Peregrinator
Hooded On A Hill
- Joined
- May 27, 2004
- Posts
- 89,482
I did! LOL
Cool. And with that I'm off to bed. Have a good one.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I did! LOL
Cool. And with that I'm off to bed. Have a good one.
"Stranded above 19,500 feet on the continent's tallest peak, the injured climber suffered frostbite and hypothermia as temperatures hit 30 below. His leg was broken. The wind gusted to 70 mph.
Another member of the man's expedition up Mount McKinley was dead -- or soon would be -- lower on the 20,320-foot mountain, the first fatality on McKinley this climbing season.
Meantime, saving the injured man would mean tying the record for the highest-ever helicopter rescue in North America, according to the National Park Service.
"It was a big deal," said helicopter pilot Andy Hermansky, as he recalled hovering 200 feet above the climber in a Eurocopter AS-350 B3.
*****
Meanwhile, Hermansky and his mechanic were preparing the specialized helicopter -- which is capable of lifting more than it weighs -- for more trips up the mountain Friday to pick up rangers and equipment.
By Friday afternoon, rescuers had flown the two remaining injured climbers from the 17,200-foot high camp, according to the Park Service. Both suffered frostbite on their hands and feet following a night high on the mountain in the icy cold and blowing winds.
Only one other helicopter rescue in North America has been conducted as high up as Hermansky's on Thursday. His is the highest on Denali using the short-haul technique, the Park Service said.
"It's just something I'm glad I can be a part of, and the rangers are the brave ones, because they're hanging on the end of a line," Hermansky said. "I'm just the driver.""
Still one of my all-time favorite threads, Perg. Don't know why, really, because I never get to do any of this stuff, but it's very cool. Thanks.
New record set last weekend.
"History was made in the Himalayas during the past week as three mountaineers became the first to summit Mt. Everest and neighboring Mt. Lhotse during the same day.
In fact, Alpine Ascents International expedition members Garrett Madison, Tom Halliday and Michael Horst, all of whom climbed the 27,940-foot Lhotse from the South Col of Everest after attaining Everest's summit, are the first climbers to stand atop two 8,000-meter peaks within a 24-hour period.
This might rank as the most notable achievement during what has become a circus-like season on the world's tallest mountain (Everest stands at 29,035 feet), which has played host recently not only to climbers but skiers, paragliders, and even a 30-year-old Nepali guru who meditated on top of the world for 27 hours in support of world peace."
At first I thought that was wrong because Latin for snows would be "nives."Pretty shot! I've always loved the name given to those little spikes of snow...neve penitentes. So damn poetic...
At first I thought that was wrong because Latin for snows would be "nives."
But apparently it's wrong because Spanish for snows is "nieves."
Beautiful pichur, anyway!
Holy fucking crap.
Indeed....
I bet you could get $50 each for a good hot dog about 50' below the summit. There's an opportunity!
Indeed....
I bet you could get $50 each for a good hot dog about 50' below the summit. There's an opportunity!
No doubt. Maybe a bookstore with wireless and good coffee.
$50? $50?
Are you kidding?
You've seriously underestimated the demand and overestimated the supply.
Oxygen bar..........