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@DaltonPre5033Ай бұрын
I love how well Rich interviews and how educated he is on his guests
@euanhosie2 ай бұрын
Haven’t listened to one of Rich’s interviews for a while. Tremendous stuff. A genuine conversation.
@ebells33Ай бұрын
He has the best guests on his show, but I stopped listening as he just talks too much. I'd rather hear the guest speak more.
@winkieblink762522 күн бұрын
Middle of the night for me. Woke up and I discovered this interview. I don’t have 2-plus hrs during the day to capture to watch this! I’ve had reading interest of the climbing world for 30 years so I’m fascinated. Now I know a new name: Ballinger! Thank you for this wonderful interview and for sharing your personal discoveries. Thank you Rich Roll. 👍
@rrrt662 ай бұрын
Rich- You are the most prepared interviewer ever!😊
@sauce1974marisaАй бұрын
What an amazing interview. I am not a climber at all, and I enjoy watching videos about mountain climbing. Adrian is a wonderful ambassador for the climbing community. He explained everything in such a way that a non climber like myself can understand and with such passion for the sport that I was riveted to this conversation. Wonderful job both of you!
@leraabercrombie27652 ай бұрын
Such good vibes! Adrian is a legend
@barbaracohen28562 ай бұрын
Delighted to see this interview! SO inspiring!! Thank you both.💙
@bartstienen41612 ай бұрын
Thanks so much Rich for your amazing guests and amazing conversations that really enrich my love for Life ❤️🙏☀️
@RachelWheltonАй бұрын
This is one of my favorite interviews you've ever done. The young guy no longer the young guy. I kept having flashbacks to your interview with Hilaree. I would love to see an interview with Carla and Topo! Mountain lessons are the best for me. Adrian is awesome and his eloquence brought this exchange to a place of great mental clarity, so easy to listen to and understand the big picture. I hope he does write this all into a book someday because future generations need those books, just like our generation needed the Conquistadors and other mountaineering books.
@rizzomatt2 ай бұрын
This was fantastic! I couldn't get enough. I still think some people are on Everest who should not be up there. Great job Rich!
@wambui_ngatia2 ай бұрын
This conversation hit home.Joshua Cheruiyot Kirui from kenya died while summiting mount Everest. Can't underestimate the immense risk it takes to do this.
@laetitiavisagie-gg6kkАй бұрын
His death was tragic - from South Africa
@elisa9359Ай бұрын
What a down to earth guy....much appreciated these insights..🙏
@eventidesweden68682 ай бұрын
Adrian is a fantastic person and mountaineer! Great interview!
@Drew9504sdlfkj2 ай бұрын
Please do an episode about your back recovery and changes to training/running that have resulted. Maybe look back at past training mistakes/things you’d do different
@andreameigs12619 күн бұрын
1:33:10 A "We're all about failure over here at Alpenglow; that's what we do."
@Asdfgdgv2 ай бұрын
Thanks so much for this interview. What an amazing person! If you want to hike to Everest base camp, I'd recommend not flying to Lukla but take a jeep to salleri. It is only below lukla that the villages are still authentic and not commercialized. Also the 3 additional days are very good training and much better acclimatization, than having to hang out in namche for a few days after arriving at that altitude by plane.
@rombohnallavan186119 сағат бұрын
Super human for sure
@bretstevens2622 ай бұрын
Awesome podcast RRPC!
@carolgerber63752 ай бұрын
Great interview !
@limitlessluisАй бұрын
When I climb Everest, I want THIS guy and his company to by my guide! 😎❄️
@winkieblink762522 күн бұрын
I always understood the North side to be a better climb. I didn’t think it was allowed anymore so I was confused when I would read that non Chinese were climbing there. Thank you for explaining that aspect of the mountain.
@SawayaNmАй бұрын
This is something you’re born with! Myself I started be physical active at old age of 28 and catch up real fast 2007-2018! I am still addicted, mountains are my home, change my life! I hiked Kilimanjaro 3 times and the next goal was to hike Everest! When I was doing research about Everest, I saw these many tragedy stories like Robert Hall! most of climbers thought about their children before death! I thought twice, I ask God to give me kids before I conquer Everest, and God bless me with 4 children! As a human being sometimes I said I wish I could have hiked Everest 😂😊! But reality now I know how my body work because of my kids! I am 46 years now! I definitely will hike Everest one day! I am healthy now than my 20’s! I learned how to ski at age of 36 on 1 season! My favorite sport yet! I ski all over the world! And I know this Bostonian from his video hiking Everest from China side! Must watch his well narrated videos! 💪🤝🍻🇺🇸☺️
@LeoandLunaLumine123Ай бұрын
I love this information!
@winkieblink762522 күн бұрын
I was trying to figure out Ballingers accent! Lol. Thank you for clearing up this mystery! Lol.
@robertcairney2955Ай бұрын
Great video
@jeremyschuh2 ай бұрын
Got to go on the Duffel Shuffle podcast now Rich!
@Gayle9750Ай бұрын
The Sherpas do all the work.
@kensuzdoerАй бұрын
It makes sense to shift to a fat burning diet instead of glucose burning diet for energy.
@jithenin2 ай бұрын
1st like & 1st Comment Great to watch the Video as a 1st Viewer A BIG FAN OF RICH & His Work, all set to dive deep into this conversation 👍❤️
@KrwiomoczBogurodzicy2 ай бұрын
“But these mountaineers, they’re crazy people, aren’t they? They go things like: ‘Oh, I am gonna climb every peak over 8.000 meters!’; ‘Well, why are you gonna do that?’; ‘Because it’s there!’; ‘Well, why don’t you just imagine it’s not there.’; ‘Ooh, I’m gonna climb every peak over 9.000 metres. Ooh, there’s none of them, I’ll be able to stay at home and have a cup of tea.” - Andy Parsons, _Slacktivist_
@charlie.carter.outdoorsАй бұрын
Unless you do this type of thing you'll never understand.
@charlie.carter.outdoorsАй бұрын
Unless you do this type of stuff you'll never understand.
@LimHoochin28 күн бұрын
Is your daily life very interesting , fun or challenging? If not U better not live . Live sucks n to live is to suffer. What an ass .
@snookmeister5521 күн бұрын
Mallory replied "Because it's there." He was pressured onto the 1924 expedition, where he died. He did not want to go and correctly felt that he wouldn't return. He was probably the world's best mountaineer at the time, certainly one of them. What those guys did with the equipment they had was extraordinary.
@j.s.vanbachum8379Ай бұрын
From an outsider 's perspective it is pure addiction and playing with something with something as precious as your life. As all addicts do. But of course this has been said thousands of times. A complete lack of understanding from my part...
@patriciaperry2028Ай бұрын
If people are going to leave crap behind, they shouldn’t be allowed up there PERIOD
@Derak-r9i2 ай бұрын
What’s the music on 41:43 please?🙏🏻
@ChrisMustListАй бұрын
I truly enjoy your interviews. If you ever need a global traveler with countless stories-from the most dangerous hoods of Haiti to the war of Ukraine, or even dinner with the Taliban-I'm your guy. A world traveller / KZbinr with one hell of a story to share.
@chriswitt259623 күн бұрын
Bring down green boots
@lindseyhauk4140Ай бұрын
How much trash up there did his many trips generate? His story is harrowing and inspiring, but all I can think of is the trash pit and toilet we have made up there.
@patriciaperry2028Ай бұрын
That part is extremely upsetting
@gordonpatterson40312 ай бұрын
After Nirmal Purja put out that shocking picture of the long queue waiting MY TURN to get to the Summit, and reading about the garbage, 💩 and dead bodies, Everest is now a prime example of how mans, BIG EGO, and Drug addiction to adrenaline are scarring the face of our Home, planet Earth.
@patriciaperry2028Ай бұрын
Sure seems that way
@snookmeister5521 күн бұрын
Ego is the key word, always and everywhere. The mind killer.
@manali215Ай бұрын
Can he mention the Sherpas and the localites who helped him climb Everest not just once but 8 fucking times !
@UnmannedExplorationsАй бұрын
I mean the Sherpas are paid well, do the job they were hired to do, and are well respected in their home country as well as by other mountaineers. Go whine somewhere else.
@JL-nk1pc2 ай бұрын
Has he done any new routes or non standard routes on an 8000er?
@markstuart84012 ай бұрын
How many 8000’ers have you done?? Fuck all I presume. 😂
@JL-nk1pc2 ай бұрын
@@markstuart8401 done ya mum
@dianebays548414 күн бұрын
How much money does he have in all those visits. Its very costly to go there.
@Kylie-wc4gx2 ай бұрын
Only 334 likes!?
@BadLuckBrian_2 ай бұрын
Quite a risky move from Rich to put out a podcast on a guy that climbed Everest 8 times with all that controversy around this subject ... Gotta respect that.
@GeorgeSmiley20232 ай бұрын
What's the controversy if you don't my asking?
@markstuart84012 ай бұрын
Yeah what controversy?
@BadLuckBrian_Ай бұрын
@@markstuart8401 dangerous overcrowding, mounds of human waste at upper camps, graveyards of oxygen canisters, and increasingly risky conditions for the Sherpa guides who make commercial climbing possible.
@cyd459Ай бұрын
@@BadLuckBrian_he talks about that though
@plantylali28 күн бұрын
Did you listen to the interview at all?
@kimlouise-rf5rrАй бұрын
Unfortunately, whilst there are authentic athletes who accomplish high altitude mountaineering with real skill and respect for the sport, Everest has been badly tainted by those with disposable income and insatiable ego's No. You are not achieving when using fixed ropes/routes set by professional mountaineers and turning this magnificent place into a tip. Hijacking off other's and furthermore relying on others to then rescue you. Everest Unfortunately is no longer the achievement it was. Sad and pathetic really the amount of skull duggery that goes on from base camp to summit.
@xtr1092Ай бұрын
this bloke knows little talk to the sherpas and they will tell you how easy it has become and they know a lot more than him
@UnmannedExplorationsАй бұрын
I bet your back hurts getting off the couch everyday doesn’t it?
@daphnenegenman2054Ай бұрын
The first minutes from en this video draw me iff. Pfff
@cynthiamarston2208Ай бұрын
Why can’t they burn the trash?
@snookmeister5521 күн бұрын
They position enough fuel to melt snow for drinking and eating. Empty fuel and O2 cannisters don't burn. Plastic, we hope, is carried down. Excrement is sometimes packed down.
@damnbadger82424 күн бұрын
The intro portray's this guy as full of himself, not watching this one.
@sarahannwhite26 күн бұрын
These people are bonkers! Why would you go somewhere where's there's not enough oxygen to breathe? Where your cells are dying off every minute, you're in the 'death zone' crazy 🤪
@skimckay10 күн бұрын
It was a good show until the Nimsdai bitching session. Bring Nims on so he can defend himself.
@LinusWilson2 ай бұрын
1:24:30 there is no such thing as doping in high alpine climbing. There is only style and stated asterisks.
@lidiastarkova2323Ай бұрын
Mountaineer and feminist - that’s the way for the future 🫶
@runfargetlost991Ай бұрын
stop climbing everest you guys fucked it up enough.