking a submersible to see the Titanic.
@bw7754
@bw7754 3 ай бұрын
The first south Asian woman from Canada to climb Everest. I like how many qualifiers they needed to make her special 😂 and she still failed.
@chuffa1130
@chuffa1130 3 ай бұрын
The whole process looks completely grotesque at this point! It looks like no one learned any lessons after 1996 disaster, thanks for the video it's fantastic
@adventuresgonewrong
@adventuresgonewrong 3 ай бұрын
Thanks! Stay tuned, I'm working on a DEEP DIVE of the 1996 disaster.
@lukewarmwater5320
@lukewarmwater5320 8 ай бұрын
The problem with "strong willed" people a lot of the time is that they tend to ignore glaring warning signs of impending doom in pursuit of their goals...
@lookingbehind6335
@lookingbehind6335 8 ай бұрын
The problem with “strong willed” people is they are too ignorant to realize they are a danger.
@danielfarrugia3884
@danielfarrugia3884 8 ай бұрын
It's arrogant too
@jordanalandry1866
@jordanalandry1866 8 ай бұрын
This isn’t strong will witness let’s get that clear right off the bat this is narcissism. This is like a severely flawed character and disordered personality to put it in plain kind clinical terms people like this, you can’t help their perception is always incongruent with reality, their beliefs and characterization of themselves is not accurate and they don’t care about other people they care about her own image they don’t have self-awareness they don’t have integrity
@detroid89
@detroid89 8 ай бұрын
@@jordanalandry1866 I couldn't agree more. I think people confuse 'strong will' for narccistic personality disorder. It's the determination to get home and over exaggerate how the experience was but the mountain did not her off easy and took her life as a result.
@kriegfaust
@kriegfaust 8 ай бұрын
@@jordanalandry1866 Well said Jordan, sums the whole situation up perfectly.
@commodorezelda
@commodorezelda 8 ай бұрын
The leader tried to save her life by stopping her from summiting in the first place. By going against advice, she put not only herself but also the sherpas in extreme risk. It's one thing to have determination, but it's another to refuse to see the obvious obstacles and warnings in front of you.
@annme_87
@annme_87 8 ай бұрын
Exactly! He has a responsibility to his family to get home alive too. He gave up some of his oxygen for her, I certainly don't think he owed her any further risk of his own life.
@leskobrandon691
@leskobrandon691 8 ай бұрын
She truly had a death wish. I applaud those who warned her, but she was unfortunately, a fool. 30 minutes of lollygagging on the summit? I'd have taken a photo & took off back down. It seems as if everyone knew she was walking dead the moment she arrived. From the penthouse suite of tents, complete with rugs on the floor shows someone who is out of touch with reality. The organizers of these treks should make each person sign off on allowing the decision to be made to end their trip to the summit when it is pretty obvious there is little chance they'll survive.
@youareloved2243
@youareloved2243 8 ай бұрын
true. This is recklessness. I understand that she has the drive and determination but she should also be considerate of others. This is not a walk in the park or some fancy touristy thing
@jaelzion
@jaelzion 8 ай бұрын
I wonder why he couldn't just say "You're not ready and we're not taking you to the summit"? He knew she was likely to die up there so couldn't he just refuse to guide her?
@colinluckens9591
@colinluckens9591 8 ай бұрын
Don't worry, as you can see the Sherpas didn't have any problems about just leaving her there did they....
@dbob3405
@dbob3405 5 ай бұрын
One of the best preparatory exercises for an Everest attempt is standing in the queue for Taylor Swift tickets. The ability to stand in line for untold hours without any sense of the line moving is more important than altitude training, climbing practice or basic physical fitness. Those who ignore the Taylor Swift ticket line exercises do so at the risk of their very lives
@emilgilels
@emilgilels Күн бұрын
That's good! 😀
@wabara30
@wabara30 8 күн бұрын
I came here after the death of Cheruiyot Kirui, a Kenyan who died on Mt Everest on 22.05.2024. May his soul rest in eternal peace.
@Ja50nkAt
@Ja50nkAt 8 ай бұрын
She lived in Canada for pete's sake, she should have gotten actual experience on big mountains in Alberta and British Columbia not just caring a heavy pack up her office building. You need years if not a decade to lay the cardio base that is necessary to tackle the tallest mountain on earth. It's really the guiding services that need to set minimum fitness and experience standards and not just take peoples money.
@Kivikesku
@Kivikesku 7 ай бұрын
It seems she had no love for mountains or nature or mountaineering, she just wanted to show how big she was.
@spergnation1859
@spergnation1859 7 ай бұрын
She was from Toronto apparently. Have you met Toronto people? They're pretty much children.
@cb-side13
@cb-side13 7 ай бұрын
Weekend warriors have all the confidence and none of the experience.
@dougbeatle1664
@dougbeatle1664 7 ай бұрын
Whatever that means
@Taintedgod771
@Taintedgod771 7 ай бұрын
Hell you could train anywhere. Weighted cardio, long endurance training, winter trips up summits. Living in socal I'm blessed because I can train in Sierras and along the PC. Over the course of a few season I trained enough to do Rainer, Whitney face, Shasta and Denali.
@Smulenify
@Smulenify 8 ай бұрын
She wanted to find herself at the summit, but I think donating those $50k to a charity would be much more impressive than being carried to the summit of Everest.
@grbadalamenti
@grbadalamenti 7 ай бұрын
Foolish and selfish
@daleolson3506
@daleolson3506 5 ай бұрын
They said she stole the money she raised for charity
@mightytaiger3000
@mightytaiger3000 6 ай бұрын
Telling the sherpas “you can go back, I’m going to keep going” is just next level delusional smugness lol
@pe4153
@pe4153 3 ай бұрын
People are so proud of their determination. You're one person, your determination means nothing to the world
@bojankotur4613
@bojankotur4613 8 ай бұрын
"The summit is optional. Getting down is mandatory." is a great quote from Ed Viesturs. There's another one from a comic book Alan Ford: It's better being a living coward than a dead hero.
@aleksejjovanovic986
@aleksejjovanovic986 8 ай бұрын
10 thumbs up for Alan Ford gang! :)
@TheEudaemonicPlague
@TheEudaemonicPlague 8 ай бұрын
Never heard of Alan Ford, but that line is actually very old (so far, the earliest I've found a claim for is around 1900). The concept is an easy one to think of--I'd be willing to bet that, in one form or another, it's been around for thousands of years. The concepts of coward and hero have been around forever....
@randomcomment6068
@randomcomment6068 8 ай бұрын
Alan Ford is awesome!
@bumblbesss
@bumblbesss 8 ай бұрын
@@TheEudaemonicPlague So is a "Coward" really just a Person who wants to Live at all costs? That seems to be the Norm for everyone. Who wants to Die other than the Suicidal? 🤔
@Gizziiusa
@Gizziiusa 8 ай бұрын
Read his books. They were quite interesting.
@BarKochba555
@BarKochba555 8 ай бұрын
Kudos to the Sherpa’s having to deal with these types of egos. Brave and patient folks.
@stevo728822
@stevo728822 8 ай бұрын
They do it for the money.
@barbarakauppi9915
@barbarakauppi9915 8 ай бұрын
That's a funny way to spell greedy..
@joelglanton6531
@joelglanton6531 7 ай бұрын
Why do you write "Sherpa's" with an apostrophe?
@putinski666
@putinski666 7 ай бұрын
​@@barbarakauppi9915can you blame them? A small place like Nepal that is mountain locked with not much in the way of commerce. People just try to make most of the cards they're dealt with. Try to understand situations before chalking everything up to greed.
@MM-jf1me
@MM-jf1me 7 ай бұрын
​@@stevo728822They lug equipment and advise their clients on the best ways to stay alive -- they're not really paid to deal with entitled people, alas, it's the same throughout all service industries.
@SaRkAsMuSoNe-
@SaRkAsMuSoNe- 6 ай бұрын
I heard about Mt Everest yesterday. Going to summit later today. Just hitchhiking to basecamp. Wish me luck
@williamtimonen6814
@williamtimonen6814 3 ай бұрын
Did you make it?
@Bettersucksaul
@Bettersucksaul 2 ай бұрын
@@williamtimonen6814He’s dead
@kimsmith-dhs-ssc5623
@kimsmith-dhs-ssc5623 2 ай бұрын
good luck to you!
@skynation69
@skynation69 6 күн бұрын
RIP bro
@sparkdrive2900
@sparkdrive2900 5 ай бұрын
I climbed mount everest way back on the 2000s. I had to train my cardio and body for half a year. Get everything prepared from the smallest equipment to the largest. Got me in contact with the climbing tour company. It was a hard climb and im glad i was able to reach the top ok. My heart goes for those who had lost their lives there. May they rest in peace. ❤
@Megan-cd6sh
@Megan-cd6sh 7 ай бұрын
People's lack of respect and regard for sherpas never fails to annoy me. If a sherpa tells you not to climb, listen. If a sherpa tells you that you are not only endangering yourself but also others, listen. I'm only halfway through the video but I think it's pretty obvious how the story ends. Toxic positivity and self help is a huge issue today. It encourages people to use magical (delusional) thinking and to believe that they can do anything. Not everyone is capable of everything. Knowing and acknowledging your limits is extremely important, especially in life and death scenarios. This story is so sad, so common and so incredibly avoidable. Some people are so mired in magical thinking that they cannot be reasoned with, no matter what. No company should have taken her on in the first place, not only endangering her but also the sherpas assigned to her. If she had trained for a few years and been patient I have a feeling that this story would have ended very differently. Very sad overall. I wish that someone could have gotten through to her. Don't let anyone convince you that you are being "negative" simply by acknowledging reality. Acknowledging reality could have saved this woman's and many other's lives.
@mogul8974
@mogul8974 7 ай бұрын
This goes hand in hand with listening to a cop… right libs?
@Menstral
@Menstral 7 ай бұрын
A woke tendency to genuflect. In every video there must be multiple comments indicating a fervent desire that all Sherpas receive anilingus. They are the rock stars of their community, and they are also paid very well by the standards of their community. Maybe they should be paid better, different issue. They can and have unionized. How much would they be paid if there were no self-important douche climbers, maybe 0, maybe they would be riding the back of an ox.
@lizw8663
@lizw8663 7 ай бұрын
Well said
@R2Bl3nd
@R2Bl3nd 7 ай бұрын
I think what's especially sad is that people really are capable of quite a bit. But not everything. She could have accomplished what she wanted if she had practiced a little bit of patience and self-control. Which I think are more admirable qualities than simple hardheadedness and perseverance. Those qualities are what got her up the mountain. But also got her killed. They have to be balanced out with self-control, objectivity and patience.
@palsci
@palsci 7 ай бұрын
@@R2Bl3nd So true, especially the patience part. We live in a society where everything should happen at once and we want to see instant results. Training for 5-10 years to get up the mountain safely wont cross as many peoples mind this day and age.
@sakshattiwari6831
@sakshattiwari6831 8 ай бұрын
A lot of people don't understand that when you're climbing an 8,000er, you're on your own. No one forced you to climb, it is a dangerous and a super extreme sport. Sometimes I see people commenting on KZbin regarding how inhumane others were to leave someone behind, plenty instances. But fail to understand that to save one person you're risking other's lives too.
@hacunamatata6802
@hacunamatata6802 8 ай бұрын
Everest: 8,850 meters (29,035 feet)
@sedmidivka
@sedmidivka 8 ай бұрын
I agree, you'll climb it or you won't, don't expect others to help you. they will if possible, but most of the time, it's just pointless. they can barely do one step let alone carry someone especially after such a long time spent on the mountain already, as it was also said in this video, everybody above 8k meters is slowly dying and it's a race against the clock. there will be many people risking their lives to bring your body down. so just don't be ridiculous, get a reality check. there's no reason to die for nothing. I mean what is the prestige anyway, look at the crowd, look at the queue. what's the point
@andrewpereira9271
@andrewpereira9271 8 ай бұрын
Yeah, when it's too dangerous to attempt dragging two thirds of the dead people down, I imagine it's even more dangerous trying get those who are barely alive safely down.
@ExistentialGojora
@ExistentialGojora 8 ай бұрын
I wouldn't go to a night club at sea level named the, "Death Zone". And then expect a person as dumb as me to save me. Which is to say, those imbeciles have confused the death zone with the rescue zone. And on top of that, more lives were risked to save her lifeless body to satisfy what? Now I'm off to watch videos of rescue divers that died trying to recover the bodies of inexperienced divers tresspassing in underwater caves of certain death.
@korsu1234
@korsu1234 7 ай бұрын
Yup Its death zone😮
@theresachung703
@theresachung703 3 ай бұрын
This was insane. I actually did a course in ice climbing and was a casual hiker. And, I would NEVER even think about climbing MT Everest without years of training.
@NilezII
@NilezII 3 ай бұрын
I know someone (friend of friend) who attempted Everest. The guy in front of him on the ladder stopped for 2 hours. Realizing that too much time had been wasted, he wisely aborted his attempt. Look at that graph for the simple-math answer-the more climbers, the more deaths. The incredible lines and bottlenecks didn't exist 30 years ago.
@ZootyZoFo
@ZootyZoFo 8 ай бұрын
I always wanted to be the first red headed American who was 1/8th Cherokee Indian and a gingivitis survivor to reach the summit of Everest but then I found out there was not an escalator to the top as I had thought and since I was also very adverse to physical exercise my dream was shattered.
@millahyvarinen9121
@millahyvarinen9121 8 ай бұрын
A gingivitis survivor! 😂😂 Such a golden comment, thanks for the laughs!
@davidtwliew616
@davidtwliew616 8 ай бұрын
Good, at least you are still alive and not another frozen stiff dead bodies that littered that mountainside.
@dickononfilm
@dickononfilm 8 ай бұрын
Sooooooooo funny 😂
@garyreams8123
@garyreams8123 7 ай бұрын
LOL'ing. That gingivitis can be a killer.
@goodgrief888
@goodgrief888 7 ай бұрын
80s rock star Billy Squire tried to hire a helicopter pilot to drop him onto the summit. They said no lol
@danamania150
@danamania150 7 ай бұрын
For anyone wanting to climb a famous mountain, choose Mt. Fuji! It’s a fairly easy climb and incredibly fun. I’ve done it twice.
@user-te5po4bu8o
@user-te5po4bu8o 7 ай бұрын
Plus you get to go to Japan and that’s rad
@las10plagas
@las10plagas 7 ай бұрын
did you meet giant robot up there?
@5upl1an
@5upl1an 7 ай бұрын
Plus you're (probably) not dying up there!
@nami4978
@nami4978 7 ай бұрын
Never underestimate the mountain. Every year, many tourists go to Mt. Fuji without doing their research, dressed as if they were going shopping in the neighborhood, and get lost. Even after the climbing season is over and the mountain is closed, people continue to slip through the barricades and get into the mountain, causing problems.
@HansWurst-gm2rx
@HansWurst-gm2rx 7 ай бұрын
@@nami4978At the peak of Mt. Fuji you still have ~70% of the oxygen concentration compared to sea level. It is way different to Mt. Everest. If you act braindead - it can still be dangerous. But you kind of have to be suicidal and really try to die there.
@njfuentesrespecter81
@njfuentesrespecter81 3 ай бұрын
I am committed to being the first American to summit Everest whose first name starts with a J, was born on a Sunday in June of ‘89, while wearing a tuxedo, clown shoes, and a monocle. I am going to break barriers for soo many people who can relate to my exact circumstances.
@kimsmith-dhs-ssc5623
@kimsmith-dhs-ssc5623 2 ай бұрын
Thank you🤟
@snowball1465
@snowball1465 2 ай бұрын
There's fine line between determination and life-ending stubbornness.
@OhioGalReads
@OhioGalReads 8 ай бұрын
Just bought a bicycle and starting slow by riding around the neighborhood. It's important to know your limits.
@adventuresgonewrong
@adventuresgonewrong 8 ай бұрын
💯
@henryoreo2283
@henryoreo2283 8 ай бұрын
Not buying one today then register for tour de france tommorow🤣
@Robutube1
@Robutube1 8 ай бұрын
I appreciate that this is said with a light touch, but it is fundamentally the issue here - you've nailed it.
@EmperorNerox
@EmperorNerox 8 ай бұрын
Why would you do that??? If you have the will like Shira, you can race the tour de France,just pay the race fee and a hire a coach !!!
@jenshoefer7944
@jenshoefer7944 8 ай бұрын
No, you should join the tour de france straight away...that's the ill spirit these days
@TheGigergal
@TheGigergal 8 ай бұрын
30 minutes on the summit when you're exhausted and very low on oxygen is totally crazy and completely ego driven. I have compassion for all who lose their lives on the mountain but it's harder when people don't listen to advice, especially on the descent which is apparently the most dangerous time. It's sad that this sacred mountain has become a tourist attraction for those want a notch in their belts. You present a very important message here, and highlight valid points.
@celticlass8573
@celticlass8573 8 ай бұрын
Staying up there for that long, would have caused others to have to wait even longer too. It's not like it's huge.
@Itried20takennames
@Itried20takennames 8 ай бұрын
True, but lots of people say lots of things….and without hindsight, hard to tell if it is good advice, or if their concerns never come to pass. Like my sibling bought a started home in their 20s and my parents thought it was a terrible idea and to wait, but it happened to be about 2003 in the US, just before the huge housing bubble….and they did very well after fixing it up and would likely have been priced out and lost money if they waited a couple more years as my parents advised. I sure wouldn’t climb against the advice of guides, but many are seduced by the “just believe in yourself….you can do anything if you really try” message.
@jeffstrom164
@jeffstrom164 8 ай бұрын
It has always been climbed to put a notch in a belt. There is no other reason to climb it.
@biazacha
@biazacha 8 ай бұрын
I have compassion for those who died or couldn’t summit despite proper experience and training because of ego driven people like her….
@anonymouse9833
@anonymouse9833 8 ай бұрын
I think she already knew she would die at that point. She was going to enjoy the few hours she had left. Selfish? 100% but I get it
@RickP2012
@RickP2012 2 ай бұрын
One day I hope to be the first green eyed man from the UK who was born on my birthday to climb Everest. I have very little climbing experience other than Mt Snowdon in Wales which was quite easy and I got a cup of coffee and a cream cake at the top. Anyone know what the cafe at the top of Everest is like?
@warwickpadmore4644
@warwickpadmore4644 3 ай бұрын
The narration, backdrop, video clips and views of Everest and surrounding peaks made this exceptional viewing for me, even though I was already familiar with Shariya’s story. How she traversed the Khumbu icefall is beyond me. Great content!
@adventuresgonewrong
@adventuresgonewrong 3 ай бұрын
Thanks so much, glad you enjoyed it!
@kimpeater1
@kimpeater1 8 ай бұрын
Anyone who's hiked even a small hill knows that coming down is always more treacherous than going up. Exhaustion and complacency can be deadly.
@sonictech1000
@sonictech1000 8 ай бұрын
Absolutely. If it takes everything you've got to get to the top then you are in a lot of trouble.
@MagisterialVoyager
@MagisterialVoyager 8 ай бұрын
Indeed. At least with climbing your have more control.
@Stu161
@Stu161 8 ай бұрын
I have always found the opposite, I can usually descend in about half the time as the ascent. That said my experience is hiking rather than mountaineering.
@morganfreeman5972
@morganfreeman5972 8 ай бұрын
You're referring to the increased risk of faling down and twisting or breaking an ankle as you descend. That's not the issue with Everest. The countdown clock to your death starts after you reach a certain altitude. You have a limited amount of time to get to the top and back down before you die.
@osmanthuswine190
@osmanthuswine190 8 ай бұрын
That's the opposite for me 😭 In my parent's childhood home, there is a river downhill. I am out of shape, but the descent is really easy. I am even skipping and stuff 😭 It was the ascent back that is hard, I have to literally crawl my way up because it was slippery 😭 Lately I am not even attempting to go to the river anymore because of that lol 😭
@40below1000
@40below1000 8 ай бұрын
"I spent my money, I'm going to reach the summit" is an amazing motivational slogan. They should put it on T-shirts and give everyone who goes to Everest one to wear
@themobseat
@themobseat 8 ай бұрын
Awesome!
@Chatta-Ortega
@Chatta-Ortega 8 ай бұрын
It's a death sentence to those people who feel entitled to reach the summit.
@DrDeuteron
@DrDeuteron 8 ай бұрын
Put that on a motivational poster with her last pic “ DETERMINATION _I spent my money and I’m going to summit_
@rigelb9025
@rigelb9025 8 ай бұрын
To be fair - she actually did end up achieving her goal, which was to reach the summit. But the ultimate cost of her perilous trek - which was her very life - turned out to be quite a bit steeper (no pun intended), than the substantial amounts of money she had to dish out.
@tinymetaltrees
@tinymetaltrees 8 ай бұрын
*sell one to everyone that goes
@selfeffacingbarbie
@selfeffacingbarbie 2 ай бұрын
The level of selfishness required to put yourself in that position where you were entirely unprepared, ill-equipped, and willfully ignorant about the process, and to then expect everyone else to save your ass while putting their own in jeopardy is absolutely astronomical.
@forgenorman3025
@forgenorman3025 4 ай бұрын
I listened to a podcast episode about Everest recently that mentioned there are people at the foot of Everest being taught how to put on their crampons and other very basic things, because it's their first mountain climb! People with more money than sense....
@adventuresgonewrong
@adventuresgonewrong 4 ай бұрын
It's crazy, that has been happening for decades.
@jello4835
@jello4835 7 ай бұрын
Kudos to the group leader for leaving her, honestly. It's tragic but that's a difficult call to make and he acted in the best interest of the group. It must be awful to know you left someone there to die but it was his job to keep everyone else safe and he did what he had to do.
@Mimi-sg6fe
@Mimi-sg6fe 7 ай бұрын
I mean... He didnt. He was 100% clear and that she didn't even tell her husband shows, that she knew. He tried to save her, but she was to arrogant to listen to a guide that has been doing this for a few years already and knows how it works.
@PennyEv4
@PennyEv4 6 ай бұрын
Exactly, she was utterly selfish. She had done no real training, refused to listen to anyone, was taking other people's oxygen and expected Sherpas to carry her down. She didn't care who she traumatised or if she caused the death of others.
@eh3477
@eh3477 6 ай бұрын
The climbing group leder should never have taken her on, due to her almost total lack of climbing experience. Then a responsible group leader would have turned her back while they were training at base camp... she was obviously having trouble. The big Everest climbing guide companies have tough rules for a reason. She had found a small, local less expensive guide company. Nome of the big ones would take her, for obvious reasons.
@jazamaraz8029
@jazamaraz8029 5 ай бұрын
Imagine her ego had she made it down successfully.
@JulieRushworth
@JulieRushworth 5 ай бұрын
Well if her ego hadn't been so big she'd be alive
@bobv7753
@bobv7753 8 ай бұрын
It is absolute insanity that unqualified, inexperienced individuals are even allowed on the mountain. They risk as you state not only their own lives but those of their sherpa guides who let's face it drag their unqualified clients up & down the mountain. This is so wrong! Thank you for your excellent content. Really enjoy your respectful informative commentary.
@jerseygirl6155
@jerseygirl6155 8 ай бұрын
anything for the almighty dollar-money talks
@colinluckens9591
@colinluckens9591 8 ай бұрын
Look the Sherpas just left her there....they didn't have any problems about prioritising their own safety
@peabuddie
@peabuddie 7 ай бұрын
Having grown up just below timberline ( that line where trees cannot grow due to altitude) in the Rocky Mountains (60's, 70's) I have truly mourned and become horrified through the years watching the glory of nature be perverted by money, ego, tourism. I've seen so many of my fondest memories of (at the time) mostly inaccessible realms of nature ruined by the elite or arrogant (movie stars and politicians are the culprits). From the Rocky Mountains, to Bryce Canyon, so much of the "old west" is now ruined or regulated. I always think of that old Joni Mitchell song, "They paved paradise and put up a parking lot."
@stinesfloy
@stinesfloy 7 ай бұрын
I am struggeling with that too. Ive been doing a lot of different activities and trips. Usually with guides as I find that the most rewarding. And I have been turned away for not having proof or certificates proving I am experienced enough. Ive got several certificates from known and well reputed courses and training facilities that I have either gotten on my own or as preparation. Such as kayak,horseriding and diving with logged hours for example. Why this isnt done for trips like this is bizarre.
@rebeccajohnson8769
@rebeccajohnson8769 7 ай бұрын
@@colinluckens9591 Then they could have had 3 dead bodies instead of 1. There was no way for them to bring her down from that height alive.
@kaze_cat
@kaze_cat 4 ай бұрын
On the one hand, Shriya made an impressive goal to climb Mt. Everest. On the other hand at the same time, she also made the more realistic goal to die during her attempt to summit and return safely. Regardless of the reasons why she perished, I believe the responsibility for her death lies squarely on her shoulders. Yes to both your questions re limiting the numbers, and level of experience needed to complete a Mt Everest summit attempt.
@dbob3405
@dbob3405 5 ай бұрын
It takes amazing mental strength and spiritual fortitude to attempt Everest without minimal climbing skills, average physical conditioning and a lack of the ability to recognize objective reality. One has to be committed to the idea that no matter how many others could die carrying you up the mountain, you will not give up until you either summit or the company you hired runs out of warm bodies to carry you. The focus and singleness of vision to put your own egocentric obsession ahead of basic human empathy is a quality found in very few and even fewer with the monetary assets to make it happen. Hats off to these intrepid explorers and the souls they have crushed in their attempts to fill the emptiness of their lives by sacrificing others
@tedcrilly46
@tedcrilly46 7 ай бұрын
every time she sat down she stopped everyone behind her. great.
@HeWhoShams
@HeWhoShams 7 ай бұрын
If a leader says, "Hey, my man, you will die if you try to climb this." I am going to trust his judgement and respect it. Some people are too stubborn for their own good
@writerconsidered
@writerconsidered 4 ай бұрын
Well people who would listen are smart enough not to be on the mountain to begin with. Or take it serious enough to train much more and be ready to climb.
@bunnyluver2176
@bunnyluver2176 3 ай бұрын
Not only "she will die" but "you'll kill us all!" Unbelievable someone would continue after hearing you could not only kill yourself but others...the hubris of this woman is unbelievable!
@renerocha6334
@renerocha6334 3 ай бұрын
The company gladly took her money.
@dennisk648
@dennisk648 3 ай бұрын
@@renerocha6334 so what?
@elbagrau
@elbagrau 3 ай бұрын
​@renerocha6334 That's what companies do... what's your point?
@aliasrandom9241
@aliasrandom9241 4 ай бұрын
Your voice and delivery show that you really care and not just using tragedies of others to make some quick $$. Congratulations
@whiskeyrichards9973
@whiskeyrichards9973 4 ай бұрын
There was a veteran climber who had made the summit several times before doing so became so "trendy". He basically said (and I'm paraphrasing here) that the only truly remarkable thing someone could do on Everest nowadays is to essentially make the summit alone and never tell a soul. In other words you would forfeit all notoriety, bragging rights and make the climb for yourself and the experience alone and nothing else.
@Soooooooooooonicable
@Soooooooooooonicable 7 ай бұрын
Her determination was fueled solely by her desire to reach the summit. Once she achieved that goal, she didn't have anything left to make it back down. She had essentially burned the entire candle of her life just to make it to the top.
@yomofoindahouse
@yomofoindahouse 3 ай бұрын
Absolutely.
@Vlasko60
@Vlasko60 3 ай бұрын
Which even happens to experienced climbers. They call it summit fever, when you know, or are being told, you should turn around, but the summit is so close. Most of those who die do so on the way down. There is also so much luck involved with the weather, avalanches, guides, etc.
@Jo31526
@Jo31526 8 ай бұрын
I think one has to have a certain level of narcissistic tendencies to put that many people in danger just to stand atop a mountain. It is quite baffling.
@felipeiglesias
@felipeiglesias 7 ай бұрын
Just a little? I would say full on narcissistic! (remember she wanted to be a politician also)
@aunch3
@aunch3 6 ай бұрын
I’d have to agree here. It’s one thing to put your own life in danger but when they tell you you’re endangering others and you still go that’s messed up
@jessicaandtrains7768
@jessicaandtrains7768 6 ай бұрын
It's the folly of the idle wealthy.
@HappyTyke25
@HappyTyke25 6 ай бұрын
​@@jessicaandtrains7768 Yeah, a little like diving down to see the titanic in a oversized tin can. Wealthy fools and their egos!
@ariesaraya1822
@ariesaraya1822 6 ай бұрын
Exactly, the fact that she put the Sherpas lives in danger is disgusting.
@kartyl1wielki
@kartyl1wielki 6 ай бұрын
Just found your channel. It is a nice change to actually see the person narrating :) Definitely will watch more of your videos!
@adventuresgonewrong
@adventuresgonewrong 6 ай бұрын
Welcome aboard!
@pam3366
@pam3366 3 ай бұрын
I am glad to hear the two sherpas made the descent safely. Her own selfishness could have killed two other people forced to summit with her.
@jmdinlove5454
@jmdinlove5454 7 ай бұрын
I'm stunned to see hundreds of people standing in line on the way to the summit. It's like waiting for an amusement ride at Disney World.
@vinnynj78
@vinnynj78 4 ай бұрын
Actually, the lines at Disney seem to be much shorter these days
@einezcrespo2107
@einezcrespo2107 4 ай бұрын
It's a very sad sight.
@ThatOpalGuy
@ThatOpalGuy 3 ай бұрын
I heard Disney world is nearly as expensive to visit.
@gatesurfer
@gatesurfer Ай бұрын
@@vinnynj78the problem with Disney World is that it’s in Florida, and nobody wants, or should want to go to Florida.
@chriswhetton3584
@chriswhetton3584 8 ай бұрын
I put more effort into my preparation to climb Mount Adams in Washington state than this women did to climb Everest.. the loss of life is sad but it’s also a warning to others that being determined is not enough in life.
@couldntbeme7385
@couldntbeme7385 8 ай бұрын
How as it? I'm thinking about trying, we did Rainer last year.
@princessmarlena1359
@princessmarlena1359 8 ай бұрын
Had a friend who started with Mount Adams, then moved up to The Matterhorn, then Mount Kilimanjaro, before finally moving on to Mount Everest.
@sorbabaric1
@sorbabaric1 8 ай бұрын
I’m not going to try to compete at elite level in epee. I’m not 6’ with long arms. Sometimes it’s something else that best suits a person. Determination doesn’t change physical reality. Nor magically imbue someone with years of training and years of experience in different conditions. Often an experienced person is observing and processing many small & subtle things in their environment in a fraction of second, all going into their decision making, many things that an inexperienced person isn’t even aware of.
@rigelb9025
@rigelb9025 8 ай бұрын
@@sorbabaric1 Maybe she had just watched the recent live action version of Disney's 'Mulan' and identified a bit too strongly with the 'Asian female protagonist'.
@sandpiperr
@sandpiperr 8 ай бұрын
@@rigelb9025 Mulan went through a training montage where, by the end, she was at the front of the pack not still lagging behind it.
@deeprollingriver52
@deeprollingriver52 3 ай бұрын
The photos of the hundreds of people on Everest is unbelievable
@emwhite6796
@emwhite6796 5 күн бұрын
thank you for sharing this story. Great background behind you by the way . nice. :)
@sagaedling195
@sagaedling195 8 ай бұрын
I’ve never been as thankful for not being strongwilled. I’d get to base camp, get cold and tired and think “what a beautiful place, it is worth some discomfort and hard work. To a limit. Let’s go home.”
@loraleepooley3669
@loraleepooley3669 8 ай бұрын
Visiting a stress free country like the uk for a few weeks is enough for me. I’m not physically or medically strong due to no fault of my own, and I know my limitations. I never like to slow others down or make them responsible for my care. Hubs and I do our own thing. 😊
@thestruggler3338
@thestruggler3338 7 ай бұрын
you would get to basecamp?
@ritahenderson6771
@ritahenderson6771 8 ай бұрын
She literary is a prime example of the saying: „haughtiness comes before the fall“. She was so caught up in her self delusion that having second thoughts or even terminating the climb was no option. It’s sad to see how a person carelessly not only risks her life but rather dies than to be sensible…for what? To bathe in some fancied glory?
@davegriffin9083
@davegriffin9083 8 ай бұрын
This is where you have to listen to your husband. I had to stop my wife a few times from doing something that would have killed her. She later thanked me.
@pugetsound1272
@pugetsound1272 8 ай бұрын
Yes, I agree. She was so arrogant and self-important that she caused herself and others to die.
@henrymorgan3982
@henrymorgan3982 8 ай бұрын
Hey, but they took the money!
@kimpeater1
@kimpeater1 8 ай бұрын
for the likes and the followers
@AkChiVibes
@AkChiVibes 8 ай бұрын
💯
@maxolivia4911
@maxolivia4911 24 күн бұрын
I, myself, am chronically ill and disabled. Have been since I was ten years old and I am now approaching mid 30's. I am super fascinated by athletes who can do amazing things with their working vessel. I'm also continually in shock when it comes to wealthy people thinking they can purchase their way to the status of an athlete without putting in any of the work. I can absolutely live vicariously through true athletes, dancers, runners, gymnasts, climbers. They make me feel connected to a human experience I will never have. This, however, I do not get. It's like cheating your way to a prestigious college. Except alongside that, you aren't just bypassing an entrance exam, you are risking countless lives in front and behind you. It would be one thing if it were only your life. Solo climbers die falling from rock face and that is their choice to make, their risk to own. But Everest? Where your Sherpas are at risk of dying for your own ineptitude? In my mind, that's a form of manslaughter. Perhaps that's going too far. I am obviously the furthest thing from a mountaineer. But I think it's reprehensible, personally.
@tinygrim
@tinygrim 6 ай бұрын
Great video. And cool voice. Plain and simple, yet 💯 awesome TY perfect timing and pace and grammar.
@thatsthat2612
@thatsthat2612 8 ай бұрын
Im sorry but the owner leaving her was on her. She'd been warned by pros not to continue but she did. He can hardly be expected to commit suicide with her
@RideAcrossTheRiver
@RideAcrossTheRiver 8 ай бұрын
The notion that reaching Everest's summit would 'complete something in her' is ludicrous.
@user-rk7cw2bf9u
@user-rk7cw2bf9u 8 ай бұрын
100% agree with you he should throw away his life because her ego.
@jeyan65
@jeyan65 7 ай бұрын
Agree 💯 with this comment . Absolutely hypocritical of Russel Bryce to condemn him . Why should the owner risk his own life when he had given her the right advise but she refused to comply .
@ToxicAli3n
@ToxicAli3n 7 ай бұрын
I think a big problem, aside from lack of experience, is that a lot of these people are so hyper focused on getting to the summit, they are forgetting they still have to go back down. Once they reach the summit and realize this, they are already too physically drained to make it down.
@emdove
@emdove 6 ай бұрын
I climbed a much smaller mountain this year, and had to back out and get back to base due to a friends elevation sickness. Let me tell you, I wasn't prepared for how long it took to get back down. The paths were much less steep, more winding and serpentine, we started demounting at 2 AM and arrived at base way past sunrise. It would've taken us two more hours to get to the summit. Now, as I said, that mountain, the Fujiyama, is very safe and not that high, it would've taken a lot of effort to die on it, so we were fine. But that's exactly why climbing smaller mountains before tackling something like the Everest is important.
@Galaxie08
@Galaxie08 5 ай бұрын
And the adrenaline rush is ebbing after reaching the summit. So they are exhausted, the body struggles to function in the Death Zone--but they need energy & alertness to make it back down safely. It is a recipe for disaster if ALL you focus on is the ascent.
@ProvisionalPatrioticAlliance
@ProvisionalPatrioticAlliance 4 ай бұрын
Most people die on the way down....
@RR-vg5hg
@RR-vg5hg 4 ай бұрын
Exactly
@xovux
@xovux 4 ай бұрын
Theres a saying in aviation that kills pilots its called Get there Itis which means pilots are so focused to land a plane even when it isnt safe to do so, for weather or w.e that instead of an alternate airport they kill themselves trying
@lowerastral1963
@lowerastral1963 6 ай бұрын
It's disgusting that Mount Everest and other extremely high-elevation mountains and their summits have become not just tourist traps, but that they've become death traps. As someone who used to do a lot of rock climbing, trekking, backpacking, and outdoor adventures, I've truly never understood the attraction of "I just HAVE to climb Everest!" fever. I also don't understand why it's a "tragedy" when people die doing these extremely dangerous and deadly "adventures". They know how dangerous it is. If summiting mountain peaks that reside in the "death zone" is something that you're willing to risk, then where's the tragedy? If that's the risk you're willing to take, then you have to know that you could end up in the Astral Plane and not on the Earth Plane. Who wants to be a part of the wealthy hoard who pay thousands of dollars just so you can say that you sat on top of Everest, meanwhile, leaving behind literally tons of human detritus? You might as well go to Mars.
@montananerd8244
@montananerd8244 6 ай бұрын
I once was tricked into summiting a very low "peak" lol (i was a chubby smoker on a baby backpacking trip). Not a named one, no one else around, it was a bushwhack tho, which is not safe, but far far far from the safety risk of most disasters. It didnt need to be a famous place, it was one of greatest moments of my life. Standing on the top of a mountain, barely above the treeline, looking out at the massive forest in the bitteroot range of the rocky mountains...nothing can ever beat that. If you only want to do the famous things, you probably are chasing the wrong dreams...
@micfail2
@micfail2 8 ай бұрын
Spending 30 minutes on the summit when you're already running late? Madness
@adventuresgonewrong
@adventuresgonewrong 8 ай бұрын
Just insanity!
@Tom_Het
@Tom_Het 7 ай бұрын
wow. I had believed for so long that it was a technical climb. I always imagined it would look like a little team of ice climbers doing tandem climbs up rock faces, putting their own ropes down, etc. with nobody else in sight. Seeing the pictures of the masses of people really demystifies it for me. It's literally just people waiting in a line all day like a tourist trap. Someone else left a rope for them to hold onto and they just walk up the hill. Except there is no air and they're freezing to death. And literally any second the weather could sweep them away.
@user-jg5ws9gr8n
@user-jg5ws9gr8n 6 ай бұрын
Tour ist TRAP
@Ryan-jp3mh
@Ryan-jp3mh 4 ай бұрын
Watch a few more videos on Everest. Its not just walking for long periods like its painted in this video. There is a lot of technical aspects. Those ropes get put up by sherpas right before the climbers head out. Just making it to the first camp, through the icefall is more than most could do, and you do it several times. I give the lady credit for making it to the top, thats no easy task, and even experienced climbers have died on the return trip.
@TrHoffma3242
@TrHoffma3242 4 ай бұрын
It wasn’t always like this. EGO and GREED have changed the game.
@TheKnoxvicious
@TheKnoxvicious 4 ай бұрын
Those pictures made me so sad. Humans ruined it :(
@arditaferrari3546
@arditaferrari3546 4 ай бұрын
himalayan climbing is basically jumaring a fixed rope in awful condition, it's not only everest but surely there are way more technical climbs. People like Ueli Steck, soloing there, are another thing
@jeffrydell
@jeffrydell 2 ай бұрын
Terrific Narration and reporting. Thank you, this was very interesting
@desertmoons8
@desertmoons8 5 ай бұрын
Another good video. i appreciate your reports are respectful to the adventurers and give insight into personalities.
@dustondoesit3913
@dustondoesit3913 7 ай бұрын
I grew up at 10000 feet, and I have summited numerous mountains. No matter how prepared you think you are, you are only as strong as your body is. And most of all, you cannot stop moving. The minute you stop to take a “small break” you are done for. I almost made the mistake of stopping waist deep in snow after I had gotten lost from the trail. If I had stopped for a break that day I’d be frozen in the white forest.
@defundhollywood3259
@defundhollywood3259 7 ай бұрын
I've spent my entire life in the Canadian Prairies, went to Utah several years ago and could barely even handle being 5000 feet higher than usual. My mom and I just felt really weird the whole time. I can't imagine trying to climb a mountain without properly training.
@orangebeagle3068
@orangebeagle3068 7 ай бұрын
Scary 😳
@user-is7xs1mr9y
@user-is7xs1mr9y 7 ай бұрын
This is a very good thing to remember. I'm not planning on climbing mountains or going to the snow, it hardly snows in some regions in my country, but it's still a good survival tip to remember, thanks. I'm so glad you're here with us and share your experience.
@snorttroll4379
@snorttroll4379 6 ай бұрын
So your clothes were not warm enough
@dustondoesit3913
@dustondoesit3913 6 ай бұрын
@@snorttroll4379 it doesn’t matter how warm your clothes are. I was plenty warm, it’s more that no matter what if you stop generating heat and blood flow you will succumb to hypothermia.
@Da_Publick
@Da_Publick 6 ай бұрын
There's something that many people don't realize going up there. If one gets into trouble it's a slim chance they'll be saved. The other expedition members are already doing all they can just to keep _themselves_ alive.
@danroux4010
@danroux4010 2 ай бұрын
Anyone attempting Everest is aware of this. It's very common knowledge. But desperation will make people do strange things.
@PeymanADLDOUSTIHAGH
@PeymanADLDOUSTIHAGH 3 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing her story. It helped me understand her life and tragic death.
@savagebrie
@savagebrie 4 ай бұрын
I'd be thrilled with myself just being able to make it to the base camp, like you said I'd happy make a trip out of that alone.
@cjod33
@cjod33 8 ай бұрын
Ive been climbing for over 40yrs. Ive got a lot of great friends who are into the alpine stuff. They've tried to get me on to numerous mountains with them. I once asked one of them (hes topped out all the highest and hardest peaks) to put in layman's terms what it's like. He thought for a while and said " get dressed in heaps of puffy gear, wrap a scarf around your face , put on a twenty kg pack and go walk up and down the fire stairs of the tallest skyscraper you can find until you can barely move your legs and then keep going up and down the stairs at least another ten times and you will have a slight taste of what it's like". He convinced me to stck with the rock climbing.😂
@carolynhunt7333
@carolynhunt7333 8 ай бұрын
That’s good enough for me to know I couldn’t do it.
@jenniferlacey6974
@jenniferlacey6974 8 ай бұрын
When I did a much less challenging hike I trained with weights in my backpack on the treadmill and stair machine. I still had trouble just hiking because I’m a flatlander. This was my most difficult hike. I didn’t complete the hike despite the fact I’d just retired from college rugby.
@fenderOCG
@fenderOCG 8 ай бұрын
I had my first successful mountaineering trip in the weekend, I'd agree about the concept of hitting your limit then having to keep going. There's often nowhere to rest tired and cramping muscles. It's the first time I've done something where I feel like I need validation from others to justify the risk and effort, it clearly doesn't add up while I still have a wife and kids to look after.
@24934637
@24934637 8 ай бұрын
He's fairly accurate there! I've only done some of the easier 14000ft peaks in the French / Italian Alps, and even on those, it's VERY noticable as you get higher that oxygen is in shorter supply than at sea level. Food packages swell up with the lower air pressure, and even walking up a gentle slope becomes a challenge. There is CONSTANT time pressure because as the day goes along, it gets warmer, so stone fall is more likely. The ONLY pleasant part of an Alpine experience is the view, and the end of the experience! Compared to rock climbing in the UK, the dangers are magnified 10X at least. Avalanches, rock falls, and issues created by 'moving together' over steep ground at higher altitude......Once you get to the 'Greater Ranges (Himalayas, Karakoram etc.) the dangers are HUGE. Blocks of ice the size of houses tumbling down the mountain, Crevasses HUNDREDS of feet deep, 100+MPH winds and temperatures far far below freezing. The word 'uncomfortable' doesn't even start to cover it, and 'misery' is only part way. IF you are a massochist, with olympic athlete levels of fitness, who doesn't give a shit about your own life, and the lives of your companions, then the Himalayan Mountains are for you! Otherwise.....Stick with rock climbing, same as I did (After a bit of a play in the Alps).
@softgoodsint
@softgoodsint 8 ай бұрын
Well, I don't mind saying rock climbing is plenty scary enough, at least for some of us, with your life hanging upside down by a finger or two. I'll take that skyscraper with those nice stairs, perhaps even throw caution to the wind and not hold the railing. Not that I won't be going back country skiing, but 30-40 deg slope (at 12k elevation) is quite enough, thank you.
@mtmadigan82
@mtmadigan82 8 ай бұрын
The guys we went with you had to have experience with them, or show a resume with refrences and literally tryout. They declined more people than they brought. When we got there it became very clear not everyone there had been similarly vetted. That was really one of the scariest part of the whole thing, we might have our lives put at risk by people like this chick. It's unbelievable that a guide would take someone with zero alpine climbing experience.
@adventuresgonewrong
@adventuresgonewrong 8 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing, I think people forget about the experienced folks who train hard to take it on.
@mtmadigan82
@mtmadigan82 8 ай бұрын
​@@adventuresgonewrongthanks, great video!
@stanislavkostarnov2157
@stanislavkostarnov2157 8 ай бұрын
She reached the summit, so she clearly did have the required minimal technical skills by the point of the climb... what she ended up not having enough of is stamina... also she might have had no experience to tell her what her condition was, but that happens even to seasoned climbers with a drive...
@rigelb9025
@rigelb9025 8 ай бұрын
@@stanislavkostarnov2157 Well there you go. She barely possessed the strict minimal requirements to make it to the top, while having to be 'carried' heavily by her team, and slowing everybody else down. But once she finally reached it, which as you say, was 'the point' of her climb, she had forgotten to factor in another major component : GETTING BACK DOWN. So the way I see it, she was either completely blinded by her own hubris, or she just happened to have a very expensive & adventurous death kink.
@barbaramiller17
@barbaramiller17 8 ай бұрын
I can’t even imagine what that was like. I am not a climber, but when a group of us turned 50, we did a live aboard dive trip to the Galápagos Islands. The dive masters wouldn’t allow anyone with less than 70 dives and a thorough checkout dive, and we still had to rescue a few who got bashed against the rocks. The idea of possibly dying because of someone else’s hubris is appalling.
@Dizinii
@Dizinii 6 ай бұрын
Hi, I use youtube as a radio at work. So glad your pacing and tone isn't hurried or stressful to listen to. Good job
@adventuresgonewrong
@adventuresgonewrong 6 ай бұрын
Thanks! Videos end up being longer but I like a chill approach and am glad to hear it works for you!
@SnackingTheWorld
@SnackingTheWorld 3 ай бұрын
I knew climbing Everest was challenging but didn’t completely understand it until I saw this video. You explained this brilliantly. Thank you
@adventuresgonewrong
@adventuresgonewrong 3 ай бұрын
Stay tuned for my next video where I break it down into more detail. It's really interesting and fascinating stuff!
@BB-sm8ey
@BB-sm8ey 7 ай бұрын
That owner really did the right thing. Adults are adults because they are old enough to take responsibility for themselves. She had been absolutely clearly warned of the consequences of her decisions.
@NadiaSeesIt
@NadiaSeesIt 7 ай бұрын
No, he was a scammer. Not refunding canceled trips that HE canceled, then letting her go anyway? He is a weak coward
@R2Bl3nd
@R2Bl3nd 7 ай бұрын
He should never have taken her on or let her go in the first place. He was just there to take the money of naive people based on how things appeared.
@abuzarov
@abuzarov 7 ай бұрын
​@R2Bl3nd I'm 100% sure all the clients are taken to realize very well what the challenges the climb entails. They also sign some form of consent confirming they realize what the dangers are and taking the responsibility for their actions. If she signed it without reading it's her own fault. She was a narcissistic fool and the guiding company is not to blame for that.
@wvanyar1801
@wvanyar1801 6 ай бұрын
@@abuzarov , I agree with you. Whether you reach the top or not, all the people and equipment used to get you to that point need to be paid for. Also the no refunds are for the person that makes it to the last base camp and then gets to sick to climb, sorry but it took two weeks of porters, sherpas, and supplies just to get you to the first base camp. Than more people to get you to the next and so on. This is not a ticket to a theater show, this is a life threatening, physically, and mentally challenging experience. You don't get your money back for a theater ticket after the curtain goes up, same thing with this climb.
@eh3477
@eh3477 6 ай бұрын
​@@NadiaSeesItA different large tour operator canceled all his clients. He has an excellent safety record. All the big companies have clear no-refund policies, for having to turn around due to sickness, weather, safety, etc. The company she was with was a pretty irresponsible small local company. None of the big reputable companies would take her, and they cost a lot more $$$.
@blueeyesblueskiesahead1612
@blueeyesblueskiesahead1612 2 ай бұрын
Thanks for this. Very interesting. Not something I would or could ever physically do. But I do enjoy vicariously experiencing the adventure through others. So very sad for all those families who have lost loved ones up there. 😢
@janisbaumrucker3431
@janisbaumrucker3431 23 күн бұрын
I really like your show! You do a good job explaining the weirdness of Everest.
@Bri-ss1gu
@Bri-ss1gu 8 ай бұрын
The saddest thing about this death is how extremely avoidable it would have been with more preparation. The fact that she was still able to get so far with so little experience just shows that she could have completed the climb successfully if she trained properly. She didn’t even need to be talked out of it, just better preparation.
@MoneyStrategiesSOULutions
@MoneyStrategiesSOULutions 7 ай бұрын
And who had to pay for the rescue team to go up there? The family?
@raybod1775
@raybod1775 7 ай бұрын
Recovery team, nobody to rescue.
@Itried20takennames
@Itried20takennames 7 ай бұрын
Ummm…do you climb or know anything about climbing? Or just assuming you know? And “properly trained” means “spend 7k to fly home, forfeiting the 40k you just paid, then practice hours per day for 2 years, then repay our 50k fee plus another 20k in airfare, travel, gear, etc? That isn’t bad advice, but how many would do that? Less than 1 in 100 is my guess.
@jacksonlawrence6929
@jacksonlawrence6929 7 ай бұрын
​@Itried20takennames well.. you know.. usually people would train properly before they paid the money and showed up.. This chick went on a couple hikes and hit a climbing wall. Lmao.
@stefaniebraun3319
@stefaniebraun3319 7 ай бұрын
​@@Itried20takennamesI would expect someone, who wanted to climb Everest, to have at least climbed half a dozen other mountains maybe in the Alps, the Andes or the Rocky Mountains, including some glaciers.
@marlenedouglas7957
@marlenedouglas7957 8 ай бұрын
Limit the amount of people who can climb. Don't allow inexperienced people to climb who put others at risk and cause them to die. Madness
@adventuresgonewrong
@adventuresgonewrong 8 ай бұрын
That is much overdue!
@Robutube1
@Robutube1 8 ай бұрын
There is no incentive to do this unfortunately, quite the opposite in fact.
@alecule
@alecule 8 ай бұрын
the permit is 11k usd so yeah, why limit the suckers
@Vincerama
@Vincerama 8 ай бұрын
The country makes good money selling permits to climb, unfortunately. However in the end, it's up to the climber to know if they can make it or not.
@Itried20takennames
@Itried20takennames 8 ай бұрын
Agree but. 1. Nepal is a poorer country, 2. Permits and fees from climbing generate a lot of money in Nepal, and reducing permits to only the best climbers would cost Nepal significant income and the loss of many jobs. Should still be done, but those are jobs and money that Nepal would not have a replacement for currently. And even limiting climbers would not make it “safe” …you could only allow the top world climbers and you would still have deaths due to falling ice, other falls, HAPE/HACE (which are more common in older climbers, but can and do happen out of the blue in strong, young climbers, even Sherpas guides), sudden storms trapping people above camp 4, etc. If the goal is safety, then no one should climb any mountain…it isn’t safe.
@user-et1vz1bx2q
@user-et1vz1bx2q 2 ай бұрын
This is a very good that lady explains and talks very well. Probably the best now so I ever heard more power to her. She’s great.
@mashton6631
@mashton6631 2 ай бұрын
Love your channel and your shiny hair. You have a gift for narration hope you keep doing KZbin forevermore
@pilotjoe4010
@pilotjoe4010 8 ай бұрын
You can’t save everyone, and some people put themselves so deep in danger they will easily kill entire teams. To give in to your own emotions in a risky situation is extremely selfish. This is sad, I hope people learn from this.
@pollsfriend
@pollsfriend 8 ай бұрын
Once you’re in death zone you know it’s each for his own. It can be cruel but it’s a reality.
@aldranzam3456
@aldranzam3456 8 ай бұрын
Indeed. Nothing worthy of glory in selfishly risking other people's lives for your own inflated ego.
@rigelb9025
@rigelb9025 8 ай бұрын
@@hasslfoot It just looks like that whole entire process, from signing the check to perishing at the summit - assuming you even make it (as somehow, she managed to do) has become a bit too easy. And cheaply done. Just cutting every single corner until there's nothing left.
@lala71171
@lala71171 7 ай бұрын
Looking at her "training" efforts, she seems to have taken this whole expedition almost literally "a walk in the park"
@Bretski126
@Bretski126 26 күн бұрын
Really interesting. Good job. Makes me feel real comfortable in my cozy little apartment.
@jessicam5712
@jessicam5712 6 ай бұрын
Part of the problem is that when youve mortgaged your house, made it all the way to Nepal, hiked to base camp, it's very difficult to convince people that their life is more important than the huge amount of resources theyve invested in getting that far. Her poor family must have felt relieved when she got to the top, but like Shiriya so many people die on the way down. I feel for her husband and family.
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