The TERRIBLE Story Of a DISAPPEARED Hungarian Climber On Everest In 2023

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  • Опубліковано 21 вер 2024
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    Szilard, a highly experienced Hungarian mountaineer, captured the imagination of climbers and adventure enthusiasts worldwide with his awe-inspiring feats.
    Suhajda Szilard's journey to the summit of Mount Everest was a testament to his unwavering determination and love for the mountains.
    He had come agonizingly close to reaching the pinnacle of the world, defying treacherous conditions, and pushing himself to the limit.
    However, the joyous celebrations that would have accompanied his triumphant return quickly turned to despair as Suhajda mysteriously disappeared.
    Today, we embark on a journey into the depths of this perplexing case of disappearance that has left investigators confused, and an entire mountaineer community on the edge.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 37

  • @echoesofenigma
    @echoesofenigma  Рік тому

    Most recent videos:
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    Thank you all so much for watching. Let me know what you think of this topic and if it’s something you’d like to see more of. Have a great weekend!

  • @shnookems
    @shnookems Рік тому +7

    If the narrator says “treecherus” one more time or pronounces “crevasse” one more different way, I might cry.

    • @DBMorris
      @DBMorris Рік тому +1

      The South Colonel was the one that really got me 😂

    • @AshayaDhungana10
      @AshayaDhungana10 Рік тому +1

      @@DBMorris south col route on everest??

    • @DBMorris
      @DBMorris Рік тому +1

      @@AshayaDhungana10 hahaha yes.

  • @Nick-rr5cy
    @Nick-rr5cy Рік тому +7

    It’s not unbelievable,he climbed Everest and died like so many others .

    • @AshayaDhungana10
      @AshayaDhungana10 Рік тому +1

      He vanished, and it's uncertain if he will ever be discovered or if the mystery of his whereabouts will ever be solved.

  • @SkylessHun
    @SkylessHun Рік тому +6

    There is no mystery in this climb. Lets see the facts: He was ill 1 week before his climb to reach the summit. He started from the 4th camp late. His climb was very slow, when he called his wife from 8700 meters, he got an information from his wife that based on his speed he could reach the summit within 3-4 hours. With basic math skills, including some additional parameters the truth was 6-7 hours. The truth is that if he would turn back from 8700 meters, it is not sure that he could reach the 4th climb if we count with double speed climb down with a little more oxygen. So the mistakes: - Illness before the climb, - slow speed, - misleading information from his wife when he was at 8700 meters. The combination was unfortunately lethal. These are my opinion, and I do not blame his wife, but my opinion a professional outsider climb leader would not let him to climb more than 8700 meters.

    • @AshayaDhungana10
      @AshayaDhungana10 Рік тому +1

      it was an absolute mistake to not bring with a sherpa climber

    • @SkylessHun
      @SkylessHun Рік тому +1

      @@AshayaDhungana10 Ok, and he went alone, but it is a style. No oxygen and no serpa assistance. So it was the difficulty by default, but with other mistakes made it fatal.

    • @AshayaDhungana10
      @AshayaDhungana10 Рік тому +1

      @@SkylessHun Climbing up to the peak is what it's all about, no doubt. The name of the game is playing it safe and avoiding unnecessary risks.

  • @Moses182
    @Moses182 5 місяців тому +1

    There will be lots of climbers whose bodies are still not traced or recorved indeed very Sad reaaching the highest peak but unfortunately vanished 😢 RIP

    • @echoesofenigma
      @echoesofenigma  5 місяців тому

      It's a sad truth, but mountaineers acknowledge it before starting their climb. Rest peacefully.

  • @gregorylumpkin2128
    @gregorylumpkin2128 Рік тому +3

    It'a amazing to me how people "conquered" these mountains but they are dead and the mountains are still there. Idiotic human way of thinking about nature. Assuming, of course, that any rational thought process was involved in the first place.

    • @AshayaDhungana10
      @AshayaDhungana10 Рік тому +1

      There are lots of mountain climbers who have achieved great success in their climbing careers. It's similar to saying that all pilots will eventually have a crash and expire.

  • @chrispewkreme
    @chrispewkreme Рік тому +1

    🌲cherous

  • @corrinnemurray1852
    @corrinnemurray1852 Рік тому +2

    Eventually, the Mountain takes you.... Odds are not good!!!

    • @AshayaDhungana10
      @AshayaDhungana10 Рік тому +1

      Ultimately, the mountain always comes out on top in the end.

  • @rossdavies-hooper3602
    @rossdavies-hooper3602 Рік тому +3

    If I had a wife and child I would not be so foolhardy and selfish.

    • @AshayaDhungana10
      @AshayaDhungana10 Рік тому +2

      sometimes people make mistakes, and it costs a lot...

    • @SkylessHun
      @SkylessHun Рік тому +2

      It was his job. The world is full with dangerous jobs where the man/woman behind there is the family. If he would be successful, his family would get some advantages from it also.

    • @rossdavies-hooper3602
      @rossdavies-hooper3602 Рік тому +2

      @@SkylessHun Absurd excuse.

    • @SkylessHun
      @SkylessHun Рік тому +1

      @@rossdavies-hooper3602 Ok, so I can not be a policeman, a fireman? It is dangerous. No astronauts? What about race drivers? All of them has certain amount of risk. Some has bigger, some has lower.

    • @AshayaDhungana10
      @AshayaDhungana10 Рік тому +1

      @@SkylessHun Nice one! It was a pretty gutsy move, no doubt, and it took a toll on the folks he left behind. But Szilard wasn't just in it for himself. The rewards of his triumph would benefit others too.

  • @corrinnemurray1852
    @corrinnemurray1852 Рік тому +3

    He knew that death was almost positive, but he died doing what he loved!!

    • @AshayaDhungana10
      @AshayaDhungana10 Рік тому +1

      He was an experienced mountain climber who had a good chance of succeeding, but unfortunately, something happened that he couldn't overcome.

  • @cjane_world
    @cjane_world Рік тому +1

    How sad... I mean, of course, it was his decision to go and made many mistakes. But how sad is it that he died up there all alone ❤

    • @AshayaDhungana10
      @AshayaDhungana10 Рік тому +1

      the final moments experienced by those climbers, struggling for breath in oxygen-deprived conditions, enduring extreme coldness with only the vast, blinding whiteness of the snow as their solitary companion...

  • @robert2695
    @robert2695 Рік тому +2

    I love hearing stories of these folks losing their lives

    • @PolakInHolland
      @PolakInHolland Рік тому

      Most exciting part of you ran down your mothers leg.

    • @AshayaDhungana10
      @AshayaDhungana10 Рік тому +1

      It's an exciting tale that we can definitely learn from in terms of what mistakes to avoid.

  • @chrispewkreme
    @chrispewkreme Рік тому +1

    This looks ant unbelievable at all. There’s just some things you don’t do alone and don’t do without oxygen….
    Sure try and not use oxygen as much as possible. But maybe pack it with you just in case. Seems like a death wish. Seeing how many people do this climb with oxygen and still don’t make it.

    • @AshayaDhungana10
      @AshayaDhungana10 Рік тому +1

      It's seriously super risky to underestimate that mountain without having any backup plans.