Dubai Telegraph - Everest? All in a day's work for record climber Kami Rita Sherpa

EUR -
AED 4.216615
AFN 73.481634
ALL 95.953313
AMD 435.504042
ANG 2.055298
AOA 1052.861097
ARS 1601.113364
AUD 1.629228
AWG 2.066684
AZN 1.947596
BAM 1.956495
BBD 2.326893
BDT 141.730356
BGN 1.962557
BHD 0.433452
BIF 3425.488337
BMD 1.148158
BND 1.475213
BOB 7.98274
BRL 6.042525
BSD 1.155342
BTN 107.131193
BWP 15.667705
BYN 3.521441
BYR 22503.89551
BZD 2.323591
CAD 1.57548
CDF 2606.318501
CHF 0.909214
CLF 0.026625
CLP 1051.287497
CNY 7.891347
CNH 7.921853
COP 4255.417751
CRC 539.597459
CUC 1.148158
CUP 30.426185
CVE 110.316685
CZK 24.455591
DJF 205.734309
DKK 7.473027
DOP 69.848505
DZD 152.168352
EGP 59.981264
ERN 17.222369
ETB 180.394945
FJD 2.54696
FKP 0.860485
GBP 0.864086
GEL 3.117252
GGP 0.860485
GHS 12.5939
GIP 0.860485
GMD 84.963721
GNF 10125.581834
GTQ 8.849146
GYD 241.693238
HKD 9.000019
HNL 30.577856
HRK 7.530881
HTG 151.413468
HUF 393.538595
IDR 19473.906721
ILS 3.559347
IMP 0.860485
INR 106.828174
IQD 1513.309014
IRR 1509827.683702
ISK 143.209678
JEP 0.860485
JMD 181.399999
JOD 0.814015
JPY 183.289631
KES 149.547026
KGS 100.406079
KHR 4626.550435
KMF 491.411314
KPW 1033.317341
KRW 1720.86485
KWD 0.351991
KYD 0.962701
KZT 557.319947
LAK 24790.342066
LBP 103472.940549
LKR 359.733607
LRD 211.409049
LSL 19.284379
LTL 3.390211
LVL 0.694509
LYD 7.372096
MAD 10.810965
MDL 20.143192
MGA 4811.67344
MKD 61.604038
MMK 2411.250427
MNT 4100.188795
MOP 9.32657
MRU 46.111419
MUR 53.400489
MVR 17.750148
MWK 2003.313071
MXN 20.440438
MYR 4.516282
MZN 73.37875
NAD 19.284379
NGN 1565.719942
NIO 42.513436
NOK 11.000369
NPR 171.4245
NZD 1.972592
OMR 0.441469
PAB 1.155241
PEN 3.945202
PGK 4.984748
PHP 68.985343
PKR 322.737818
PLN 4.270804
PYG 7467.148862
QAR 4.200868
RON 5.092427
RSD 117.459043
RUB 96.310104
RWF 1686.429662
SAR 4.31097
SBD 9.237206
SCR 17.436198
SDG 690.043208
SEK 10.784969
SGD 1.471715
SHP 0.861416
SLE 28.302523
SLL 24076.31023
SOS 660.263977
SRD 42.912402
STD 23764.551115
STN 24.513513
SVC 10.108088
SYP 126.969918
SZL 19.289718
THB 37.576334
TJS 11.049677
TMT 4.018553
TND 3.399493
TOP 2.764488
TRY 50.88774
TTD 7.831215
TWD 36.647482
TZS 2989.492888
UAH 50.807129
UGX 4346.036202
USD 1.148158
UYU 46.781918
UZS 14087.600313
VES 517.753599
VND 30214.350116
VUV 137.311493
WST 3.138724
XAF 656.318803
XAG 0.015048
XAU 0.000236
XCD 3.102954
XCG 2.081994
XDR 0.816254
XOF 656.321662
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.921773
ZAR 19.449405
ZMK 10334.803798
ZMW 22.592553
ZWL 369.706386
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • BCE

    -0.2600

    25.75

    -1.01%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.89

    +0.04%

  • RIO

    -2.0800

    87.72

    -2.37%

  • BTI

    -2.4600

    58.09

    -4.23%

  • GSK

    -1.3500

    52.06

    -2.59%

  • BCC

    -1.0800

    71.84

    -1.5%

  • NGG

    -3.0200

    87.4

    -3.46%

  • RELX

    -0.4300

    33.86

    -1.27%

  • CMSC

    -0.1200

    22.83

    -0.53%

  • AZN

    -2.8700

    188.42

    -1.52%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2100

    16.6

    -1.27%

  • JRI

    -0.1370

    12.323

    -1.11%

  • VOD

    -0.3800

    14.37

    -2.64%

  • BP

    0.7600

    44.61

    +1.7%

Everest? All in a day's work for record climber Kami Rita Sherpa
Everest? All in a day's work for record climber Kami Rita Sherpa / Photo: Prakash MATHEMA - AFP

Everest? All in a day's work for record climber Kami Rita Sherpa

Scaling the world's highest peak is all in a day's work for 54-year-old Nepali mountaineer Kami Rita Sherpa, a man breezily modest about having set foot on the summit of Everest more times than any other person.

Text size:

On Wednesday morning, Sherpa scaled Everest for the 30th time in three decades of climbing the mountain, extending his own record just 10 days after his last successful ascent.

"I am glad for the record, but records are eventually broken," Sherpa told AFP last week after his 29th successful climb.

"I am happier that my climbs help Nepal be recognised in the world."

Dubbed the "Everest Man", he has held the record since 2018 and his closest rival is now three summits back.

"I did not climb for world records, I was just working," he said in a 2019 interview. "I did not even know you could set records earlier."

A living legend of mountaineering, Sherpa was born in 1970 in Thame, a village in the Himalayas famed as a breeding ground of successful mountaineers.

The community's most famous son, Tenzing Norgay, made the first successful climb of Everest's 8,849-metre (29,029-foot) peak alongside New Zealand's Edmund Hillary in 1953.

Growing up, Sherpa watched his father and then his brother don climbing gear to join expeditions as mountain guides, and was soon following in their footsteps.

A guide for about four decades, he first reached the summit in 1994 while working for a commercial expedition, and has repeated the feat almost every year since.

In 2018, he ascended Everest for the 22nd time, breaking the previous record he shared with two other Sherpa climbers -- both of whom have retired.

The following year, aged 49, he conquered Everest twice in six days.

- 'The risk we take' -

He briefly shared the record last year when another guide, Pasang Dawa Sherpa, equalled his then total of 27 summits.

But he quickly reclaimed it on his own that season with his 28th summit.

Sherpa has reached the top of four other of the highest Himalayan mountains -- K2, Lhotse, Manaslu, and Cho Oyu -- and has a world record 44 summits of peaks higher than 8,000 metres.

As a senior climber, he has on numerous occasions led the team that fixes ropes leading up to Everest's summit, an annual practice before the climbing season begins that makes the ascent safer.

In recent years, he has recounted his own observations of the impact of climate change on the weather patterns on the mountains.

"We now see rock exposed in areas where there used to be snow before. Not just on Everest, other mountains are also losing their snow and ice. It is worrying," he told AFP in 2022.

He has also been a regular advocate of the importance of Nepali mountain guides and the need for more action to recognise their contributions.

Ethnic Sherpas from the valleys around Everest are a crucial component of Nepal's lucrative mountaineering industry, which nets the Himalayan republic millions every year.

With their unique ability to work in a low-oxygen, high-altitude atmosphere, they are the backbone of climbing expeditions, helping clients and hauling equipment up Himalayan peaks.

"It would not be possible for many foreign climbers to summit mountains without our help and the risk we take," Sherpa said in a 2021 interview.

G.Gopinath--DT