It takes about a month to correctly summit mount Everest from beginning to end. Most people don’t realize that. The rotations are extremely important going back-and-forth until finally you are ready to make the summit and then you’re halfway because you still have to come down. You better be in the best shape of your life and know it.
A typical trip to summit Everest is approx 70-day from start to finish. But what if find interesting is people are doing this 30-50% faster now. Using Hypoxico technology at home, the climber acclimatizes without ever being on the mountain. Then when they get there they are far ahead in training and can summit quickly, reducing danger, cost and time. There is a lot of debate about it but for many who don't have 70 days this seems like a great option provided it is done correctly.
Western cwn can be incredibly hot. However from the south col to the summit it can be insanely cold, cooling effects from strong winds can push temperature to below -70C
AND broken bones I read this story about a guy who was climbing the north side. He had to come back after developing a slight cold/cough…only because he coughed too much and his body was so weak he broke a rib
I could listen to this guy's talking all day. I love his voice and the way he speeks. So calming. I wish I could listen to your stories after you are back from the climb. :)
That’s crazy that it’s so warm (90 degrees) … yet the snow doesn’t melt? I’d also be concerned about avalanches with it being that warm. Have you climbed K2 yet? In any event, enjoyed your videos!
Great insight. All made possible by the sherpas who are the true heroes. Please take responsibility for the out of control rubbish & environmental contamination - take your rubbish back out - pack out what you pack in.
Salute to the legends Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgey... When Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgey reached on the Peak there were no fixed lines and ladders available at that time... They are real legends.. Now a days climbing up to the Mt Everest seems like a tourist destination with little effort... The climbers only have to follow the lines and to climb the inbuilt ladders on there... And SOS helicopter, Oxygen and other facilities, available if needed..
Americans are so embarrassing about this sort of thing. I can't stand hearing them going on about being Irish or Italian or whatever when there connection is tenuous at best.
@@NachoCheesus I’m English, about 200 years ago I had a pole in my lineage. I had French too, and Jewish. What does that make me? Everyone is a composite when you go back generations. Unless your family only in bred with other Irish when they went to NA, you aren’t Irish. Plus - it’s where you grew up makes your culture. I have a mate who lived in Sierra Leone till he was about 10. He had his teenage years here and he’s pretty much as English as me. Americans lack their own culture so cling to abstractions
@@RaferJeffersonIII If you've had nothing but English ancestors for 200 years, you're obviously English. That's exactly what happened for the vast majority of US history. The Irish, the Dutch, the Germans, Ulster Scots, Italians, whatever largely stuck together in religion-based pillarized groups. The guy in the video was talking about his skin. We're talking ethnicity here, not culture.
@@NachoCheesus nonsense. Virtually every American is a mix. That’s why the names are like Ramone Markowiscz, Antonio Bailey etc. There isn’t a single person in America or England with one ethnicity in their lineage. You have 4 grandparents, 8 great grandparents. Back 200 years it’s probably 32 people. If you’re born in America, you are American. You can’t be Irish. Sorry.
It takes about a month to correctly summit mount Everest from beginning to end. Most people don’t realize that. The rotations are extremely important going back-and-forth until finally you are ready to make the summit and then you’re halfway because you still have to come down. You better be in the best shape of your life and know it.
A typical trip to summit Everest is approx 70-day from start to finish. But what if find interesting is people are doing this 30-50% faster now. Using Hypoxico technology at home, the climber acclimatizes without ever being on the mountain. Then when they get there they are far ahead in training and can summit quickly, reducing danger, cost and time. There is a lot of debate about it but for many who don't have 70 days this seems like a great option provided it is done correctly.
Wow I'm surprised at how little views this has its awesome
For real
So interesting brave educational so much challenge
I think its amazing that people say its warm, I don't understand this especially when it is thick with ice and snow all year around.
Because the sun is reflecting straight off the ice and onto you.
It's relatively warm
I literally get frostbites just by watching this lol how can anyone call this warm
Western cwn can be incredibly hot. However from the south col to the summit it can be insanely cold, cooling effects from strong winds can push temperature to below -70C
damn bruh you could come back with sunburn AND frostbite
AND broken bones
I read this story about a guy who was climbing the north side. He had to come back after developing a slight cold/cough…only because he coughed too much and his body was so weak he broke a rib
such a beautiful valley
I could listen to this guy's talking all day. I love his voice and the way he speeks. So calming. I wish I could listen to your stories after you are back from the climb. :)
Hang on. The summit from camp four takes 5-6 days??
I think that is a one day trip from 4 to the top and back. Maybe he was talking about the whole journey from Base camp to the top?
That’s crazy that it’s so warm (90 degrees) … yet the snow doesn’t melt? I’d also be concerned about avalanches with it being that warm.
Have you climbed K2 yet? In any event, enjoyed your videos!
Great insight.
All made possible by the sherpas who are the true heroes.
Please take responsibility for the out of control rubbish & environmental contamination - take your rubbish back out - pack out what you pack in.
Salute to the legends Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgey...
When Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgey reached on the Peak there were no fixed lines and ladders available at that time... They are real legends..
Now a days climbing up to the Mt Everest seems like a tourist destination with little effort... The climbers only have to follow the lines and to climb the inbuilt ladders on there... And SOS helicopter, Oxygen and other facilities, available if needed..
SOS heli is not available at that altitude….
do they have wi-fi at the camps?
Only at base camp. But even that goes away sometimes.
@@csillavamossy1380 thanks I was kinda joking 😄
Nice couches anyway
I like your hat . would be great, if you could tell me where can it buy??
Looks like it came from Nepal maybe? 🤦🏼♂️
why not wear your sunglasses in the beginning lol
I know eh haha. I'll try not to go blind but i WILL keep my sunglasses on my forehead
Selfie anyone
Not Irish, American. Having one person 400 years ago in your tree doesn’t make you Irish pal
Americans are so embarrassing about this sort of thing. I can't stand hearing them going on about being Irish or Italian or whatever when there connection is tenuous at best.
Uhm no, ethnic Irish don't become transracial by living in North America 😂
@@NachoCheesus I’m English, about 200 years ago I had a pole in my lineage. I had French too, and Jewish. What does that make me?
Everyone is a composite when you go back generations.
Unless your family only in bred with other Irish when they went to NA, you aren’t Irish.
Plus - it’s where you grew up makes your culture. I have a mate who lived in Sierra Leone till he was about 10. He had his teenage years here and he’s pretty much as English as me.
Americans lack their own culture so cling to abstractions
@@RaferJeffersonIII
If you've had nothing but English ancestors for 200 years, you're obviously English.
That's exactly what happened for the vast majority of US history. The Irish, the Dutch, the Germans, Ulster Scots, Italians, whatever largely stuck together in religion-based pillarized groups.
The guy in the video was talking about his skin. We're talking ethnicity here, not culture.
@@NachoCheesus nonsense. Virtually every American is a mix. That’s why the names are like Ramone Markowiscz, Antonio Bailey etc.
There isn’t a single person in America or England with one ethnicity in their lineage. You have 4 grandparents, 8 great grandparents. Back 200 years it’s probably 32 people.
If you’re born in America, you are American. You can’t be Irish. Sorry.