The Nanda Devi Disaster

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Morbid Midnight

Morbid Midnight

Күн бұрын

In September of 1976, mountaineering pioneer Willi Unsoeld and his 22 year old daughter who was named after the peak, Nanda Devi Unsoeld, as part of a 13 member expedition team, would attempt to ascend a new, difficult route up Nanda Devi's fearsome slopes. This is the story of that fateful expedition.
Thanks everyone for watching, and if you enjoyed the video, please leave a like and a comment on it for me, and since you've read this far, you're now obligated to subscribe to the channel. Sorry, those are the rules! Since this video is being posted on December 24th, I also want to wish everyone a merry or happy Christmas and I appreciate you all so much!...why is it that Christmas is the only merry holiday in the US? I've never had anyone wish me a merry Fourth of July, but honestly, it would be kind of cool if people did. Anyways, I digress...
As I always do in these descriptions, I of course want to give a huge thank you to all the channel members who help make these videos possible by financially supporting the channel by becoming members! Seriously, I appreciate your support more than I can find the words to express at the moment; you really do make me even more motivated to keep improving and producing the best quality videos I can for you all, as I'm just one guy doing my best out here! If you'd like to support the channel by becoming a channel member for as little as $1 dollar a month, I'll leave a link to the memberships page below for your convenience to peruse, as each tier of membership comes with some neat perks as a thank you for your support! Stay safe out there everyone!
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Пікірлер: 199
@phishfanvt
@phishfanvt Жыл бұрын
I hiked to the base camp about 10 years ago, this is bringing back some amazing memories. I had no idea about this disaster. thanks for making this. The thumbnail picture on my KZbin profile is actually a picture of Nanda Devi from a 16,000 foot pass across a valley from Nanda Devi! Would love to make it back to this area sometime in my life
@markwebster5749
@markwebster5749 Жыл бұрын
Same 7 years ago breath taking place
@TheEmpire822
@TheEmpire822 Жыл бұрын
Damn you have been using the same KZbin account since KZbin was created basically. That’s impressive.
@jjggbbjunk
@jjggbbjunk 11 ай бұрын
I am finishing the book "Nanda Devi" by John Roskelly. The book does not shed a pleasant light on Willie. My father climbed with Willi Unsoeld in the Oregon State College Mountain Club. (OSC is now OSU, for the record). So I asked him about Willi. He liked him, but he described his leadership style as democratic an non-confrontational. Devi is described in the book as being stoic and strong-willed. Willi was not willing to be forceful toward her; he was no match. He really was kind of a "hippy", very risk tolerant, and probably a poor choice as a team leader. My father said he would not have chosen that particular route down Mt Rainier, as it was known to have avalanches. He said that "He isn't available to ask about his thinking." Willi may have felt pressure to get his students down the Mt Rainier quickly due to the worsening weather. Another risk. I am glad my father didn't go on any big expeditions with him.
@noteveryday
@noteveryday Жыл бұрын
Im looking through my subs, and you are the only one that has not succumbed to using clickbait thumbnails and titles. Much Respect. I mean I wouldnt even mind if you did, these days its like a fucking major disadvantage to not do it ever since that god damn Veritasium video that proved they were required.
@TheBaleadaMan
@TheBaleadaMan Жыл бұрын
“I kid you not” First time bro broke his professional narrating because not even he could believe this brain dead reason 😭😭
@91945punx
@91945punx Жыл бұрын
Amazing how that was ever an idea.
@solomondees.4632
@solomondees.4632 6 ай бұрын
Its actaully not that unusual to power such a remote device with a nuclear battery. The soviets did it for lighthouses and radio relays in the far north. Its the only power source that will function reliably in those conditions with no maintenance. Essentially the rest of the device was just a normal radio repeater.
@tomperkins5657
@tomperkins5657 11 ай бұрын
Hindsight, of course, is 20/20. It is hard for me to comprehend that Willi, a veteran and accomplished mountaineer, would not recognize what was happening to his daughter and get her off that mountain.
@JeremyBrochu-wp5wc
@JeremyBrochu-wp5wc Жыл бұрын
Idk why but i really like these mountaineering vids great stuff look forward to ur videos my friend
@HollyCat504
@HollyCat504 Жыл бұрын
Sad Fact: John Roskelley, the climber who was ready to get back to the US to await the birth of his child, also lost a child to the mountains. His son was Jess Roskelley, who was a well-known and accomplished mountaineer in his own right. By 2003, Jess was a guide on Mt Rainer and had summited the mountain 35 times, even though he was only 20 years old. That same year, he joined his father, John Roskelley, on an expedition to Mt Everest. Their attempt was successful and Jess became the youngest American to ever summit Mt Everest (a record which has since been broken by a 13 year old) He was a professional climber and sponsored by Adidas Outdoor and The North Face. He was sadly killed in 2019, at the age of 36, during the Howse Peak Avalanche in the Canadian Rockies. He was killed alongside 2 other young and very well-known and successful mountaineers. One was a 35 year old Austrian climber named Hansjörg Auer, who was noted for his free solos. But probably the best known of the trio was David Lama, a 28 year old Austrian, quite famous for his rock climbing abilities and his Alpine mountaineering. David won climbing events all over Europe and was the first to reach the summit of Lunag Ri. It was a tragic loss on many levels for the climbing community.
@averagejoegrows
@averagejoegrows 11 ай бұрын
shit happens oh well people are dying daily
@paulgrey8028
@paulgrey8028 7 ай бұрын
David Lama kept pushing the limits and cutting the safety margins thinner and thinner. It was inevitable that he'd eventually be taken out by a dangerous route.
@rl7012
@rl7012 3 ай бұрын
@@paulgrey8028 An avalanche can and does kill the safest of climbers.
@rl7012
@rl7012 3 ай бұрын
@@paulgrey8028 What do you think it does? It was an avalanche that killed Lama not him taking excessive risks.
@paulgrey8028
@paulgrey8028 3 ай бұрын
@@rl7012 really? You don't say? The difference is that safe climbers don't climb in poor conditions [you know like when slopes are loaded with fresh snow for example] nor do they climb risky new routes that are natural funnels for avalanches.
@classicmicroscopy9398
@classicmicroscopy9398 Жыл бұрын
You can't really regain stamina by resting that high. They should have turned back much sooner.
@tedthesailor172
@tedthesailor172 Жыл бұрын
@ceedub619cameraman3 Edmund Hillary died in 2008, so it can't be him...
@PostModernBooRadley
@PostModernBooRadley Жыл бұрын
You probably already know this but the legendary Pete Boardman and Joe Tasker unintentionally played a role in this incident in that they had just finished epochal ascent of Changabang's west wall and were prepping to leave when they received word of nearby climbers requiring assistance. There was obviously nothing they could do but Joe, at least, was able to provide some morale support to the Nanda Devi team in their grief. An interesting footnote, to me anyway 😊
@harinagarajan2296
@harinagarajan2296 6 күн бұрын
Do read the book "shining mountain" by Boardman and Tasker. Truly great writing and this sad and poignant episode is written about in that book. Hari
@MegaAngryspoon
@MegaAngryspoon Жыл бұрын
This dropped just before christmas here, merry christmas and thanks for the christmas eve upload!
@creeseman
@creeseman Жыл бұрын
My grandmother recently told me this story with a bit less detail last month, crazy seeing it appear here. When my mother and grandparents lived in Nepal, they would host expeditionary groups as they came through Kathmandu on the way to the mountains. They even hosted the folks in this tragedy at one point. Both stories ended with the comment about Mt. Rainer as well, she said Willi had been taking students from Evergreen State University on yearly mountaineering expeditions when that happened.
@Happyhappyclam
@Happyhappyclam 11 ай бұрын
How is this level of obsession NOT considered a mental illness??
@zztop4996
@zztop4996 4 ай бұрын
Jon Krakauer, Into Thin Air, p.3: "Unsoeld, who hailed from my hometown in Oregon, was a close friend of my father's. I climbed my first mountain in the company of my dad, Unsoeld, and his oldest son, Regon, a few months before Unsoeld departed for Nepal. Not surprisingly, accounts of the 1963 Everest epic resonated loud and long in my preadolescent imagination. While my friends idolized John Glenn, Sandy Koufax, and Johnny Unitas, my heroes were Hornbein and Unsoeld." It's a small world...
@dougshelby939
@dougshelby939 24 күн бұрын
Thanks for the information on John Roskelley. Outstanding American climber, who was one of the four Americans to first summit K2. Only wish it didn't come with the sad news about his son!
@sylviarogier1
@sylviarogier1 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for narrating your own videos. So many videos these days have computer generated voices reading the text.
@POLARTTYRTM
@POLARTTYRTM Жыл бұрын
That's a gnarly-looking mountain. How do you conduct a survey in 1808 to determine which mountain is taller with no modern equipment? I always find it interesting how they find out such things with no technology.
@OfftheWallTales
@OfftheWallTales Жыл бұрын
Deleted my comment because yup, Brian’s right. Apparently in the 1840s people used two equations (Law of Sines and the Pythagorean Theorem) to calculate Mount Everest’s height. They took it a hundred miles away and were only off by 27 feet. A good diagram of how they did it is on the site outdoors org, and the page is called “Calculate Mountain Elevation Like a Pro” so Google that if you want a visual explanation. But long story short, they took the measurements of the angles of two points at the base to the peak. Then knowing just the two angles and the distance between the two points, they could calculate it. The page explains it really well if you’re more curious.
@kintustis
@kintustis Жыл бұрын
Tape measure
@brianmessemer2973
@brianmessemer2973 Жыл бұрын
Spherical trigonometry and triangulation.
@OfftheWallTales
@OfftheWallTales Жыл бұрын
@@brianmessemer2973One google search later and suddenly I’m remembering about the Law of Sines for the first time in 15 years. Holy crap, that is some amazing work those people did. Thank you.
@davidpawson7393
@davidpawson7393 Жыл бұрын
Geometry
@randydewees7338
@randydewees7338 Жыл бұрын
Bill Tillman the "strong little sahib". I recommend reading his accounts of mountaineering, exploration, and sailing. He is an excellent writer and is occasionally hilarious. While he did many hard things, he was not immune to impractical ideas, being the first person to ride a bicycle across equatorial Africa. He fought in both World Wars, and finally died a sailor's death in the stormy sea off Cape Horn.
@dianedavis1833
@dianedavis1833 Жыл бұрын
Photography is stunning!
@richieroma
@richieroma Жыл бұрын
18 years ago I was lucky enough to glimpse this mountain on the horizon from the Himalayan foothills - as stunning and majestic as they come.
@averagejoegrows
@averagejoegrows 11 ай бұрын
i want to do everest base camp and see all these beauties did you have a guide?
@anniereddj
@anniereddj Жыл бұрын
Merry Christmas and thank you!!
@tedthesailor172
@tedthesailor172 Жыл бұрын
I wouldn't even go to work if I had her symptoms, never mind climb a mountain. She must've been plenty tough...
@91945punx
@91945punx Жыл бұрын
too tough for her own good.
@nimomemre6550
@nimomemre6550 Жыл бұрын
I think her father pushed her 😕
@alexyo2440
@alexyo2440 Жыл бұрын
Clearly not enough though. Strange that they even kept going
@micfail2
@micfail2 10 ай бұрын
You spelled "really dumb" wrong
@valarieirons4447
@valarieirons4447 4 ай бұрын
​@nimomemre6550 apparently she was strong willed... Dad compromising.
@JudyMotto
@JudyMotto 4 ай бұрын
Thanks for all you do ❤
@nimomemre6550
@nimomemre6550 Жыл бұрын
This is so upsetting to see that Willy literally pushed her daughter to take a climb. Her daughter complained from the start about her being sick. Yet was pushed to her limits. - Question is why Willy was so irresponsible that he didn't took his daughter down when for three days she clearly showed symptoms of altitude sickness & was suffering diarrhea (in a death zone) ? 😐 - can't imagine the helpness she would've felt.😕 RIP 🙏
@cyruskhalvati
@cyruskhalvati Жыл бұрын
One may simply suggest that any minor complaint should see the team member taken off the summit team and be taken lower down the mountain immediately. Doing so too frequently however, would ultimately result in team members who will pretend like they’re fine in fear of being taken off the summit team. And thats just the normal team member-leader relationship. When you consider the team leader was devi’s dad, you have to factor in the highly elevated importance both of the factors i mentioned above. Both the safety and the emotions of devi are inherently going to be much more important to willy, the problem is now a much more personal one. Then you have the potential expectations of the parent on the child. On a mountain expectations should honestly be tossed over the cliff, but never the less, they still play a factor in the ultimate decision making of the team leader. Its not as straight forward as most would think, and this is just part of the problem viewed through a psychological lens.
@Periodik
@Periodik Жыл бұрын
​@@cyruskhalvatiThe answer is simple. He loved the mountain more than his daughter. It's why even after the mountain killed her, he would continue to scale mountains afterwards as if nothing happened.
@v5k456jh3
@v5k456jh3 11 ай бұрын
@@Periodik Why would he stop doing what he loves? Would that bring her daughter back? Would it make someone feel better if he stopped? I really don't get it.
@SuperHenryVa757
@SuperHenryVa757 11 ай бұрын
Same thing happened to the son on the imploded Titan Submersible went to appease his dad on Fathers Day Sulemon Dawoo??
@cyruskhalvati
@cyruskhalvati 11 ай бұрын
@@Periodik its easy to say that without thinking about it, but how many over ambitious parents end up hurting their kids? Does that mean they don’t love their kids? Also devi was an adult, everyone on the team has to take responsibility for their own safety, if they cant do that they shouldnt be there. As I implied i believe the fault somewhat lies with devi. She knew the signs of failure to acclimate. She knew it could cause pulmonary edema. Obviously so did her dad, this is not an excuse for the outcome, but she made her choices as well. If she asked to go down before it was too late, she would have been fine.
@TheEmpire822
@TheEmpire822 Жыл бұрын
I mean who in their right minds stays at altitude for 5 days? The first time she started having stomach issues they should have left and went back down. I feel there was a lot of selfishness going on here about summiting and it cost someone their life.
@Galfrid
@Galfrid 11 ай бұрын
Willy was some package 🙄 Seasoned enough to know how climbing affects you, but unwilling to remove his daughter from the climb. She was sick at the beginning and only got worse. I don't expect him to give up climbing just because his daughter died, but that gruff "alcohol and TV" attitude kinda sums it all up
@Tsumami__
@Tsumami__ Жыл бұрын
That being said, Willy sounded like an incredibly selfish and stupid individual
@dfinlen
@dfinlen Жыл бұрын
Don't judge a book by a couple statements about climbing. Would you spend nearly an hour doing cpr.
@markwebster5749
@markwebster5749 Жыл бұрын
How is binx doing 😊
@same5952
@same5952 Жыл бұрын
@@dfinlen It WAS his daughter that he was doing CPR on, not a stranger. He was responsible for her condition.
@Idekreally
@Idekreally 10 ай бұрын
@@same5952he didn’t force her to climb. She was an adult and chose to ascend despite her sickness.
@lyntonblair9016
@lyntonblair9016 Жыл бұрын
One scarey looking mountain
@Pewnhound112
@Pewnhound112 Жыл бұрын
Yeah I saw this coming when they used the awful strategy of letting how they feel dictate their summit attempt, instead of the weather. Mountaineering 101-easier to ascend in good weather when you are tired than bad weather when you are rested. Basic, basic stuff. Not really so much a tragedy as it was a result of piss poor mountaineering. The longer your expedition takes, the greater number of difficulties you will face.
@gavriloking5637
@gavriloking5637 Жыл бұрын
Amen. Same with all outdoor sports on mountains or the sea.
@review-report
@review-report Жыл бұрын
Well said!
@larrynicholson5810
@larrynicholson5810 Жыл бұрын
Another fine video,midnight. Thanks.
@boyerbyr
@boyerbyr Жыл бұрын
So many things wrong here. These people were not fit enough to make this ascent. They should have turned back immediately once they felt discomfort of any sort. If I feel I can’t do something feeling 100%, I don’t do it and wait til I can.
@chrimony
@chrimony Жыл бұрын
That's easy to say in hindsight. I'm sure lots of people have summited not feeling 100%. These expeditions are expensive and time consuming, so it's not surprising people are reluctant to turn back at what might just be a passing upset stomach.
@darb4091
@darb4091 Жыл бұрын
AMS undoubtedly wasn't understood as well back then along with a number of other things such as gear weight and capability. I am sure that it took much more of a push through anything mentality back then and even more so the further you go back.
@domesticterrorist483
@domesticterrorist483 Жыл бұрын
She had the hernia on the approach trekk and downplayed it. Roskelly ordered her down from camp 3 but she refused and was backed up by her hippy dippy father, thus sealing her fate. She had an ostich egg sized hernia, thats what killed her. The high altitude just sped up the process. If she had tempered her ego and her father his then she would be still alive today. They threw her down the mountainside from camp 4 like a pile of thrash.
@5amH45lam
@5amH45lam Жыл бұрын
I just had a hernia op on a nearing strangulated hernia in my groin just this week. It was no joke. The pain and discomfort Devi must've suffered would constitute a tortuous death. I can't imagine what hiking such a peak would have done to me a couple of weeks ago. Killed me, probably. Like it did Devi. RIP.
@Tsumami__
@Tsumami__ Жыл бұрын
If you want to try bringing down a body that’s past rigor and now a flopping rotting cadaver from 20,000+ feet, go right ahead. Doubtful you’d survive. There’s a reason why bodies are pushed off of high altitude peaks. Climbers are well aware they can die during a summit attempt, and few would want more lives risked just to retrieve our deceased corpse.
@5amH45lam
@5amH45lam Жыл бұрын
​​​​​​​​@@Tsumami__ Bodies can be, and are - in many cases - retrieved from such locations. However, it requires huge resources and a team willing to risk their own lives doing so. But, then again, if the financial remuneration on offer by the deceased's family/backer is "worth" it, then it can be done. It all boils down to the Benji's available/on offer. _Everything_ boils down to the Benji's available/on offer. Even in the most untouched, least traversed, least populated, most sacred points on the planet.
@dfinlen
@dfinlen Жыл бұрын
​@@5amH45lamyeah I have crohns with structures. Im told the pain is worst then child birth. Hernia being worst the CD is sadly horrifying. I had no idea he pushed her to keep going. Wow idk that's horrible.
@Orquet-qj2nf
@Orquet-qj2nf Ай бұрын
​@@Tsumami__Actually, it probably would have been frozen solid post rigor mortis. Not worth dying over regardless, but not floppy.
@Parlimant_Strifey
@Parlimant_Strifey Жыл бұрын
Was Willi really trying to sell us that as a bad idea?? Sounds pretty sweet, better then being up some mountain.
@mrlaw711
@mrlaw711 Жыл бұрын
Great video. Thank you.
@standdownrobots_ihaveoldglory
@standdownrobots_ihaveoldglory Жыл бұрын
To answer your description notes question, Christmas is Merry because it is so British. Christmas became part of secular American life during a period of intense Anglophilia, the Victorian Era. The UK was still more powerful then, we were having self-esteem issues and were copycats. I believe that Christmas is our only major cultural holiday (Easter, while the #1 holiday in religious Christianity, is just not the same) that precedes the formation of the US/colonial entities, which makes sense, national holidays are for the nation itself.
@davidvonslingshot
@davidvonslingshot Жыл бұрын
ok poindexter
@dfinlen
@dfinlen Жыл бұрын
Poindexter was a smart man. Idk, about self-esteem but a lot of our culture of course is British thanks to being mostly British at least for a couple hundred years.
@RSimpkinuk57
@RSimpkinuk57 Жыл бұрын
In the words of the song, "we wish you a merry Christmas and a happy New Year". Never the other way round. UK's Christmas on its own can be either happy or merry. As in "eat, drink and be merry". We do not celebrate Thanksgiving in the UK. Christmas is the occasion for our big turkey feast family get-together. Descended, I guess, from a pre-Christian tradition of celebrating having got past the longest night of winter.
@counterfit5
@counterfit5 Жыл бұрын
The telemetry relay was most likely powered a radioisotope thermoelectric generator like the ones used on some satellites (the Voyagers, for example)
@DarknessUnresolved
@DarknessUnresolved Жыл бұрын
Imagine being soo narcissistic that you name your kid after some mountain you're obsessed with. Then practically offering that kid up as a sacrifice to said mountain. Some people should never be allowed to have children!
@nimomemre6550
@nimomemre6550 Жыл бұрын
Yep ... I thought the same ! - His daughter was constantly complaining of her not feeling well and in her last three days, she clearly showed altitude sickness & diarrhea yet they waited for her to die 😕🤦
@markwebster5749
@markwebster5749 Жыл бұрын
Merry Christmas everyone 🎄🎅🎄🥂🎅🍻👍🇬🇧
@DarknessUnresolved
@DarknessUnresolved Жыл бұрын
Fuck xmas.
@justinedse8435
@justinedse8435 Жыл бұрын
@DarknessUnresolved Merry Christmas!🌲🎉🤶🎅🎁❄️⛄☃️🎂😁
@justinedse8435
@justinedse8435 Жыл бұрын
Thank you! Merry Christmas! 🎅🌲☃️
@DarknessUnresolved
@DarknessUnresolved Жыл бұрын
@@justinedse8435 Not for the victims of Israel's terror.
@Nefville
@Nefville Жыл бұрын
That's sad, naming your daughter after a mountain only for her to die on it later.
@tim.martin
@tim.martin Жыл бұрын
Spoiler alert... [edit] was top comment. It's also a *good* comment, just wish KZbin would hide comments while I watch. Top one seems always visible.
@-jess--here--
@-jess--here-- 2 ай бұрын
​@@tim.martin the thumbnail says died on her namesake mountain. How is this comment a spoiler..even if it's the first comment?
@tim.martin
@tim.martin 2 ай бұрын
@-jess--here-- 10 months ago lol. Thumbnails changed.
@Nefville
@Nefville 2 ай бұрын
@@tim.martin Shoot, sorry. I know its belated but I just didn't see this until now.
@tim.martin
@tim.martin 2 ай бұрын
@@Nefville 🌞 my apology for the comment. I can watch stuff in fullscreen if the content is spoiler-able.
@Pixx4you
@Pixx4you 28 күн бұрын
How sad and ironic to see your daughter pass away on the mountain after which she was named.
@Yerpompous
@Yerpompous 13 күн бұрын
Why am I so obsessed with these mountaineering videos? If anyone knows of some other great YT channels let me know. I will never mountain climb but vicariously I do obsessively! Anyone else here also can’t get enough?😂😂😂
@jonathonsmith8871
@jonathonsmith8871 11 күн бұрын
Yes. I love these videos. There are some great movies about mountain climbing I can recommend you if you want
@Yerpompous
@Yerpompous 9 күн бұрын
@ Absolutely I would love that!!! Yes please! You’re so nice. ☺️💛
@jonathonsmith8871
@jonathonsmith8871 9 күн бұрын
@@Yerpompous you should first start with “the alpinist” and then maybe watch “meru” after
@cadillacdeville5828
@cadillacdeville5828 Жыл бұрын
Good morning and thank you
@Geronimo2Fly
@Geronimo2Fly Жыл бұрын
It's hard to imagine spending 45 minutes doing CPR trying to save the life of your own child. I think he made a mistake staying up so high when she was so sick for such a long time, but the heartbreak must have been unbearable.
@rl7012
@rl7012 3 ай бұрын
It is a shame his daughter nor anyone around her was not experienced enough to recognise her high altitude sickness symptoms for the danger that they were. Her dad should have known though. He was very experienced in mountains and he knew she was suffering and when it came on and he let her go on suffering thinking she wold get over it. The dad should have made her go down the mountain and have someone go with her and if nobody would go then he should have taken her down himself. It is all well and good him going on about how much CPR he gave he even after she had died but that was just show boating about how much he wanted people to know the he cared and too little and far too late. If he cared that much then he would have gotten her down the mountain when her serious altitude sickness symptoms became obvious. Everyone knows that diarrhea can be dangerous but even more so at altitude. That poor girl even knew she was dying, but I bet he didn't believe her until it happened. He got his daughter killed and then he goes off mountaineering again acting the martyr whilst still living his dream. Daughter or no daughter nothing was going to stop this guy.
@barrydysert2974
@barrydysert2974 Жыл бұрын
He dedicated His daughter to the mountain at birth. Of course the mountain rightfully accepted it's offering when given the chance. Traject but not unpredictable.
@Tsumami__
@Tsumami__ Жыл бұрын
Maybe if one lives in a fantasy world where you believe in deities, ghouls, goblins, and bigfoots/yetis
@recessional5560
@recessional5560 Жыл бұрын
Tragic. T-R-A-G-I-C
@recessional5560
@recessional5560 Жыл бұрын
@@Tsumami__hahahaha don’t forget Santa Claus hahahaha
@solenoidnull9542
@solenoidnull9542 Жыл бұрын
@@recessional5560 But Santa Clause is real
@recessional5560
@recessional5560 Жыл бұрын
@@solenoidnull9542 oh yes. So is the butt fairy. He will give you three wishes. All you have to do is stick your head up your ass and then take a giant poopy dump at the same time and you can meet them.
@cyruskhalvati
@cyruskhalvati Жыл бұрын
The balancing act a leader of any mountain expedition has to successfully preform is an incredibly challenging task. The difficulty seriously can not be understated. One may simply suggest that any minor complaint should see the team member taken off the summit team and be taken lower down the mountain immediately. Doing so too frequently however, would ultimately result in team members who will pretend like they’re fine in fear of being taken off the summit team. Either of these failures *WILL* lead to death of a friend. Dont fuck up. But if you do, know that countless others before you, some of whom are worlds better than you can ever imagine to be, have done the same. Learn from it, never let it happen again.
@patrickagee
@patrickagee Жыл бұрын
65k!!!!!!! Merry Christmas!!!!!!!!!!!!
@mjaricacat
@mjaricacat Жыл бұрын
So heartwrenchingly sad being unable to save your own child. It feels like the mountain took her
@agaragar21
@agaragar21 Жыл бұрын
NOt Sad.....the father was a complete selfish piece of Shit !!!
@strider1237
@strider1237 10 ай бұрын
My guy, did you make the creepy music for your videos even creepier?
@Dragondemar33
@Dragondemar33 Жыл бұрын
Tu contenido es impresionante. Me gustaría que hablaras sobre qué pudo ocurrir con los montañistas Mariano Galván y Alberto Zerain en la Arista del Mazeno del Nanga Parbat en Junio de 2017. También de la cara oeste del Gasherbrum IV, la escalada más dura de la Tierra.
@jeffdavis7356
@jeffdavis7356 5 ай бұрын
Amazing story. Tragic, and the CIA issue is nuts.
@metronorthwtrain1452
@metronorthwtrain1452 Жыл бұрын
These two government entities should be ashamed of themselves and clean up their failure.
@davidvonslingshot
@davidvonslingshot Жыл бұрын
they should…. but they won’t.
@DinoCism
@DinoCism Жыл бұрын
@@davidvonslingshot And their idiocy continues to this day...
@tedthesailor172
@tedthesailor172 Жыл бұрын
They probably would if they could find it...
@valvlad3176
@valvlad3176 Жыл бұрын
Well I won't bring my daughter in any of that. Whatever she wonts, I won't do that.
@DJ-ws6je
@DJ-ws6je Жыл бұрын
Yet another amazing narration
@ImmolationVenus666
@ImmolationVenus666 Жыл бұрын
While mountains are glorious, if it becomes too dangerous I wouldn't risk my life trying to ascend any further
@Za7a7aZ
@Za7a7aZ 3 ай бұрын
The Chinese got the device ..would make a great spy movie tho..😅
@franciscoramirez9867
@franciscoramirez9867 Жыл бұрын
Yea boii have a good night everyone happy holidays!
@davesmith5656
@davesmith5656 Жыл бұрын
I've heard of naming mountains after people.
@claudiamarlow5265
@claudiamarlow5265 11 ай бұрын
Such an amazing loss of such a beautiful daughter. Bro should have turned back when she started having bigger problems obviously know one expected her death from it
@klifforsburg2799
@klifforsburg2799 Жыл бұрын
Because it was there ! No better reason.
@norml.hugh-mann
@norml.hugh-mann Жыл бұрын
Who are you to judge other peoples priorities?
@DinoCism
@DinoCism Жыл бұрын
Well, that and so the CIA could fuck with China. That was the other reason for this nonsense.
@claudiamarlow5265
@claudiamarlow5265 11 ай бұрын
She probably insisted her stomach virus wasn’t that bad and she could work through it. Or maybe he encouraged her to tough it out and take one for the team. They had their chances to turn back but nothing doing
@HawkVarro
@HawkVarro Жыл бұрын
Name of background music?
@justinedse8435
@justinedse8435 Жыл бұрын
Death wave
@MorbidMidnight
@MorbidMidnight Жыл бұрын
It's an original track I made! It doesn't have an official name although I can't lie Death Wave is kinda fire
@T3hderk87
@T3hderk87 Жыл бұрын
Man.... This comment section....
@-jess--here--
@-jess--here-- 2 ай бұрын
Can't help but to become curious about what the governments are doing up there now since it's closed to the public again and for so long.
@ralphrey474
@ralphrey474 Жыл бұрын
interesting story but the narration slayed me. I didn't make it to listen to the end.
@5amH45lam
@5amH45lam Жыл бұрын
I believe that "forces" bigger than the CIA and IB could comprehend did NOT want a nuclear powered, Cold War device at _Nanda Devi's_ sacred summit.
@91945punx
@91945punx Жыл бұрын
It sure would suck knowing you contributed to your daughters death. :/
@roderickflint1330
@roderickflint1330 10 ай бұрын
Cool father...keep pushing for the summit even tho daughter is obiously suffering...
@valvlad3176
@valvlad3176 Жыл бұрын
This one looks good. The ridge is solid to climb. No avalanches there. No seracs, good to go Alpine style. And I do ropes make no mistake. And I like the name.
@Kazwell111
@Kazwell111 Ай бұрын
Many believe he had an "unnatural" relationship with his daughter.
@lawrenceeustache9422
@lawrenceeustache9422 Жыл бұрын
oh well it`s all good family fun for everyone ! just clean up the mess you made
@joekidd2582
@joekidd2582 Жыл бұрын
REPETATIVE AND OLD ADS MAKES YOU TUBE SUCK..
@SquamatoHD
@SquamatoHD 7 ай бұрын
bURgEr KinG foOt LeTtuCe
@mariemoller9901
@mariemoller9901 Ай бұрын
don`t like that spooky background sound...
@richardmcquade9832
@richardmcquade9832 11 ай бұрын
Good content, annoying narrator
@baginatora
@baginatora 10 ай бұрын
What happened to that nuclear powered device? Did anyone find it?
@levitatingoctahedron922
@levitatingoctahedron922 Жыл бұрын
the mountain has claimed its sacrifice, named and raised for the ritual
@recessional5560
@recessional5560 Жыл бұрын
It would be awful to take a massive Diarrhea in your pants right before death like his daughter did 😢
@winstonoboogie6725
@winstonoboogie6725 7 ай бұрын
This narrator sounds slow and dreary, like he doesn't care about anything and he is tired of reading out loud. I am going to find a livelier channel than this drivel. Thanks for trying i suppose.
@daviddenham1511
@daviddenham1511 Жыл бұрын
Narrator sounds like he needs a good nights sleep….
@justinedse8435
@justinedse8435 Жыл бұрын
Perfect narration
@michaelgallagher3640
@michaelgallagher3640 Жыл бұрын
ChAngabAng, no Os in that word
@phillysauto4724
@phillysauto4724 Жыл бұрын
ULTIMATE BORING
@ZedLeppelin1989
@ZedLeppelin1989 Жыл бұрын
Play stupid games win stupid prizes
@justinpino8115
@justinpino8115 Жыл бұрын
How original. Haven’t read that in 5 minutes
@ZedLeppelin1989
@ZedLeppelin1989 Жыл бұрын
​@@justinpino8115 I'm more surprised that you can read to be honest
@Alternate_Titles
@Alternate_Titles 9 күн бұрын
The father should have spent the rest of his life in prison.
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