Adventure Beat

Adventure Beat offers observations, interviews, featured media and regular columns about adventure travel and the natural world. Follow the Beat at AdventureBeat.Com.

Name: Christian Kallen
Location: Healdsburg, Calif.

Media professional in news, travel and lifestyle.

Sunday, June 10

Final Report from Xtreme Everest (1)

We wrap up over coverage of the Caudwell Xtreme Everest expedition, with an interview with Greg MacGillivray and final thoughts from Kay Mitchell. The expedition is being covered by MacGillivray Freeman Films for their forthcoming "Return to Everest 3D" IMAX release.


Sherpa in the IcefallEnd of the Adventure

The days are warmer now at Everest Base Camp, the ice of the Khumbu Glacier melting with spring and the beginning of the monsoon rains. Most of the climbing teams are gone – only an Indian group shares the site with Caudwell Xtreme’s scientific camp, where not long ago more than 30 expeditions crowded the glacial moraine. A feeling of remoteness, of wilderness, is returning to the Himalaya.

Just a few days ago things were livelier when the team celebrated at the foot of the Icefall. Kay Mitchell, the de facto camp supervisor and project manager, recalls the day the climbers came down through the Khumbu Icefall for the last time, three days after reaching the summit.

“Just on the edge of the icefall we set up a bit of a party – we got the music system going, and played ‘Eternal Flame’ by the Bangles, one of Mike Grocott’s favorites. Quite a few of the trekkers from the last trek group came over as well, and a few odds and sods, so we had a big gathering of about 40 people. When the climbers came over the last bit of the icefall together, there was a huge round of applause. It was great.”

But despite the spectacular success of the expedition’s climbing effort, the work isn’t over. The mountaineering doctors of Caudwell Xtreme face another two days of medical testing at Base Camp, to round out the months of biometric data they’ve supplied. And tons of scientific equipment and camping gear must be packed up and carried, by yak and by porter, all the way down the trail to Lhotse, then by plane to Kathmandu, then on back to London for months if not years of analysis. The hard work may be over, but the real work has just begun.

Returning to Everest
Back in California, Return to Everest producer/director Greg MacGillivray is effusive in his admiration for the climbing doctors. “The scientists were far more successful than I ever imagined they would be,” he says. “Not only were they successful in gathering a tremendous load of data that they’ll be evaluating for the next several years, but they were also able to get 8 of their 10 summit team doctors all the way to the top, with their Sherpa teams. I think as a whole they had 25 people summit, including our cameraman Michael Brown.”

Party at Base CampFilming the Caudwell Xtreme Everest expedition was not originally part of MacGillivray’s vision for Return to Everest, the sequel to the award-winning 1998 IMAX Theatre film Everest. “With this film, I knew we would have a good follow-up story with Jamling Norgay and Araceli Segarra, because they’re just wonderful characters,” explains Greg. “They are so much fun, and they come across so well on screen. But when I found out about the medical expedition, it took the story up a notch.

Everest was more or less a documentary of climbing with some great characters,” Greg says. “What Return to Everest will do is focus far more on the Sherpa culture—audiences will see the culture through Jamling and Araceli’s eyes as they return to Base Camp eleven years later. You’ll see the changes that have occurred with the Sherpa culture and how things have gotten better for the Sherpa since that tragic 1996 season.”

Though Sherpas have been part of Everest’s history since Jamling’s father, Tensing Norgay, joined Edmund Hillary as the first men to summit the mountain in 1953, it has only been recently that Sherpas have begun to enjoy the fruits of their labors. Hillary’s own Himalayan Trust and the American Himalayan Foundation have built schools and hospitals in remote tribal villages. More recently, the Khumbu Climbing School was started in the village of Phortse to train Sherpas in rope and ice climbing techniques, so they can contribute more than strength and tenacity to climbing expeditions.

The school, started by Everest climber Conrad Anker and Jenny Lowe, widow of climbing legend Alex Lowe, will be the subject of MacGillivray’s next IMAX shoot in Nepal sometime next spring. “Remember that most Sherpas don’t climb as a sport or hobby, they climb as a profession,” Greg emphasizes. “But no one had stopped to think and say, ‘These guys need training,’ until Jenny and Conrad started this school. As a result, a lot of Sherpas are now climbing more safely, and there are fewer accidents. It’s a great program.”

See the previous blog post for the second part of this final update. Or download the PDF for the whole story.

1 Comments:

Blogger nepalwriter said...

Sherpas are the true heroes on Everest. One third of all deaths on the mountain have been Sherpas but one rarely learns of this. To learn more about this amazing tribe that makes climbing Everest possible, read Beyond the Summit by Linda LeBlanc. Details of Sherpa culture and religion are interwoven in a tale of romance and high adventure. The story has something for everyone: a love affair between an American journalist and Sherpa guide, conflict between generations as the modern world challenges centuries of tradition, an expedition from the porter's point of view.

Below are selections from reviews. To read the complete ones and excerpts go to www.beyondthesummit-novel.com

Beyond the Summit, is the rare gem that shows us the triumphs and challenges of a major climb from the porter’s point of view. The love of two people from diverse cultures is the fiery centerpiece of a novel that leads its readers through harshly beautiful and highly dangerous territory to the roof of the world. Malcolm Campbell, book reviewer

Conflict and dialog keep this gripping story of destiny, romance and adventure moving from the first page to the last paragraph. LeBlanc has a genius for bonding her readers and her characters. I found I was empathizing in turn with each character as they faced their own personal crisis or trauma.
Richard Blake for Readers Views.


A gripping, gut-twisting expedition through the eyes of a porter reveals the heart and soul of Sherpas living in the shadows of Everest. EverestNews.com

A hard-hitting blend of adventure and romance which deserves a spot in any serious fiction collection. Midwest Book Review

LeBlanc is equally adept at describing complex, elusive emotions and the beautiful, terrifying aspect of the Himalayan Mountains. Boulder Daily Camera

LeBlanc's vivid description of the Himalayas and the climbing culture makes this a powerful read. Rocky Mt News Pick of the Week

A rich adventure into the heart of the Himalayan Kingdom. Fantastic story-telling from one who has been there. USABookNews.com

This is the book to read before you embark on your pilgrimage to Nepal. The author knows and loves the people and the country, and makes you feel the cold thin air, the hard rocks of the mountains, the tough life of the Sherpa guides, and you learn to love them too. This is a higly literate, but also very readable book. Highly recommended."
-- John (college professor)

Memorable characters and harrowing encounters with the mountains keep the action moving with a vibrant balance of vivid description and dialogue. Literary Cafe Host, Healdsburg, CA

This superbly-crafted novel will land you in a world of unimaginable beauty, adventure, and romance. The love story will keep you awake at night with its vibrant tension and deep rich longing. Wick Downing, author of nine novels

Such vividly depicted images of the Everest region and the Sherpa people are the perfect scenario for the romance and adventure feats narrated. It's a page-turner, so engrossing you end up wanting to visit Nepal! Not just novel, but perfect for those seeking to get acquainted with the culture of this country.
By Claudia Fournier (América, Bs. As., Argentina)

1:24 PM  

Post a Comment

Links to this post:

Create a Link

<< Home