Mountaineers Climb Over Mortally Wounded Porter to Reach K2 Summit | K2 Disaster Analysis

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  • Опубліковано 19 сер 2024
  • This video answers the question: Can I analyze the case of the 2023 controversy involving climbers who climbed over mortally wounded porter on K2?
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 4,2 тис.

  • @SirArghPirate
    @SirArghPirate Рік тому +1048

    I really hope I never happen to be in a situation where Todd Grande speculates what could be happening in a situation like mine.

    • @morticiaheisenberg9679
      @morticiaheisenberg9679 Рік тому +36

      😂😂😂😂me too!!
      Some people live by "What Would Jesus Do"
      I live by "What Would Judge Judy Saw and Dr Grande Speculate" that keeps me out of trouble

    • @markusgorelli5278
      @markusgorelli5278 Рік тому +20

      It depends. If I was the victim in the crime or something, I would be honored if my gruesome death would be featured on his channel.

    • @nhmooytis7058
      @nhmooytis7058 11 місяців тому +1

      Me 2 😂

    • @flickymurph
      @flickymurph 11 місяців тому +4

      😂😂

    • @bandlehars
      @bandlehars 11 місяців тому +7

      Best comment ever 😂

  • @shuswapbcoutdoors8652
    @shuswapbcoutdoors8652 Рік тому +1515

    About 3 weeks after I summitted two peaks in the Canadian Rockies on a guided trip, my college buddy died on a similar climb when his entire 7-person team broke through a snow bridge and tumbled into a relatively small crevasse. Six of them walked out of the crevasse, but my buddy died quickly from a crushing chest injury when he was flung against the crevasse wall. His daughter was 11 years, my 3 kids were pre-schoolers. That was almost 30 years ago; I never climbed again.

    • @A-classic-smithy
      @A-classic-smithy Рік тому +82

      I will never hike in the winter, it's dangerous enough in good weather. One slip, dizziness, and it's all over, that fast.

    • @lisanelke9726
      @lisanelke9726 Рік тому +45

      How tragic 🥺

    • @amang1001
      @amang1001 Рік тому +56

      Damn what was your friend's name? My next beer is for him...

    • @glow1815
      @glow1815 Рік тому +49

      To be honest I'm glad you never climb again. Risking to do something that is dangerous only time will tell.

    • @scottandrews947
      @scottandrews947 Рік тому +97

      Pretty stupid and selfish to take those kinds of risks when you have young children.

  • @tidaltidaltidal
    @tidaltidaltidal 11 місяців тому +432

    A popular quote among hikers and mountaineers "The mountain will reveal the true face of people who climbed it"

    • @SF-fb6lv
      @SF-fb6lv 11 місяців тому +28

      The gentleman I climbed with on Mt. Rainier, who also has climbed Everest and K2, famously participated in two extreme altitude rescues, giving up his summit bids. Luckily, I have been fortunate enough to be taught by a truly good climber.

    • @jacedjohnson3541
      @jacedjohnson3541 10 місяців тому

      @@SF-fb6lvdid he ever get to summit them?

    • @artmallory970
      @artmallory970 10 місяців тому +5

      There are old mountaineers & there are bold mountaineers, but there a no old, bold mountaineers...

    • @Sarmatae1
      @Sarmatae1 10 місяців тому +1

      ​@@artmallory970 All mountaineers are bold. Every single of them. I think the word you're probably looking for is "brazen". Those are usually the ones that do shit they're not supposed to and get themselves or other climbers hurt. Fortunately for the rest of us, they are super easy to spot from a distance so you can stay well out of their fall line.

    • @artmallory970
      @artmallory970 10 місяців тому +6

      @@Sarmatae1 It was actually an old Pilot's saying: 'There are old Pilots & there a bold pilots, but there are no old, bold pilots'.
      It's the same principal. You take high risks - it's only a matter of time before your luck runs out - statistical probability, or law of averages...

  • @Erikazilla
    @Erikazilla 11 місяців тому +506

    kudos to the brazilian dude who tried saving the porter, even sharing his oxygen with him, while others were just stepping over his body

    • @jamesmaybrick2001
      @jamesmaybrick2001 11 місяців тому +40

      Because thats NOT a place or location you CAN safely stop. A backjam of folks all standing around could well have resulted in many more fatalities. Its funny how folks are judging others for actions happening at extremes of where people can survive.

    • @omariwest9068
      @omariwest9068 11 місяців тому +10

      @@jamesmaybrick2001/ agreed! and then when the Brazilian dude ran out of air they’d probably expect the others to risk their lives saving him. Then they’d be at risk.

    • @aldranzam3456
      @aldranzam3456 11 місяців тому +27

      @@jamesmaybrick2001 the problem isn't they didn't help. It's the accepted for him to be hired in those conditions in the first place. They're responsible for the exploitation that caused his death.

    • @TheSubpremeState
      @TheSubpremeState 11 місяців тому

      I don't think the guy fully understands what it's like near a mountain a fraction this size

    • @stuffbinaboxdos
      @stuffbinaboxdos 11 місяців тому +17

      Damn right! Probably the most decent human beings on the mountain that day.❤

  • @loiskondo8349
    @loiskondo8349 Рік тому +870

    I feel climbing these time types of mountains comes with ethical dilemmas. I am glad I have absolutely no desire to do so. Thank you Dr. Grande for another thoughtful video!

    • @H37P5kY57
      @H37P5kY57 Рік тому +20

      my husband went to do Kilimanjaro and no training that year as he was doing his dissertation and we were discussing marriage and possible move to Europe. I think most climbers are smart enough to know what their limits are. The night before he summited he said he didn't even think he was going to go that morning to summit as it was so cold and difficult to breathe - he knows his limits and isn't going to bother climbing these types of peaks. I think for Hassan - the quest of wanting to help his family got in the way of judgement as he's never climbed to those altitudes nor did he really have proper equipment especially for someone who was inexperienced for these types of technical climbs. It's really sad but I suppose its typical that most of us when we love people we will go to extreme lengths to make it work..like the parent that their child has a terrible disease and they go through bankruptcy to becoming homeless all to save the life of their child... I suppose that's why I generally like to get someone else's opinion on when I go to great lengths as I'm aware when you're emotionally invested in something it's really hard to pull back. Someone once told me the best type of advice is the one you'd give to your own child.

    • @monacoofthebluepacific2571
      @monacoofthebluepacific2571 Рік тому +13

      I'm also glad I had no desire to do things like thus. But I wish I'd been there to at least comfort him during his last hours; talking to him about his family etc ...

    • @monacoofthebluepacific2571
      @monacoofthebluepacific2571 Рік тому +6

      ​@@H37P5kY57Very well said 🥺

    • @Fiona2254
      @Fiona2254 Рік тому +15

      My husband had a mountaineering thing going on at some point. After a scary night all alone in Mt Rainer he changed his mind about going up and came down the mountain.
      He had Everest obsession for a while but watching Everest movie of the disaster in 1996 finished curing him of the selfish desire to climb ever higher. Climbing is a selfish endeavor and I’m never surprised to hear these things happen in the death zone.
      BTW if you don’t want to die on mountains do NOT pay for guides who will basically drag you up the mountain for money. Train and aclimate before you risk your life on the mountains.

    • @sylviekins
      @sylviekins Рік тому +4

      @@H37P5kY57well said- those of us living in first world conditions need to think before we speak, that is for sure.

  • @MrDlt123
    @MrDlt123 Рік тому +565

    Im a former climber. - I just got old, which is a blessing, all things considered. There is NO comparison between Everest and K2 climbers. Many Everest climbers can be considered novices at BEST, whereas K2 demands very high levels of skill from every mountaineer. But even so, the death rates are still far higher. This is because the slopes are relentless and steep; all of the skill in the world will not protect you from freak events like avalanches and freak storms. And because K2 doesnt have even 1/20th traffic as Everest, that means you have far few support and rescue personnel on site if you get into trouble. Its a desolate and unforgiving place to have an incident.

    • @chohaewon88
      @chohaewon88 Рік тому +2

      Did you get to climb both of these?

    • @valerierodger
      @valerierodger Рік тому +24

      That is no longer true. A few years ago, the expedition companies began to commercialized K2, and now it is essentially Everest 2.0. For the right price, you can have two sherpas dedicated to getting you to the summit, which makes up for lack of personal skill in mountaineering.

    • @stevecarter8810
      @stevecarter8810 Рік тому +59

      Seems like getting old is a pretty good fate for a serial mountaineer.

    • @MrP-kw3lf
      @MrP-kw3lf Рік тому +45

      There are old mountaineers and bold mountaineers but there are no old bold mountaineers, as they say.

    • @rigel2112
      @rigel2112 Рік тому +42

      Getting too old to climb without dying seems like the winning endgame for the activity to me.

  • @davejob630
    @davejob630 10 місяців тому +276

    Saving a man from 27000 ft up K2 is a much greater achievement than climbing to the summit.

    • @neth77
      @neth77 5 місяців тому +13

      For normal moral folks like me, this is true, for social media morons they think a pic at the summit it more important.

    • @nineteeneightynine432
      @nineteeneightynine432 5 місяців тому +14

      No none sherpa could have carried a body from the death zone down. To much weight for the average person

    • @margodphd
      @margodphd 3 місяці тому

      ​@@nineteeneightynine432Yup

    • @pauldritsas6047
      @pauldritsas6047 3 місяці тому

      ❤🧡💛💙🤎🤍💜❤

    • @JeffreyAllanBackowski
      @JeffreyAllanBackowski 2 місяці тому +3

      They probably wanted to save the porter, but he was all like "No, leave me, I'm a goner... reach the top... for me..." at least that is what I'm going say that's what his last words were as I cut the chump's safety line for slowing me down, then I would've tossed him down the mountain, no one would've known. How did anyone even find out the climbed over a wounded guy, did they tell people about it? I'm not even going to watch this video.

  • @Lcm2003
    @Lcm2003 11 місяців тому +582

    Whether it was possible to save him or not is one thing, that woman‘s behaviour after he had passed and getting back to base camp where they partied and celebrated themselves for their record is another and was just disgusting and shows what she truly cares about - collecting records to pump up her ego and not the human life that was lost while trying to help them feed their soulless ambitions.

    • @celem12
      @celem12 11 місяців тому +65

      I would say that the companies who commercialised the c'imbing and charges thousands of domlars per person but than pay a dude 3$ a day as a lot more blame imo. You could also argue that the people who pay these companies to climb whilst knowing workers risk their lives for measly pays are also to blame.

    • @Jesus.Fuckery
      @Jesus.Fuckery 11 місяців тому

      *You Put your StuPud Values upon a Group of PeoPLe who Live by a Diff set of RuLes!!!*
      *EveryOne there Paid a LOT of Money to be on a Suicide Mission!!!!*
      *OnLy the Serpas can be HeLp AccountaBLe, if AnyBody!!!!*

    • @anacleta424
      @anacleta424 11 місяців тому +32

      Had she stay to keep helping him would have been the humane thing to do. Just supposed that was her hanging like that the outcome would have been different. It was more important to her to finish the climb than try to save a human. ✌️

    • @michelledodge2599
      @michelledodge2599 11 місяців тому +10

      The companies that run these climbs should not sun people up without at least a four-man rescue team who do nothing else, but rescue anyone who paid for their climb

    • @ArtU4All
      @ArtU4All 11 місяців тому +7

      “Sole less ambitions” so well said 😞😰

  • @Paul-ou1rx
    @Paul-ou1rx Рік тому +2635

    You will not be remembered for the mountains you've climbed, but for the people you climbed over to get there.

    • @thebusinesswoman23
      @thebusinesswoman23 Рік тому +25

      😅

    • @hiddengem-is8cw
      @hiddengem-is8cw Рік тому +4

      Huh

    • @Jimmybarth
      @Jimmybarth Рік тому +15

      Don't think so

    • @kimmuckenfuss2284
      @kimmuckenfuss2284 11 місяців тому +81

      Ain't it the damn truth! The more I think about your statement, I believe this is the mantra they teach to the future 1% when they're in college.

    • @utubewillyman
      @utubewillyman 11 місяців тому

      ​@@kimmuckenfuss2284In terms of average income worldwide, you're in the 1%.

  • @p.siadoreyou9050
    @p.siadoreyou9050 Рік тому +722

    Financial desperation can cause a person to put themselves in dangerous positions. This case is heartbreaking 💔

    • @bazle64
      @bazle64 Рік тому

      Capitalistic exploitation and tyranny

    • @throbbinwoodofcoxley6830
      @throbbinwoodofcoxley6830 Рік тому +3

      @@llamamama2910the hell they were.

    • @sylviekins
      @sylviekins Рік тому +25

      @@shellyliban7069well he paid for it. We who go to bed (and have a bed and a roof over our heads) with full bellies, have no right to judge this man. I apologise that I make the assumption that you have a reasonably comfortable existence.

    • @valerierodger
      @valerierodger Рік тому +42

      @@shellyliban7069 it wasn’t selfish at all. He wasn’t up there for his own glory, he was trying to feed his family.

    • @isanchez85
      @isanchez85 Рік тому +49

      @@shellyliban7069 What's selfish is making people risk their lives and all for an expensive hobby, knowing that they will go to extremes for literally crumbs, I bet those climbers have socks more expensive than what the porters make a day of climbing. They see them being exploited, but they don't care as long as it helps them fulfill their own selfish endeavor...

  • @calthorp
    @calthorp 11 місяців тому +71

    I was a climber & was a member of search & rescue. It is very hard for 6 trained people to carry one guy on a proper stretcher on a formed track. Never mind at that altitude with no rescue equipment no trained people & on a difficult mountain. He would have died trying to get him down. However this does not absolve the callous nature of people walking past & not offering to help or trying to give comfort. God help them.

    • @darthkek1953
      @darthkek1953 9 місяців тому +5

      He had people though. They were sharing oxygen for as long as possible.

    • @stine7144
      @stine7144 5 місяців тому

      then what should the other gropus do then? Spend 10 minutes of their oxygen to speak of allah or jesus? While possibly not making it down themselves? 1/3 die trying to ascend K2. Stopping to chat is a death hazard. Please dont.@@darthkek1953

    • @jscab7140
      @jscab7140 2 місяці тому +2

      The most sad is that some people celebrate his summit after , as nothing wrong happen

  • @hannahvickery4683
    @hannahvickery4683 11 місяців тому +179

    I really appreciate the detail and gaps filled in here. I think the biggest issue to me now that I know this is that these commercial climbing expeditions rely on exploiting vulnerable, desperate people and don't equip or train them properly. Even if there wasn't a chance of saving him at the end, he could have had a much higher chance of survival if he were properly trained and equipped and if the people on the expedition were properly trained and cared to look out for each other and saw each other as part of the team.

    • @BDnevernind
      @BDnevernind 11 місяців тому +30

      Yeah, I made my judgment of these climbers when I heard that groups of them only pay $20/day/porter. They are all rich, and yet even in groups they pay this ludicrous market rate just because they can get away with it. I am far from rich as that's what I tip my plumber just for coming out. These people were indecent before they started the climb.

    • @melissamcclain34
      @melissamcclain34 11 місяців тому +3

      ​@@BDnevernindtotally agree!

    • @michelebrowne418
      @michelebrowne418 11 місяців тому +12

      I totally agree with this. Where are the Sherpa/porter union organizers!?! Another issue is how climbers can distance themselves from the treatment and pay of these people by thinking that the sherpas are the responsibility of expedition group they have hired. “Not my problem.” It’s all on the expedition company. Then the expedition company shoves it all off on native organizers. More distancing. Better, more expensive companies treat all their employees better, but there are plenty of cut rate outfits willing to take advantage of people with little to no other option.

    • @BDnevernind
      @BDnevernind 11 місяців тому +10

      @@michelebrowne418 A whole world of oppression I never knew about. Holy hell.

    • @user-jo5ml8et1z
      @user-jo5ml8et1z 11 місяців тому +6

      ​@@michelebrowne418
      I don't necessarily disagree, but do you make sure everyone you deal with is treated and paid fairly?
      Do you investigate how the cashier at the grocery store is paid , if she has health benefits, etc., or if the clerk behind the gas station you buy gas at is making a living wage?
      I highly doubt it.
      Poor countries are poor because of the people who built their societies, and it's ultimately up to them to fix that.

  • @Jay5-0
    @Jay5-0 Рік тому +96

    The blame falls on the expedition company. They put a inexperienced porter, without the proper equipment, on a mountain renowned for killing people.

    • @costco_pizza
      @costco_pizza 11 місяців тому +4

      The blame also lies on the climbers who stepped over them. They all need to be arrested immediately.

    • @preciousmourning8310
      @preciousmourning8310 11 місяців тому +3

      @@costco_pizza People have stepped over mortally wounded people high on mountains before when they were not able to be saved. This is the folly of allowing profit driven adventure companies to operate on the mountain. It's full of novice climbers who would have just gotten in the way.
      They would have needed about 6 experienced mountaineers to get him down because the lack of oxygen up there makes it hard to even move your own body and every weight is magnified. It's a tragic situation all around.

    • @Beth-sn9ip
      @Beth-sn9ip 4 місяці тому

      Plus he decided to go whereas other porters didn't. He knew he didn't have the right equipment.

  • @sweeabn6736
    @sweeabn6736 Рік тому +250

    I know its just Mt Rainier, but I greatly appreciate the people who reprimanded me when they found that I did not have sufficient supplies on my way up. They cared for me and sent me back down. :)

    • @amyepstein4868
      @amyepstein4868 Рік тому +61

      And you were smart enough and logical enough to listen to them!! Many have died on mountains because they didn't heed advice..
      Mt. Ranier is a mountain, commands respect and you gave the mountain respect.
      🥶🏔

    • @sweeabn6736
      @sweeabn6736 Рік тому +53

      @@amyepstein4868 Thank you -- I was strangely not a bit embarrassed at the reprimand. I felt loved and cared for. It was a wonderful, beautiful day.

    • @jenerin905
      @jenerin905 Рік тому

      ​​@@sweeabn6736That's a wonderful way to put it. A lot of people let their pride get in the way and refuse to listen. I'm glad you're here and able to tell your story!

    • @Tina06019
      @Tina06019 Рік тому +21

      You are a very smart climber.

    • @Pippi-Longstocking
      @Pippi-Longstocking Рік тому +33

      That’s a hard conversation to have, even if your willing to have it. For some people it’s difficult to hear. I love that you took it in the vein it was probably given: care and concern. You must be a delight to travel with! (No sarcasm! I genuinely mean it)

  • @bunnymad5049
    @bunnymad5049 11 місяців тому +180

    Thank you. You filled in a lot of what the media didn't, so I had ignored their outrage headlines. You keep it calm and sensible. It is terrible he felt compelled to risk his life due to such poverty, and love for his mother. And now she is mourning him. It's just so sad.

    • @adjohnson9897
      @adjohnson9897 11 місяців тому +10

      .. plus his 3 boys are without their father and his wife is without a husband.

    • @bunnymad5049
      @bunnymad5049 11 місяців тому +5

      @@adjohnson9897 I had no idea. That's even sadder. 😢

    • @slucas6303
      @slucas6303 11 місяців тому +2

      @@bunnymad5049 It’s mentioned in the video…

    • @bunnymad5049
      @bunnymad5049 11 місяців тому +1

      @@slucas6303 LOL. Because you remember every minute detail from what you've watched 8 days prior. Good for you, darling. 😘

  • @katherinebergdahl2669
    @katherinebergdahl2669 11 місяців тому +43

    This reminds me so much of Jon Krakauer’s “Into Thin Air” about Mount Everest. It’s terrible and unimaginable the kinds of atrocities the sherpas endure in order to satisfy tourists’ grandiose egos

    • @steveshea7725
      @steveshea7725 9 місяців тому +1

      Yes those lazy tourists were having a hechuva time relaxing and sucking down slushy Mai Tais up in the Death Zone.

    • @inquisitivenessandcontempl9918
      @inquisitivenessandcontempl9918 9 місяців тому +4

      The sherpas make a living off the climbers they would have never been able to afford otherwise. That's what they do. They would be severely worse off if the tourists disappeared. They are paid, they are doing their job for money. You are not doing them a favor by depicting them as indentured servants or slaves, which they are not.
      And in "Into thin air" Anatoly Boukreev actually saved several people from the mountain by putting his own life at stake. While Krakauer himself refused to go out with Anatoly because he just wasn't able to.
      It's not a matter of personal choice whether you feel like saving someone or you'd rather not to in those conditions. It's about whether you are physically able to or not.

    • @ytc257
      @ytc257 7 місяців тому

      Do you know Jesus is a messenger of God

    • @Sushikatherman
      @Sushikatherman 6 місяців тому

      Such a good book!

  • @andarwarje8127
    @andarwarje8127 11 місяців тому +701

    My step dad gave up his climbing career after climbing Denali and meeting another group who lost one of their members on the mountain. He said, I decided I didn't want to die up there. These stories always make me think of him. It's normalized to step over dead bodies in a quest to make it to the top, which I find disgusting enough, can't imagine stepping over someone fighting for their life.

    • @newnamesameperson397
      @newnamesameperson397 11 місяців тому +47

      It's an easy choice especially when it's my survival VS yours. But my opinion is that mountain climbing is a stupid hobby that needlessly endangers lives just like diving and cave exploring

    • @georgemen
      @georgemen 11 місяців тому +35

      @@newnamesameperson397 the problem isn't in the hobby itself. I wouldnt do it myself, but the abillity to push yourself for years and years with strict training and going through all that just to "conquer" a peak is a deeply "human" thing to do - and that's not the problem. The problem is the travelling agencies that advertise it as it's supposed to be for anyone just for the right price and people who should not be there end up there. It's got to this point where you got people waiting in line to get to the peak, which cause bottlenecks, people pushing eacho other by accident, people not paying attention to their own selves/teams because, hey, someone else is right on your back wanting to get to the top, and stuff like that.

    • @Seasniffer69
      @Seasniffer69 11 місяців тому +20

      ​@@georgementraining for a decade plus isn't the same as training for a summer.
      So I absolutely agree. If I can't run a full marathon, ya i probably can't climb a mountain is my motto.

    • @MartineH1
      @MartineH1 11 місяців тому +15

      Yes, the sport don't test your physical and mental strengh to suceed but your egoism and cold heart to ignore those ones that are left behind dying. You are training your lack of empathy.

    • @richardb8104
      @richardb8104 11 місяців тому +4

      @@MartineH1 Nah, it's just too extreme for you, and that's ok.

  • @fredalwatkins4506
    @fredalwatkins4506 Рік тому +2006

    If you can't save someone, comforting them as they are dying is a beautiful thing

    • @cremdilly7176
      @cremdilly7176 Рік тому +217

      That's a good point. The thought of him dying alone up there is sad.

    • @Dr.Pancho.Tortilla
      @Dr.Pancho.Tortilla Рік тому +40

      Saying what to comfort them? that they will soon meet Jesus or prophet Muhammad? Well that's a lie

    • @againsttheleftandright4065
      @againsttheleftandright4065 Рік тому +364

      @@Dr.Pancho.Tortilla
      Yikes. Maybe just be there as another human being or animal in their final moments.

    • @Dr.Pancho.Tortilla
      @Dr.Pancho.Tortilla Рік тому +21

      @@againsttheleftandright4065 the world is brutal, and there's no escape from that.

    • @mrazik131
      @mrazik131 Рік тому +100

      I imagine cold, lack of oxygen and forecast of storm, if i stay behind that there is a HIGH chance of death, I feel your sentiment but no the healthy thing is to go....staying 2 hours behind is death for you dear compassionate person.

  • @VictoriaMarch13
    @VictoriaMarch13 11 місяців тому +254

    My former doctor actually passed on Everest in 2017. His body is still there. RIP Dr. Roland Yearwood

    • @BetaBuxDelux
      @BetaBuxDelux 11 місяців тому +29

      You just left him there too?
      😢

    • @darksu6947
      @darksu6947 11 місяців тому +24

      You're a terrible patient. Why would you just leave him there? What the hecking heck man?

    • @insanehippiehippieinsane3828
      @insanehippiehippieinsane3828 11 місяців тому

      ​@@BetaBuxDeluxEvery person who climbs Everest and K2 knows that if you die on the mountain your body will stay there.

    • @pandakk6998
      @pandakk6998 11 місяців тому +15

      @@darksu6947are you serious?

    • @VictoriaMarch13
      @VictoriaMarch13 11 місяців тому +15

      @@darksu6947 🤣🤣

  • @danparish1344
    @danparish1344 11 місяців тому +207

    I talked to someone who climbed Everest once. When she talked more about her life, the stories were that of narcissistic fantasy and couldn’t possibly be true. Sure, many that go on these just have a passion for climbing, but anecdotally, I wouldn’t be surprised at all if most of these people have little to no empathy. The person I talked to was clearly driven by a need to be perceived as special more than anything else in her life.

    • @adalEun
      @adalEun 11 місяців тому +9

      thats because those people have never worked hard to achieve something physical. therefor they try to make whatever special event they do seem greater than what they are. For example the ability to do a simple backflip on land is much more impressive than climbing a mountain like this because the difference is a mountain requires outside factors like clothes and gears, a backflip on the other hand only requires human ability.

    • @mysteryseaker1914
      @mysteryseaker1914 11 місяців тому +23

      Exactly-"narcissistic fantasy."

    • @chriswitt2596
      @chriswitt2596 11 місяців тому +14

      Just the idea that the porter had three children three boys in fact makes me so sad. Couldn't one of the rich climbers go on down the mountain I'll give you a few hundred dollars when I get back down. That would be nothing to some of these rich people that desire to climb the mountain.

    • @aldranzam3456
      @aldranzam3456 11 місяців тому

      They all should be fucking ashamed of themselves, using the services of empoverished locals, risking the porters and sherpas' lives for less than you'd spend for a fast food meal.
      If these people are so bored of their privileged lives, and want leave their corpse as a landmark, they should at least have the decency to not take others with them.

    • @stellviahohenheim
      @stellviahohenheim 11 місяців тому

      at least he died doing what he loved

  • @SentMyOwnWay
    @SentMyOwnWay Рік тому +662

    The best thing you can do when it comes to people is to keep your expectations low. The selfishness of average people can be shocking.

    • @mrparlanejxtra
      @mrparlanejxtra Рік тому +7

      Homer Simpson says this too.

    • @Flamsterette
      @Flamsterette Рік тому +24

      Yup, like this guy earlier today who held up the grocery checkout line for almost ten minutes, demanding multiple price checks on a bag of Hawaiian buns that were 30% off. I had a full shopping cart, including ice cream and frozen lasagna!

    • @comradeballin
      @comradeballin Рік тому +18

      @@Flamsteretteno. it’s not like that at all.

    • @jimh6254
      @jimh6254 Рік тому +32

      The selfishness of the average person used to shock me, but now I expect it

    • @SentMyOwnWay
      @SentMyOwnWay Рік тому +39

      @@comradeballinyou say that, but the people who hold up a grocery line for no good reason are probably the same ones who would step over you as you lay there dying. Different scenarios, same energy.

  • @RileyRunsWithScissors
    @RileyRunsWithScissors Рік тому +213

    The route through the bottleneck on k2 is single file, very narrow and has huge seracs hanging over it and is avalanche prone. Six people carrying another person between them could not fit down the route. A helicopter rescue would have likely caused falling seracs and/or avalanches, burying and/or killing everyone at the porters location.
    Everyone who attempts these insane climbs are forewarned that if you run into trouble high up on the mountain, and you cannot move under your own power, there is nothing anyone can do for you and you will die. K2 and Everest are both littered with frozen dead bodies due to this simple fact. If you attempt one of these peaks, you cannot expect rescue. It’s wonderful if it can be done, and an amazing feat, for sure…..but you just can’t expect it.

    • @valerierodger
      @valerierodger Рік тому +17

      No excuse. Rescue is possible as long as the person is responsive and can aid in their own rescue. Entitled narcissists just like to throw around excuses for not even stopping to see if they can assist.

    • @steveshea7725
      @steveshea7725 Рік тому

      ​@@valerierodgerblah blah blah, valley dweller. You don't have a clue what it is like to operate in a low oxygen environment, where each step forward takes five breaths.

    • @missdemeanor3524
      @missdemeanor3524 11 місяців тому +90

      ​@@valerierodgerI don't think you understood what the OP said. But everyone knows you stamp your feet and cover your ears and say BAD.

    • @smilesfordays
      @smilesfordays 11 місяців тому +68

      @@valerierodgerthe problem with “assisting” is that it ends up much like trying to help drowning victims. If a dying person pulls you down you’ll drown too.
      The people up there have very little oxygen, and would be endangering their own lives to try. You would have those people die as well? The fact they got him back up and not hanging dead was a tremendous effort that took supplies he didn’t come up with himself. The person who sent him up with the group in his company is liable. Everyone who goes up there knows they might die, but sure, tell you what, how about you go up and do that work to retrieve bodies or the injured on the mountain. Even going up should teach you a lot about your own limits and how being endangered by others unpreparedness would make you move to safety or not. I’m interested to hear if your opinions hold up.

    • @victoriaalicewestwood3558
      @victoriaalicewestwood3558 11 місяців тому +19

      Dr grande already mentioned that by the time they got him down he was unable to move or assist.

  • @Liam-zw1ek
    @Liam-zw1ek 6 місяців тому +3

    "The opportunity to unnecessarily risk their lives was quickly passing them by..." love it.

  • @nazer9
    @nazer9 11 місяців тому +42

    I think the biggest issue with these deaths, especially this past Everest season, is stemming from regulatory bodies allowing far to many people to climb the mountain(s) at once and far to many inexperienced and unprepared climbers. Its a dangerous combination thats why so many have died this past climbing season.

    • @SueRosalie
      @SueRosalie 11 місяців тому +8

      yes. China limits numbers on their side of Everest and requires climbers to qualify by having already climbed another 8,000m peak. The Nepalese govt has much less strict requirements and they need the money from the climbing permits, so Everest is overcrowded on the Nepalese route.

    • @jakewilson7112
      @jakewilson7112 11 місяців тому +2

      fully agree. Its the dangerous mix of ignorant people and profits.

    • @artmallory970
      @artmallory970 10 місяців тому

      *too

  • @A-dth6wdh
    @A-dth6wdh Рік тому +57

    $20 vs $3?? 🤯🤯 unbelievable, such a tragedy.. seeing the image of them climbing over him was very upsetting. Great content as always Dr. Grande

    • @Meela234
      @Meela234 Рік тому +7

      Makes me wish I was able to give him a couple hundred dollars for his family so he wouldn't have to give his life climbing up that mountain. I hope they will be okay after losing him. 🙏🏽

    • @stephendacey8761
      @stephendacey8761 Рік тому +3

      Today, kids with only a high school diploma feel like they deserve at least $20 per hr. to start.

    • @stevecarter8810
      @stevecarter8810 Рік тому

      From below minimum wage to double average wage

    • @makinnewcounts6676
      @makinnewcounts6676 Рік тому

      @@stephendacey8761 yeah they deserve about 50 while older should be getting 500 or so an hour. The ultra rich elites have the money, don't fall for famine mentality the real war is class war elites vs masses

  • @jimbobshambles
    @jimbobshambles 11 місяців тому +132

    It’s an extremely sad story. I hope he’s at peace now and I hope his mother is okay.

    • @ivanasukjadic1423
      @ivanasukjadic1423 11 місяців тому +15

      Why would his mother be okay? Silly comment. Of course she is not okay and much worse now that the son is gone

    • @cryptnick_
      @cryptnick_ 11 місяців тому +11

      ​@@ivanasukjadic1423Maybe it was poor wording, chill out.

    • @Jesus.Fuckery
      @Jesus.Fuckery 11 місяців тому

      @@cryptnick_*

    • @cryptnick_
      @cryptnick_ 11 місяців тому

      @@Jesus.Fuckery make me, girl.

    • @caderainier4052
      @caderainier4052 2 місяці тому +1

      ​@ivanasukjadic1423 Obviously they meant that they wished the best for his mother, but let's not let the benefit of the doubt get in the way of your self-righteous navel-gazing.

  • @janineroux2398
    @janineroux2398 10 місяців тому +14

    Incredibly sad...especially his circumstances and how little he earned, the pressure for him to go further and the loss for his family

  • @thefisherking78
    @thefisherking78 11 місяців тому +60

    I could never step over a hurt person just to check a box. But I also don't have the motivation to climb mountains like this. It's hard to put myself in the shoes of anyone who was there.

    • @axv95
      @axv95 11 місяців тому +1

      not just hard but impossible. at over 27000 ft on a mountain like K2 you’d need to change your underwear every 3 minutes climbing without supplemental oxygen is a death wish.

    • @jb-xc4oh
      @jb-xc4oh 11 місяців тому +3

      You would if your life depended on it.

    • @junioradult6219
      @junioradult6219 11 місяців тому +1

      Sry but you would be the first dead body lying next to him. You dont know the mountain or even the area of the mountain this happened on

    • @housemana
      @housemana 10 місяців тому

      it's "hard to put myself in the shoes of anyone who was there".... are you seriously trying to fence sit in such a quandry? jfc. terminally online oblivious fool. "motivation" does not trump morality. period.

    • @cockoffgewgle4993
      @cockoffgewgle4993 10 місяців тому

      Yes you could and you would. It was literally the only option.

  • @quhan7664
    @quhan7664 Рік тому +370

    My friends and I once encountered a girl crying alone while hiking a local mountain trail. This hiking trail is famous for local legend and supernatural sighting. One of my friend though she was a ghost. We were spooked for a while seeing a girl crying in the middle of a rainforest, as it's not something you usually see or experience. But I notice she was in hiking gear and back pack. I decided to approach her and ask her why she was crying. To my relive she was not a ghost or anything supernatural. But she was from another hiking expedition. It turns out that she was relative new to hiking and her team mates decides to leave her behind since she was to slow. We decide that she could join us and try to comfort her the best we could. Long story short, in the end she was no longer crying and after the end of the hiking trip, she promised not to hike with such people who leaves their team mates behind.

    • @markusgorelli5278
      @markusgorelli5278 Рік тому +50

      I had a work colleague who once led a hiking group. Heading back out one day, one of the ladies was slow and was holding back the entire group. She wanted to sit and rest. He was worried because it was getting late and the forest would be dark earlier. Not for nothing would she hurry up so he told her that if they didn't get out soon, that bears and lions would be out. That frightened her so much that she got up quick. I had to laugh when he told the story because we don't have any bears or lions in our country.

    • @PaulLoveless-Cincinnati
      @PaulLoveless-Cincinnati Рік тому +10

      This is a heartwarming story.

    • @LilyGazou
      @LilyGazou 11 місяців тому +12

      @@markusgorelli5278😂
      In my area we do have mountain lions and bears. We would never leave anyone behind alone.

    • @nhmooytis7058
      @nhmooytis7058 11 місяців тому +9

      She was inexperienced and shouldn’t have been there.

    • @Hygelac1000
      @Hygelac1000 11 місяців тому +28

      Considering all the dangers and possibilities of a rescue on an unforgiving mountain like K2 is one thing, but just leaving someone behind on a hike is disgusting. That is far more callous than this K2 story. I've been in this situation and I put the slow person's arm over my neck and I made him walk my speed before he realized the pace required and started walking again on his own. That poor woman.

  • @yarnpower
    @yarnpower Рік тому +485

    I can’t believe how little those porters and sherpas get paid just to enable some wealthy person to reach a summit.

    • @TatraScrambler
      @TatraScrambler Рік тому +23

      There is a name for it: it's called capitalism. Supply and demand - the equilibrium market price. As long as there is someone willing to accept such price, that's what the employer is gonna pay them. If you live in a capitalist state you must be a pretty darn hypocrite for saying that. But yeah, it is disgusting. That's the world we live in.

    • @darkprince56
      @darkprince56 Рік тому +36

      @@TatraScrambler I’m not saying it’s appalling but they get paid 20 a day….where as my eldest cousin & his wife together make ~29 _a month_ in communist Cuba. Just sayin’

    • @bluejay9890
      @bluejay9890 Рік тому +22

      Yeah, they should demand higher wages. The mountains are all clogged up with rich people wanting to check off their bucket list. Maybe if it cost even more to climb these mountains they wouldn't be so crowded.

    • @nhmooytis7058
      @nhmooytis7058 11 місяців тому +8

      Might seem like more if someone is from a poor country but us still wrong!

    • @charshill2978
      @charshill2978 11 місяців тому +20

      Wealthy people who have never had to worry about their next meal or having a roof over their heads don't understand why anyone is poor

  • @stevenreiser2599
    @stevenreiser2599 11 місяців тому +10

    I climbed for about 26 years. In the Death Zone above 26,000 feet, every person is trying to survive. Assisting others is NOT an option - attempting just kills more people

    • @margodphd
      @margodphd 3 місяці тому +1

      Unfortunately, that's the truth. But, dying in the death zone doesn't take long, especially without oxygen- not so long you cannot hold the hand of someone dying until they loose consciousness.

  • @markstevenson6635
    @markstevenson6635 6 місяців тому +2

    In 1953, Art Gilkey was NOT brought down. During the rescue, he was swept away and his body not found by his team. The rescuers nearly ALL died in a fall during the rescue but were only saved by a miraculous belay by Pete Schoening. And, as you noted, this occurred at a much lower elevation. Then there is the case of Dudley Wolfe and the Sherpas who died trying to rescue him in 1939.

  • @paulthew2
    @paulthew2 Рік тому +206

    I began rock climbing in the mid-eighties. I superficially knew a few top mountaineers, and they all said the same thing; K2 was the mountaineers mountain. It required a high level of mountaineering skill, and is very dangerous. Luck really helps. That it is now being used for paying customers, with ill-equipped, lowly-paid porters, is breathtakingly sad. I thought K2 was still the mountaineering jewel in the crown, so to speak. This is fucked.

    • @wildliferox2
      @wildliferox2 Рік тому +20

      What was this man doing on K2 if he had only ever been to base camp and no significant experience of climbing above that. From the images it looks like they were at the technically demanding Bottleneck and the Great Serac- that means this is the last push, you summit and then you come down. No way should an inexperienced climber have be there without support.

    • @LDiamondz
      @LDiamondz Рік тому +14

      ​@@wildliferox2I agree. He shouldn't have been hired for the job in the first place. He went up their without proper clothing or gloves. He had to know he needed those items. Even if just climbing to the base camp, you need proper equipment. It's very sad this man lost his life. All of the deaths on that mountain are sad, as well.

    • @moniqueengleman873
      @moniqueengleman873 11 місяців тому +4

      A Congo line on Everest.

    • @nhmooytis7058
      @nhmooytis7058 11 місяців тому +1

      🎯

    • @Just.A.T-Rex
      @Just.A.T-Rex 11 місяців тому +1

      The porters want, market, and exist well under their countries governing due to these climbs.

  • @PerlaOC
    @PerlaOC Рік тому +208

    Although the rescue attempts failed, I can clearly see who the heroes are in this case. Those who tried to help him, so he didn’t feel alone, even if he died waiting, he died knowing someone cared.
    So heartbreaking, truly, heartbreaking.
    This case reminded me of the Nutty Potty Cave death case, which kept me crying for days over the heart-wrenching, agonizing death of the young man. 💔
    Edit: miss spelled
    “Nutty Putty Cave” (correct name)

    • @maxw5900
      @maxw5900 Рік тому +2

      Your paragraphing is also heartbreaking.

    • @PerlaOC
      @PerlaOC Рік тому

      @@maxw5900 ?

    • @th3unmaker
      @th3unmaker Рік тому +10

      @@maxw5900 I find the name 'Nutty Potty Cave' to be more disturbing still.

    • @ranman7688
      @ranman7688 Рік тому +16

      @@th3unmaker The Nutty Putty cave story is nightmare fuel.

    • @th3unmaker
      @th3unmaker Рік тому +6

      @@ranman7688 Well, if it is "Nutty Putty' and not "Nutty Potty' i'm a bit less horrified so far.

  • @Paintbl99
    @Paintbl99 11 місяців тому +86

    This is tragic and is such a perfect exemplification of current society - people are more concerned with their status and vanity then they are of the actual lives of other human beings

    • @asegal4677
      @asegal4677 11 місяців тому +6

      Okay, but with a 23% death rate on K2 "tragedy" is rather common. Hard for me to use the word "tragedy" under these conditions.

    • @danielwarwick8086
      @danielwarwick8086 11 місяців тому

      Human beings have no business being in places like K2, death valley, Mariana's trench, the moon, mars, etc. If you go to these places you need to be aware of these risks and prepare for the worst because at a 23% fatality rate you are guaranteed to hit some road-bumps. Mohammed didn't prepare his death is on him.

    • @OmarAbdulMalikDHEdMPASPACPAPro
      @OmarAbdulMalikDHEdMPASPACPAPro 11 місяців тому

      "The opportunity to unnecessarily endanger their lives, was passing quickly."😐
      Your dry humor is awesome.😅👍🏽
      May the hearts of the remaining friends and family be granted solace.😔🤲🏽🙏🏽♥️

  • @alisonmary1443
    @alisonmary1443 11 місяців тому +50

    Unacceptable said it all, you don't step over a dying man to reach your goal, he was putting his hand out to folk who passed him, did any stop to hold the hand that was reaching out for help. This is extremely sad.

  • @Tina06019
    @Tina06019 Рік тому +174

    This is a gruesome story. Mohammed Hassan was told to go down. He must have known he was not prepared for this work. Did his employers pressure him to do it, or did his own significant economic need cause the judgment-impairing pressure? Many local porters and high altitude guides take these jobs to send their children to school in Katmandu. These men want their own sons to be able to take better, less hazardous jobs.

    • @user-sr1kc6jj2b-p1q
      @user-sr1kc6jj2b-p1q Рік тому +17

      Dr Grande said that he had 3 sons and a diabetic mother to look after.

    • @citizenoftheearth6
      @citizenoftheearth6 Рік тому +19

      I can't believe they pay the porters only 20$ per day!!! They spend tens of thousands on their equipment, trip, and climb, but can't raise the pay for the guys who do the hardest work.

    • @laurenurban3942
      @laurenurban3942 Рік тому +12

      That’s the problem. Once the big guy makes his profit…..there’s nothing left for the little guy. That’s how greedy people are today.

    • @TatraScrambler
      @TatraScrambler Рік тому +2

      Katmandu? You mean some imam Islamabad? This is Pakistan and K2, remember? Not Nepal with its Everest.

    • @jcjcviews
      @jcjcviews Рік тому +6

      Can we imagine this poor fellow dangling in the air and how his family and loved ones must cope with the memory? (Who needs such a job?!) Right, you are.
      I've worked with these folks from Nepal. Now I know why they're not impressed when I talk to them about the accomplishments of sherpas and mountain climbing. What troubles me above all else and yet enlightens me for the best? I learned the extent to which we innocent humans are worth so little in the grand scheme.
      My friends, for all "our" progress, we remain in a lonely, uncaring world, vast numbers of us, and Mr. Hassan's story is an excellent example of where we find the "rich" by any standard and the rest of us. We are so naive.
      May you RIP, Mr. Hassan, and God be forever with you and yours.

  • @overzealouseuthanasiast9731
    @overzealouseuthanasiast9731 Рік тому +146

    Am grateful you mentioned the financial burden that contributes to decisions of people. Is sadly an overlooked factor in most cases.

    • @SirenaSpades
      @SirenaSpades Рік тому +3

      Dave Ramsey talks about this all the time.

  • @LIBERTYSINCURSION
    @LIBERTYSINCURSION 11 місяців тому +35

    But there was a rescue attempt, right? I mean, he was hanging upside down after the fall and it took them hours to get him back to a position where they were able to even assess his physical situation.
    Beyond that I'll say that an old college friend of mine is into mountain climbing. In fact he never shuts the hell up about it. Anyways he always says that if someone is injured during their attempts their goal is no longer to reach the summit but to get them off the mountain. But he also says sometimes that's just impossible to do though.

    • @1984KaliA
      @1984KaliA 11 місяців тому +7

      seems like two persons tried to help but the others just wanted to reach the summit. and that's the point, they didn''t change their goal like they should have. even if it was impossible to rescue this guy, they should have tried. or at least should have aborted their climb.
      and then celebrate afterwards that they have broken some record?! that is just disgusting in my opinion and shows how little empathy they had for this guy :(

    • @jorgepeppertrees6612
      @jorgepeppertrees6612 11 місяців тому +4

      I have been binge watching Everest death documentaries, and if one can’t walk, there’s no saving a person. Not in a location like that definitely. As a leader, there is another level of mental fortitude required that we in our regular lives don’t. Not me 😂

    • @Emm325
      @Emm325 11 місяців тому +1

      @@1984KaliAI’m not saying the climber was right, but do you even have any idea what the record was?!? Climbing ALL the highest, most dangerous peaks in the minimum time, which also has a lot to to with weather, permits, governments, etc.
      watch the Netflix documentary 12. Peaks, I believe it is, the only person to do this before is an amazing climber from Nepal, it’s a HUGE ordeal, had it been just that mountain I doubt they would’ve kept on climbing.
      However, during the other climber’s “tour” he actually ended up rescuing another climber (almost died doing it) and he was an amazing human, with almost superhuman strength and breathing abilities compared to even your fittest humans, do some research on the backstory before throwing out a feeble comment.
      Google is great for that.

    • @junioradult6219
      @junioradult6219 11 місяців тому +3

      ​@@1984KaliAlet me guess you have zero exp😂.

    • @brucerorty4014
      @brucerorty4014 10 місяців тому +1

      @@1984KaliA Read K2: The Savage Mountain by Charles Houston, M.D. and Bob Bates for the 1953 mountaineering ethos on K2, and why the team tried to save their stricken mate despite the high risk the entire team would perish. Decades later, Dr. Houston acknowledged that the team's overall group survival might have taken precedence over trying to save a teammate whose attempted rescue would lead to 7 deaths, not one.

  • @mistressmozart
    @mistressmozart 10 місяців тому +17

    I get that conditions were such that it was probably not possible to get him down, but it took 3 hours for him to die. He reached out to people as they stepped over him. I cannot imagine the callousness of such an action. Kudos to the man who tried to help him and give oxygen. Could no one abandon their narcissistic goal of reaching the top to hold his hand and be with him while he died?

  • @juniperwool
    @juniperwool Рік тому +132

    This story made me cry...here's a desperate man working for pennies on probably one of the world's most dangerous jobs. I felt so much sorrow for him laying there trying to get help from those around him. Put yourself in his position. Try to imagine what he felt. He probably felt so much pain and so much helplessness as no one around him could or would help him.

    • @Lemmon714_
      @Lemmon714_ Рік тому +20

      They are too high up to carry anyone. If Sherpas can't do it then no one can.

    • @cindyl3297
      @cindyl3297 Рік тому +11

      There is a reason why you shouldnt try to rescue a drowning person unless youre a life guard...

    • @Hatbox948
      @Hatbox948 Рік тому +19

      It is tragic. He left behind three sons and a sick mother. I doubt the village he hails from has any social services to make life easier for them.

    • @juniperwool
      @juniperwool Рік тому +7

      @@Lemmon714_ I understand, but it is still terribly sad. It's still a life gone.

    • @ronald3836
      @ronald3836 Рік тому +17

      He would not have helped someone in danger at that height, either. He was not even equipped to help himself.
      The only reason why I can say with complete confidence that I would not have stepped over him is because I have ZERO inclination to ever climb a mountain.

  • @Lady.B0420
    @Lady.B0420 Рік тому +26

    When you climb these types of mountains, if you can't get yourself up and down, do not expect anyone to risk their life to get you where you want to go. You are responsible for yourself in that environment. Good climbers know the risks and do not expect anyone else to be their responsibility.

  • @paulajohnson139
    @paulajohnson139 11 місяців тому +6

    There was a rescue effort. According to what you said, Daniel and 2 workers pulled the Sherpa up to the ledge. After that the Sherpa couldn't move (very important) or talk (less important). Harila comes off slightly better than previously thought. However, I don't believe for one minute she didnt know if the Sherpas doing the roping had been lost/injured in that "avalanche" as radio contact woipd have occurred and uodated her.

  • @user-rq3sw8sj5n
    @user-rq3sw8sj5n 11 місяців тому +6

    When you climb these tall mountains like K2 you have to understand at a certain height you’re not gonna get rescued if you need medical attention. It’s more dangerous for ppl to try to rescue someone at those heights and on those dangerous mountains especially K2. It’s not the same when you’re on a mountain such as K2 and you don’t help an injured person as if you’re walk on the sidewalk and you see an injured person and don’t help.

  • @helpyourcattodrive
    @helpyourcattodrive Рік тому +95

    Everything stops when it’s Grande time! Let’s do this! Thanks, Grande. ❤ This one sounds unbelievable, as usual.❤

    • @sylviekins
      @sylviekins Рік тому

      Very thought provoking, he makes me think about my attitudes, and work though assumptions.

    • @TatraScrambler
      @TatraScrambler Рік тому +1

      Sure everything stops, I - for instance - stopped having any shreds of respect for dr Grandeur after 1:34. It's not the first (nor last, most certainly) time that he attempts to authoritatively speak about something he's got no idea about.

  • @katherinekirkhope9399
    @katherinekirkhope9399 Рік тому +45

    Imagine hiking over bodies to get somewhere where a lot of other people have been.

    • @carfincap
      @carfincap Рік тому +2

      God will not forgive the fireworks.

  • @cassienorman6275
    @cassienorman6275 11 місяців тому +16

    I love the comment where you said the climbers need a more ludicrous chance of dying rather than a high probability that was great. I love your dark humor. I needed a good laugh, thanks Dr. Grande.🤣😍

  • @frankarouet
    @frankarouet 11 місяців тому +47

    At this altitude, one step is like a small run for someone in shape. Carrying someone is like a marathon. It's a given that at such high altitude, if you can't move, no one can help you. You might have a few cases of people saved. But it's not generally the case. It's rather exceptionally heroic from those who save others.
    Also, from the picture, you see they would have had to climb with him, not just go down. My hunch is, as you're saying, that it was not possible.
    This said, if you're going to leave people to die, up there, I personally think you have to be very insensible as a human being, to dedicate yourself to such an activity. Very often, on summits, people even distinguish directions by the sightings of leftover bodies. I'd never have the heart to do this. I guess it takes many kinds to make a world.

    • @SF-fb6lv
      @SF-fb6lv 11 місяців тому +4

      True, for me even at 'only' 20,000 feet, each step (with a 50 lb backpack) took 8 breaths...

    • @frankarouet
      @frankarouet 11 місяців тому +1

      @@miesvaillanykyisyytta3252 That's pretty much what I'm saying. But you still leave them to die. No matter how you turn this around. I could not do that myself. Besides, how would you know what God wants?

    • @junioradult6219
      @junioradult6219 11 місяців тому +1

      ​@@frankarouetif you herd a stranger screaming as they were burning to death ingulfed in flames would you rush strait into the flames to save them?

    • @frankarouet
      @frankarouet 10 місяців тому +1

      @@junioradult6219 Have you even read what I wrote?

    • @ITR1329
      @ITR1329 10 місяців тому

      Your fake virtue signaling is adorable. Every climber who gets on one of the 14 >8000 meter peaks knows they have a good chance of not coming home. Should there just be no mountain climbing because some dude who eats tortured animals his entire life “has a heart”. Give me a break, you have less virtue than you think.

  • @jean-marcknight8816
    @jean-marcknight8816 Рік тому +12

    My final though would be : $20 a day while the cost to climb is $15000 and above

  • @jenanne31
    @jenanne31 Рік тому +268

    How tragic to lose your life for a $20 paycheck. Perhaps expeditions like this provide employment for many people in the area but the risk seems too great, particularly for the people who may not understand or be prepared for the dangers. Thanks for your excellent content, Dr. Grande!

    • @oftin_wong
      @oftin_wong Рік тому +13

      The locals know better than anyone ...

    • @shannonjaensch3705
      @shannonjaensch3705 Рік тому +22

      I was wondering how much the Sherpas got paid. I was doing my forklift licence training yesterday with a Nepal man who had moved to here in Australia 17 years ago. We were talking about all the deaths of climbers and he informed me of how many do including the sherpas. He made it clear that Sherpas do it as they like all other locals need the money to survive and have little choice. He didn't answer my question and hopes that they the sherpas got paid a decent amount of money tho.
      They should be paid exceptionally well for the risk/efforts and provided with the same necessary clothing/equipment as the climbers/clients by the climbers but it sadly appears that most who climb these mountains are very selfish and focussed on their own personal goal rather then the care for others.

    • @prettyokandy230
      @prettyokandy230 Рік тому +33

      the fact that people that can afford to travel the world to try and climb this mountain only pay these guys that little is pretty gross tbh..

    • @oftin_wong
      @oftin_wong Рік тому +10

      The Sherpas charge US $10,000
      To rescue someone ..a climber

    • @dickjohnson9582
      @dickjohnson9582 Рік тому +7

      I watched a documentary on sherpas and they said their wages are relatively good. Making a whole nepal years salary in a couple months but still very dangerous

  • @ericeverett2353
    @ericeverett2353 11 місяців тому +6

    You CANT help others in the Death Zone. All climbers are fully aware of that fact before they climb

  • @Sarah-xj9il
    @Sarah-xj9il 11 місяців тому +9

    Climbing those summits have RULES People. You’re risking your own life to help another. It’s talked about. Your on your own basically…and you KNOW that going in!! You can’t judge another for not choosing EXTRA death during an already deadly situation!!

    • @41052
      @41052 11 місяців тому +2

      You are soulless if you can step over someone dying. Genuinely sickening. Glad at least one seemed to actually be human.

    • @adjohnson9897
      @adjohnson9897 11 місяців тому +3

      You can judge the team that allowed the porter to climb withou the minimum basic equipment!

    • @goodgolly4726
      @goodgolly4726 11 місяців тому

      ​@@41052there's a UA-cam channel that talks about the countless deaths in Everest. Unfortunately it's extremely common because to save someone else more often means you both die

    • @goodgolly4726
      @goodgolly4726 11 місяців тому

      ​@@41052supposedly the actual dead bodies are considered landmarks on the hike up. I believe "green boots" is one. If you Google it, it should come up

    • @gb747gb
      @gb747gb 6 місяців тому +1

      This is not Vietnam

  • @bobbobertson7568
    @bobbobertson7568 Рік тому +7

    Most of the complainers can't even walk down the street without getting winded, yet these Heroes think they would be able to give effective aid at 28,000 feet under treacherous conditions.

  • @michelleobrien6996
    @michelleobrien6996 Рік тому +25

    The primary issue based on your explanation is that he was not given adequate equipment for the work he was given. For that the company is responsible and should compensate his family significantly. Imagine the consequence for the company if he were a paying climber and not given adequate equipment. His lack of experience is secondary as he had experience working at lower altitude and everyone who works at the higher altitude would have a first time for doing so.

  • @jessicaleser8822
    @jessicaleser8822 11 місяців тому +25

    When people are on the mountain in the death zone, saving a life could mean losing your own. Its a difficult decision to make, and i honestly don't know what I would do.

    • @ioidt
      @ioidt 11 місяців тому +4

      at least not throwing fireworks to celebrate their fortunes

    • @MireVale
      @MireVale 9 місяців тому +1

      I would not participate in any hobby where the life of another human being is up for debate

    • @sanepillow59
      @sanepillow59 8 місяців тому +1

      "saving a life could mean losing your own" As opposed to scaling to the summit, right? To keep scaling up is more dangerous than to bring a single guy down assisted by many other climbers

  • @robgrey6183
    @robgrey6183 Рік тому +127

    Some thoughts from a mountaineer:
    -Dr. Grande references the attempted rescue of Art Gilkey from high on K2 in 1953. I would suggest that this incident shows rather the near impossibility of such a rescue. Gilkey succumbed to illness, probably pulmonary edema, at the high camp at 7800 m. His team, which had been stuck at that camp waiting for a storm to subside, immediately abandoned the summit attempt, even though the weather was perfect for the summit, and coordinated a rescue. What follows was an epic of mountaineering, as his team fought storms and avalanches to get the helpless Gilkey down.
    Gilkie was swept off the mountain, where he had been anchored while the team attempted to make camp in a blizzard. The team got off the mountain with serious frostbite injuries.
    This was a highly experienced, cohesive group of mountaineers led by one of the pillars of American mountaineering. They behaved selflessly, and could not save Gilkey. They barely escaped with their lives.
    Several of the team went on record with the opinion that Gilkey, to save his friends who would not leave him, undid his anchors and fell to his death.
    There is a small, beautiful peak named Gilkey Tower between the South Teton and Nez Perce, which I have climbed.
    So, rescue is not so easy, at that altitude, in those conditions. Those who have never experienced the brain fog and fatigue of high altitude, the biting cold of oxygen-starved limbs, and the stress of dealing with exposure and objective hazards inherent in a route like that, or who have never spent a prolonged period camping in the snow and hanging on to wind-rattled tent poles, are of course entitled to their opinion. What is that opinion worth?
    Another observation: I've spent some time working with Sherpas in their homeland in Nepal. They work on K2. Sherpas are Tibetan Buddhists. The porters on K2 are Pakistani Muslims. I would not discount the possibility of language and cultural differences contributing to this accident.

    • @ModernVintage31
      @ModernVintage31 Рік тому +29

      Thank you for your contribution to this discussion. It seems like many of the commenters here are forgetting that even professional rescuers, for instance the US Coast Guard, have specific parameters within they will attempt rescue. And if a victim’s situation falls outside those parameters and attempted rescue will threaten the lives of the rescuers, they don’t do it. There’s a cascading affect, as you pointed out. Attempted rescue in impossible situations puts MULTIPLE other people at high risk.
      Thank you also for acknowledging that Mr. Hassan was not Sherpa, and that Sherpa are a distinct ethnic group. Mr. Hassan certainly deserves to be seen as an individual human being, of Pakistani descent, versus being lumped into what many people incorrectly believe is a job title.

    • @davepirtle9790
      @davepirtle9790 11 місяців тому +7

      I had heard about the porter but not the part about people climbing over him. I would need more Info but it sounds like they were in or close to the death zone. It's well understood truth that in the death zone you are on your own. The rescues typically occur below the death zone.
      Also for clarity K2 is not the most deadly mountain to climb
      . That's either Annapurna or

    • @molassescricket6663
      @molassescricket6663 11 місяців тому +12

      This is the opinion of a human being, and someone who spent nearly two decades caring for the sick, wounded and dying. I would want nothing to do with people who think and behave in such a degenerate, despicable manner.

    • @bobsterclause342
      @bobsterclause342 11 місяців тому

      look, your run gives you this obstical, then that's just bad rdm
      you fail to help you cheat and you fail your run, you are disqualified and banned from future attempts if hurt someone
      furthermore, if someone dies, you need to be banned froma ll recorsds cheating and manslaughter
      if you cheat, you don't go on the leaderboards, you are just a cheater
      no records, nad you can never compete again, as you are just a cheater
      this is what needs to happen

    • @tim27scissorfists
      @tim27scissorfists 11 місяців тому +5

      @@bobsterclause342Are you OK? lol

  • @jackwalls7170
    @jackwalls7170 Рік тому +36

    This has all the ingredients for a Agatha Christie novel. A bunch of people that don’t know one another all climb a mountain together 🤣

    • @jeynjohnston8085
      @jeynjohnston8085 Рік тому +3

      If you write it, I'll read it.

    • @jayjablunov4697
      @jayjablunov4697 Рік тому +1

      Read, "The Eiger Sanction." :)

    • @carpediem6431
      @carpediem6431 Рік тому +2

      I’ll help with the opening sentence for the book….. “It was a dark and stormy night…….”
      Suggestions:
      It was the:
      A) porter with the crampons
      B) wealthy doctor with the faulty carabiner
      C) influencer with a frayed rope
      D) all of the members through callous disregard of human life

  • @cocksureness
    @cocksureness 11 місяців тому +4

    I don’t think I could celebrate.. (or even keep going) if I knew a man down wasn’t helped.
    Thx for exposing this, Dr.Grande... there appears to be greed and selfishness among the summit seekers.

  • @livbyron4150
    @livbyron4150 10 місяців тому +1

    This is the most emotion Dr. Grande has ever displayed 😢

  • @fractalign
    @fractalign Рік тому +830

    I can’t think of bigger more selfish bunch of narcissists than mountaineers ! They risk their lives and the lives of others just so they can boast about something the rest of us couldn’t care a less about.

    • @scottbrower9052
      @scottbrower9052 Рік тому +145

      And they litter everywhere.

    • @glengrant3884
      @glengrant3884 Рік тому +57

      Global divers are pretty much the same.

    • @ANPC-pi9vu
      @ANPC-pi9vu Рік тому +163

      And the people they hire do all the real work of lugging the gear and setting the lines ahead of these tourists so that the tourists can get their selfies and bragging rights. We shouldn't even call them mountaineers. That term should be reserved for the shirpas.

    • @jakeviolet2195
      @jakeviolet2195 Рік тому +81

      Nobody has to be there who doesn't want to be. And they don't do it to impress normies. They do it to challenge themselves and impress their fellow mountaineers, who are very much interested in their exploits. It's no different from any other pointless recreation activity, except the stakes are higher.

    • @valerierodger
      @valerierodger Рік тому +69

      I don’t consider these high-paying commercial tourists to be mountaineers. Mountaineers are not a selfish bunch of narcissists - and they sure as hell wouldn’t leave a companion to die without exhausting every possible option for saving them.

  • @grantlarsson9173
    @grantlarsson9173 Рік тому +26

    Never will I ever climb a mountain like K2 or Everest. The “dead zone” is a thing for a reason. Everyone knows in the dead zone you don’t stop for anything, it could mean your death. Even if you reach the peak, many die on the descent. Scary stuff .

    • @deankruse2891
      @deankruse2891 11 місяців тому

      You do stop for plenty of things in the death zone, including sleeping and drinking water, and changing your oxygen bottles, which make the death zone a non-factor.

    • @nhmooytis7058
      @nhmooytis7058 11 місяців тому

      I won’t climb Everest because I get panic attacks and nosebleeds standing on a chair to change a light bulb 😢

    • @GarethTiedt
      @GarethTiedt 11 місяців тому

      @@deankruse2891You clearly have no idea dude. Sleeping at 8000+ meters is still considered incredibly risky, even with oxygen. Changing bottles when not over exerted is easy. It's a few seconds. Trying to rescue someone with planned oxygen capacity, while over exerting yourself, uses far more oxygen than planned and thus carried.

  • @doclewis8927
    @doclewis8927 11 місяців тому +25

    Unfortunately, there's also the issue of needing extra oxygen to move a body down the mountain and the fact that there was deep fresh snow. They were in the death zone meaning that trying to save someone else could literally mean your own death. Most mountaineers, sherpa, and porters are aware that once you're into the death zone, it is truly everyone for themselves. Those that stepped over him though without even trying to help or even give him a word of comfort will meet a similar fate or worse. Often, climbers in the death zone have their bodies moved into a cervasse to become one with the mountain and one day will appear elsewhere on the mountain.

    • @41052
      @41052 11 місяців тому +1

      so people don't save people in the freshly fallen snow? That people have not survived helping someone down while in fresh snow? i doubt that, gotta be heartless to step over them. Least they could have done is try to give him comfort in his last moments.

    • @RogueEva
      @RogueEva 11 місяців тому +2

      also, all climbers are fine with that. I'm not saying i'm not expecting my climbing mates to try their best but i don't expect anyone else to risk their lives for me. And i don't even have to climb above death zone to think that. People have different mindsets and the ones who moralise from the comfort of their homes tent to be worst :) btw ofc it's a shame that the guy died but i wouldn't blame those people on the mountain for not risking their lives

    • @41052
      @41052 11 місяців тому

      @@RogueEva I blame those people for literally walking over his body. Really shows how fucked up y’all mountain people mentality that you think I am the worst because you walk over someone to reach a peak. Disgusting and heartless.

    • @upsidedownjim
      @upsidedownjim 10 місяців тому +3

      @@41052 The commenter mentioned that trying to help someone could mean ones own death. That's important to understand the situation. In the death zone you barely have enough strength and energy to move yourself. That isn't an exaggeration. Moving through fresh, deep snow is more challenging and causes one to exert more energy. It's not at all like at sea level or lower altitudes. Maneuvering someone who is essentially dead weight in deep snow, icy terrain, narrow ledges, strong winds, cold, while wearing lots of gear, etc makes these situations near impossible to mount a rescue. Stopping to comfort someone also means that you aren't moving, so your body heat goes down and you get cold, develop hypothermia, can't move and then die. Now another dead body to walk over. Just pointing the challenges that can't be overlooked and minimized when judging the morality situations like this.

    • @41052
      @41052 10 місяців тому +1

      @@upsidedownjim still, don’t walk over their body. It shouldn’t be so shocking or hard to grasp that you *stop* and go back down the mountain. If more of you mountain people are human then y’all could help, not just one person but multiple, if it’s one person, don’t step over their body as they reach for you, go down for help if you can’t comfort them. And the guy who was comforting him, from what I remember, is alive. So, no one has ever been saved from the death zone? No one has ever helped someone from the death zone?

  • @user-po3mh4dy9r
    @user-po3mh4dy9r 11 місяців тому +6

    Among the elite in any endeavor, there is a certain level of contempt for those who appear to be in trouble as a result of incompetence, unpreparedness, arrogance, or any other deficiency. They see it as "not their problem". This brings to mind the tragic death of Rob Hall on Everest, who tried to save people who should have been left. The general public can think what they want, but opinions about these events should really be left to those who have lived the choices (in my opinion).

  • @tink_a
    @tink_a Рік тому +47

    Imagine the porter's family. ❤ The desperation over his death and the worry their future is immense.

    • @annaf3915
      @annaf3915 11 місяців тому +7

      A climber that was in the area at the time of the accident but didn't attempt to climb has started a GoFundMe for the family. He was on tv here in Austria so he's legit

    • @falconeshield
      @falconeshield 11 місяців тому +3

      All for 20 dollars

    • @KHH595
      @KHH595 11 місяців тому +1

      They know that career is extremely dangerous. If he had a sick mother to care for he shouldn’t having been climbing the world deadliest mountain

    • @bobsterclause342
      @bobsterclause342 11 місяців тому

      i think if you don't help people, then that is bad rdm and you still fail your run
      you get dsiqualified like this you get banned from future attempts and if you kill someone you are the type of cheater who can't be put in any wrold records because you are just a cheater and an sasshole
      everyone else has bad luck they respond to, you ignore it, you are cheating and not better, just a

  • @francislarv3012
    @francislarv3012 Рік тому +8

    The Brazilian photographer deserves praise 👍🏻

  • @catserver8577
    @catserver8577 11 місяців тому +1

    I have never ever woke up and thought "I want to climb a snowy remote mountain". This is the main reason why.

  • @vanessamcgrew4486
    @vanessamcgrew4486 11 місяців тому +1

    “The opportunity to unnecessarily risk their lives was passing by quickly” he’s roasting

  • @joytrujillo9447
    @joytrujillo9447 Рік тому +9

    I would like to think that hypothermia set in and he just went to sleep. Prayers for his family. I'm sure he'll be greatly missed.

  • @somebody701
    @somebody701 Рік тому +134

    May he rest in peace. That’s really sad but I’m not surprised that climbers who don’t care much about their own life, or leaving behind families, would walk over him.

    • @wpeniche
      @wpeniche Рік тому +16

      Pretty much this.

    • @Nancy-tr5fi
      @Nancy-tr5fi Рік тому +12

      We have to stand against the indifference of callous people.

    • @michelleobrien6996
      @michelleobrien6996 Рік тому +9

      Old School climbers would be less likely to do this. They left behind families with greater risk to their own lives, but their connections with each other would have been stronger with no "traffic jam" issues. By comparison think how people respond to a traffic jam and how self centred their thoughts are when sometimes the cause of the traffic jam is a fatal car crash or a suicide.

    • @Lemmon714_
      @Lemmon714_ Рік тому +2

      Sherpas said that there was nothing that could be done. Would you prefer 20 others try to save him and have some of them die too?

    • @carfincap
      @carfincap Рік тому

      Just a 2023 every day heart warmer! Spoiled white brats in the West. I was lucky and blessed with opps but always had a heart. There IS a statistically significant drop in empathy among studied of a spectrum of individuals in past three decades.

  • @lowbrowrodeo
    @lowbrowrodeo 11 місяців тому +6

    I thought the picture of him laying on that narrow trail where climbers couldn't even stand up straight themselves already said enough. There was no way anyone could have rescued him in those circumstances.

  • @Brandoni65
    @Brandoni65 11 місяців тому +3

    Im a climber in PNW. I know Lucy Westlake the youngest woman to summit Mt. Everest from communication on social media. She made a summit attempt of K2 at this time but decided to turn around due to deaths and avalanche at that time. I cant believe the porter didnt have oxygen or gloves and if these climbers donated oxygen and gloves he may have lived. Or if gave him high altitude medicine. There should always be emergency medicine for climbers like this on huge expeditions on K2.

  • @Mila_Brearey
    @Mila_Brearey Рік тому +218

    The "bottleneck" which is in the death zone, is where most lives are lost. It's due to regular avalanches, altitude sickness (causing hallucinations) and just the fact that K2 is almost vertical with nowhere to rest for a few minutes. Add to it hurticane-type winds, the inability to breathe, frostbite, exhaustion, etc.
    Everest & K2 are very different; however, death zone rescues on either mountain are not possible if you are incapacitated and can't help to get yourself down some very technically challenging vertical 4-5 storey cliffs likd on Everest. K2 is a vertical nightmare all the way.
    Msny people here just have no clue at all that mountaineers & sherpas follow strict rules, which apply to everyone starting at 8,000 meters & higher.

    • @TatraScrambler
      @TatraScrambler Рік тому +16

      Some voice of reason at last. Grandeur has no idea what he's talking about (not his first time). P.S. what a lovely angel on your avatar. You're not exactly horrible looking either ;)

    • @sarahfox5379
      @sarahfox5379 Рік тому +58

      @@TatraScrambler Well that's a cringey comment if I ever did see one.

    • @Torrque
      @Torrque Рік тому +20

      Voice of reason, yes… and then, definitely cringe the rest!

    • @QJacPLo
      @QJacPLo Рік тому +17

      @@TatraScramblershe’ll never be into you bro

    • @sarahfox5379
      @sarahfox5379 11 місяців тому +11

      @scotttillman01 What has that have to do with anything?
      Do scientists have to go to Mars to know anything about it? Do biologists have to personally travel down to the bottom of the ocean for them to have knowledge of what is down there?

  • @ShrawanRegmi
    @ShrawanRegmi Рік тому +12

    Sherpas are from Nepal. The word "Sherpa" doesn't mean a profession. Its the ethnicity of people in Nepal living at high altitude mountainous region who are physically superior in climbing mountains in extreme conditions.

    • @ModernVintage31
      @ModernVintage31 Рік тому

      Thank you for stating this. I’ve been saying pretty much the same thing on other channels that have covered this death, and no one has acknowledged it. It’s a bit weird, really.

  • @hoosieraussis1
    @hoosieraussis1 11 місяців тому +4

    If Mohamed was unable to get on his feet, carrying him down could be a suicide mission, for all of the features of K2 that you outlined in the beginning, the technical difficulty, the steepness, the avalanches, the extreme altitude and physical condition of the the potential rescuers. I trust that if Sherpas passed him by, it was a lost cause. All of the extreme altitude climbing is so senseless but fascinating to me.

  • @ar4203
    @ar4203 11 місяців тому +4

    Unfortunatly you cant really stop in these situations because it actually risks more lives, just read about multi mt everst deaths because of the delay & then people cannot get back to base camp in time

  • @ProfessorMonstru
    @ProfessorMonstru Рік тому +34

    Thank you for your well-reasoned thoughts on this. Sadly, people with way too much money and not nearly enough sense will throw said money at all sorts of stupid and dangerous stuff, and poor village dwellers get caught up in the dangerous schemes at the cost of their lives for a measly few dollars a day. The whole thing makes me sick to my stomach, to be completely honest.

    • @Jenny-nz8fb
      @Jenny-nz8fb 11 місяців тому +8

      Agreed. $20 a day for a high chance of dying is disgusting exploitation.

  • @jodiearrington
    @jodiearrington Рік тому +31

    I really appreciate how much research goes into your analysis of all these cases. Just brilliant and thank you so much for this content. I use to think climbing was on my bucket list. I don't think that any more. Way too dangerous. Thank you Dr. Grande, as usual, for your brilliant analysis, research, knowledge and the content of this channel.

    • @antoniotula262
      @antoniotula262 Рік тому

      There are mountains that are far easier to climb from what I've read. More of a trek or hike than a climb. Don't completely abandon that bucket list yet!

    • @M.May195
      @M.May195 Рік тому +1

      @@antoniotula262 agreed. You can climb say snowdon in the UK very safely and the views are amazing at the top. It’s not climbing Everest but it is a lot safer and very rewarding. (That doesn’t mean there’s no risk at all. Make sure to train and prepare before doing any type of hiking, trekking or mountaineering)

    • @TatraScrambler
      @TatraScrambler Рік тому

      Research? Come on. His knowledge of mountaineering and its moral dilemmas is less than superficial, and yet he still made his pathetic attempt at moral judgement.

  • @FireElement7
    @FireElement7 11 місяців тому +1

    The fact that this poor man was placed into a position where he was willing to risk his life for $20 a day is the worst part to me. At least they could have made an attempt and honored him instead of celebrating their own "victory".

  • @MackerelCat
    @MackerelCat 11 місяців тому +2

    The woman is being unfairly singled out. She wasn’t even one of those who climbed over him. What’s more, the bottle neck is the most dangerous section of a perilous and deadly climb. Even without someone being injured and needing help, people have to move quickly through that zone. K2 is not called the Savage Mountain for no reason. 1/4 climbers of K2 dies in the attempt.

  • @redjasper9458
    @redjasper9458 Рік тому +13

    Should we expect people to value someone else's life when they put their own life at such risk? Honestly these people aren't like the rest.

  • @elliebellie7816
    @elliebellie7816 Рік тому +17

    I grew up in Colorado climbing high mountains. Not K2, but still, most of the 14ers. It always amazed me at how poorly prepared most mountain climbers are. Many showed up for a day's climb in flipflops, short shorts and maybe a sandwich and bottle of water and acted like they were on a playground. I can't count the number of times these people had to be helped down due to altitude or broken bones.

    • @morticiaheisenberg9679
      @morticiaheisenberg9679 Рік тому

      I wouldn't have helped them. Stupidity should be painful. I know that they were told in the beginning, probably by several people, that you cannot hike like that. But stupid, self entitled asshats will do what they want AND give attitude.
      In AZ, they have a "stupid motorists law". Stupid people that drive around barriers to try crossing flood waters. When they get stuck, the news crew comes out to shame them on local news stations. AND the stupid motorists has to pay for the rescue. I 100% agree with this law and it should apply to a lot more situations. Like flop flop hikers, lol.

    • @CalopsitaVanderbilt1911
      @CalopsitaVanderbilt1911 Рік тому +9

      Exactly. I’m from Switzerland, and there are tourists who try to climb the Alps with flip flops.

    • @evilarchconservative2952
      @evilarchconservative2952 11 місяців тому +2

      Flip-flops and shorts...SIGH...these are people who really deserve a Darwin Award.

    • @sluttymctits4496
      @sluttymctits4496 11 місяців тому

      I noticed this, too. I spent the summer in Summit County last year (will be moving to CO permanently next year), and there I developed my life-long love of nature into a sheer obsession with climbing peaks. I haven't hit a 14er yet (I'm not one to push my limits, but I know I'm now ready for the easier 14ers) but have done multiple 12 and 13ers. Even on those peaks, I saw so many people treating the scrambles at the top like a walk in the park. No pack/food/water on a 6+hr hike/climb, improper clothing and footwear, no map/GPS/knowledge of the trail, etc. Who thinks that open-toed sandals are a good idea on loose rock and high exposure sections? Maybe I'm just overly cautious, but I'd rather be overprepared and successfully finish my hike than unprepared and risk injury, death, or needing rescue.

  • @perro4996
    @perro4996 11 місяців тому +2

    Poor guy. He did not listen to advice and was unprepared. He was responsible for his own actions.

  • @afaha2214
    @afaha2214 11 місяців тому +1

    imagine spending all that time and money to climb a mountain
    but the entire world remembers you climbed over people

  • @StAlphonsusHasAPosse
    @StAlphonsusHasAPosse Рік тому +59

    Anyone who wants to learn more about this subject should read "Into Thin Air" by John Krakauer. He was on Everest when things went bad. It's a great book

    • @kevinpatrickcarey3741
      @kevinpatrickcarey3741 Рік тому +1

      he wasnt happy with the movie Everest he felt they made him look like to much of a dick

    • @evelynwaugh4053
      @evelynwaugh4053 Рік тому +4

      Yes, it is. He's a very good writer. Under the Banner of Heaven and Into the Wild were also good.

    • @okjhbk74
      @okjhbk74 Рік тому +12

      Krakauer was part of the problem, He was hired to write about a summit atempt and decided to go for the summit, bad move. He did not help with rescue because he was toast from going to the summit with lack of experiance. Anatoli Boukreev wrote the book about this climb and he was on it. He recieved the highest award from the usa alpine club for his behavour and puts Kakauer to shame.

    • @okjhbk74
      @okjhbk74 Рік тому +2

      Krakauer was part of the problem, He was hired to write about a summit atempt and decided to go for the summit, bad move. He did not help with rescue because he was toast from going to the summit with lack of experiance. Anatoli Boukreev wrote the book about this climb and he was on it. He recieved the highest award from the usa alpine club for his behavour and puts Kakauer to shame.

    • @purpleslurple5149
      @purpleslurple5149 Рік тому +6

      He is a great writer, but after reading his version you need to do some research to get a fuller view of what actually happened, and understand he had bias in the telling of the story.

  • @sydneyfairbairn3773
    @sydneyfairbairn3773 Рік тому +32

    I do not understand people putting themselves in harm's way. They have families that need them.

    • @ericf7063
      @ericf7063 Рік тому +4

      I don't get it either and I'm a hiker. When it gets to that level, it's no longer a pastime.

  • @Gundus1000
    @Gundus1000 2 місяці тому +1

    There is no guilt, therefore no need to apologize. Our society is ignorant and stupid.

  • @FuckGoogle2
    @FuckGoogle2 9 місяців тому +2

    Mountaineers seems like the biggest collective of egomaniacs, I'd never want to be part of anything they'd do as a group.

  • @lindas5964
    @lindas5964 Рік тому +8

    After reading “Into Thin Air” several years ago, I got the impression there is almost a trance like state these people get into in order to reach the summit.

  • @thesisypheanjournal1271
    @thesisypheanjournal1271 Рік тому +14

    Elite mountaineers tend to be callous anyway. On Everest, corpses of dead climbers are actually treated as landmarks.

    • @Lemmon714_
      @Lemmon714_ Рік тому +3

      Well you should go up there and carry them down. You could show the Sherpas that it CAN be done and it really isn't every man for himself at high altitude.
      What do you think they should do with the bodies??

    • @thesisypheanjournal1271
      @thesisypheanjournal1271 Рік тому

      @@Lemmon714_ I know that the bodies are pretty much part of the mountain once the person dies. It just can't help but leave you a bit calloused to turn corpses into landmarks. Not evil, just callous.

    • @darcydistefano363
      @darcydistefano363 Місяць тому

      @@Lemmon714_ cover them up....start with Green Boots and Sleeping Beauty

  • @Gundus1000
    @Gundus1000 2 місяці тому +1

    You are doing a fair job in describing the situation.

  • @randallgd
    @randallgd 10 місяців тому +2

    People who think she could have saved or rescued him clearly do not understand what is lke up there. Experienced climbers understand it just wasn't possible. People who have never climbed at real altitude or in that kind weather shouldn't say what climbers should have done on that day.

  • @dawnwang1558
    @dawnwang1558 Рік тому +13

    I love dr. Grande's humor regarding rich people in there incomprehensible need to risk their lives

  • @mr559
    @mr559 Рік тому +21

    I would be interested in seeing Dr. Grande cover more mountaineering and cave diving incidents. After having watched so many videos on those topics, it's safe to say that the conditions, split-second decisions and panic really makes people do things unimaginable.

  • @kxs7267
    @kxs7267 10 місяців тому +3

    Feasibility of rescue isn't just a matter of altitude - depends on the topography of the place where the injured party is, i.e. how steep and hard to climb that particular terrain is. That it took so long to get him back on the path suggests it was not easy ground. Also, even six people is a very small number to carry out a rescue of someone unable to move themself.
    (Both these factors can be seen in mountain rescues even in lower mountains like those in the UK.)
    The Gilkey rescue (attempt) is part of mountaineering history precisely because it was such an epic achievement.
    That said, it does stick in the craw to feel an injured person was neglected. Though we don't know how many of those moving past asked if they could help and were told no. Inexperienced climbers on a technical rescue could be more liability than help.
    Celebrating one's own achievements later? In poor taste, certainly to the outsider. But if it's the Norwegian woman people are complaining about - sounds like she was one of a very limited number of people who actually rendered help. A celebration looks bad but doesn't actually harm the person they tried but failed to save. In short, emotions are complicated, especially with groups of people.
    A much more important problem overall is the treatment and payment of porters and sherpas. That is the real disgrace that goes overlooked because it's not a single dramatic incident.

  • @charlesfaure1189
    @charlesfaure1189 11 місяців тому +2

    These people put their ego drives ahead of life itself. It's no surprise they don't give two shakes about the lives of others. Those summit photo smiles tell you everything you need to know about what's inside the mountain-climbing set.

  • @calvinsmyth
    @calvinsmyth Рік тому +112

    The majority of deaths on K2 happen at the bottleneck. It is steep, icy, and prone to falling rock. In books and YT shows about K2, the bottleneck is always mentioned as a place of most concern/danger for all climbers. It is not uncommon for climbers to lessen their load, including leaving behind their O2 at base camp to make it through the bottleneck to the summit. Also, the health status of the climbers vary. Not all are feeling great and rested, but all will push themselves to get to the summit with little reserve for anything else.
    In general, most deaths occur during the descent. Add in the weight of taking down a person and the odds greatly increase that more deaths will follow. This has occurred many times. If the body is frozen it will be heavier than the dead weight of an unconscious person as ice will accumulate on a dead body. That is the main reason that dead bodies are not routinely retrieved. Rescuing or retrieving is a concerted effort. Good planning equals more safety and one bossman is the limit.
    There are many stories of climbers being left to die alone, so the porter being left behind is not a simple case of entitlement regarding the climbers. On the mountain, it comes down to everybody for themselves for a variety of reasons. The main reason that any company would go above and beyond for a client is because they want more clients. Some have literally had their climbers carried along the way and to the summit by sherpas. Catering to more weekend climbers is big business and there is great competition to get such customers.
    If the climbing groups are private, it's best to be amongst close friends if you need help, because even in small groups where everyone knows one another, often egos clash, and that is how some climbers remain on the mountain for all time. There is often a lot of drama on Mountain Mamma. The big celebration at the end of this particular climb is a case in point. It was in poor taste, but not at all out of the ordinary.

    • @ANPC-pi9vu
      @ANPC-pi9vu Рік тому +1

      Fuck that. They should have abandoned the climb to help get him down the mountain. He was alive and could have been saved if more than two people had bothered trying. Also these climbers should be called tourists, not mountaineers, since these locals they treat as disposable do the real mountaineering and risk taking so these egotists can get their selfies and bragging rights.

    • @glow1815
      @glow1815 Рік тому +6

      Well said

    • @veganjeliza8518
      @veganjeliza8518 Рік тому +16

      Yes, the bottleneck is no place for a porter with little K2 experience and lacking proper gear for climbing and warmth. He was doomed at that point.

    • @zebeart8808
      @zebeart8808 11 місяців тому +1

      Mountain climbers are cruel, selfish, and filthy people.

    • @happyinparis
      @happyinparis 11 місяців тому +4

      Then climbers have a creepy, self-centered way of thinking.

  • @anahitaavestaei
    @anahitaavestaei Рік тому +48

    I mean I know “misunderstandings” occurs but if an injured person grabs at you while you’re passing by him, it is universally understood as begging for help. You cannot help? Fine! But you can comfort him as he dies or something. People are unbelievable.

    • @NoeLPZC
      @NoeLPZC Рік тому +14

      I'd agree with you... were they not in the "death zone". If you and a pal fell into freezing water and your pal couldn't be rescued, no one would judge you for getting out instead of staying by their side and both dying of hypothermia.
      It was a notoriously treacherous stretch on one of the most dangerous mountains on earth. Staying to comfort the dying meant substantially increasing the risk to your own life. It's completely understandable for them, in those circumstances, to keep moving.
      What's not so forgivable is why they were up their in the first place. Fuck them for knowingly putting other's lives at risk for personal glory that means nothing to anyone else.

    • @pwnsolo443
      @pwnsolo443 11 місяців тому +7

      @@NoeLPZC So the person grabbing at you is injured and freezing to death, and you stay and comfort him while he's dying and freeze to death along with him? Lead your life with logic and reason not compassion or you wont make it very far. People arent "Unbelievable"...they made the LOGICAL decision. Everyone is made well aware of the risks before the climb started. A gamble was taken and lost, its that simple.

    • @NoeLPZC
      @NoeLPZC 11 місяців тому +2

      @@pwnsolo443 You replied to the wrong dude

    • @JadedJet
      @JadedJet 11 місяців тому +7

      Yea stop on the most dangerous spot of the mountain so you can die comforting someone who is dying

    • @pwnsolo443
      @pwnsolo443 11 місяців тому +1

      @@NoeLPZC The other chick deleted her reply...Im not sure why the response was sent to you lol...sry about that

  • @Amtcboy
    @Amtcboy 11 місяців тому +1

    The most recent incident, the Sherpa decided the group not continue to the summit, to save the Malaysian climber.
    (The climber was criticized initially since he did not acknowledge the efforts of the sherpa and the other climbers, who gave up the summit, to save him)

  • @davidhunternyc1
    @davidhunternyc1 11 місяців тому +2

    I remember what Sandy Hill Pittman did too. I heard in her own words, in front of my own eyes, the day she arrived back in NYC, what she caused. Where is the law that will prevent these horrible tragedies from happening again ??? ...RIP

  • @Reallyheistaken
    @Reallyheistaken Рік тому +4

    If viewers were to subscribe Dr Grande would reach 2M. That would be nice for a hard worker like him.