Have stayed mum about the recent earthquake tragedy in Nepal – and my planned Everest excursion this August. For now, all’s still a go – Spring season is closed but Fall climb season remains hopeful.
More than 9,000 Nepali people have perished in the Apr 25th & May 12th earthquakes – literally, hundreds of thousands of people are displaced, sleeping outdoors. People are fighting for survival, yet I am climbing a mountain? Mighty self serving, huh.
Everest Base Camp a ‘War Zone’ After Earthquake Triggers Avalanches
The local climbing team reached out before the 2nd earthquake (a 7.4 aftershock), asking folks not to cancel – that the country would need economic dollars. Mentally though I remain conflicted.
we are in need of your support now more than ever! As things are slowly getting back to normal and people resuming their daily lifestyle, you can help us by coming to Nepal, visiting us and boost the morale of this devastated nation. In this time of need, we urge you to help us rebuild our nation from this disaster. We would like to assure you that our services will not be compromised and there shall be no hindrance while operating the trips.
We look forward to your support to Nepal and its people.
Visited the American Mountaineering Museum last night in Golden.
Attended a Nepal Relief benefit, hosted by a local Sherpa living in Boulder. Many Coloradoans have visited Nepal – and those of us who haven’t, feel a connection because of common geography & our love of high peaks.
Pemba Sherpa will travel to his hometown, Sengma in mid-June. His goal to build 200 homes at a cost of $1,000/home before heavy winter weather hits in November – puts it all into perspective, huh.
If you can donate, Pemba Sherpa’s details are: www.youcaring.com/boulderpemba
100% of your contributions to this campaign will go to helping the people of Nepal whose lives have been devastated by this recent disaster. As we all know, Nepal and its people have been rocked by a magnitude 7.8 earthquake, which had left thousands upon thousands sleeping in the streets, country wide blackouts, and over 5000 dead. Please, donate what you can and you can rest assured that your entire contribution will be brought to Nepal by me personally when I travel there in June to support the relief efforts.
There are many ways to help. I have personally supported the following 2 immediate-need operations.
To support our fundraising efforts via GoFundMe.com, please click on the following link: https://www.gofundme.com/t95dm85d
Finally, as you can imagine our recovery will require the efforts of a lot of people. We are also asking for volunteers to help us in Nepal. If any of you or someone you know are interested in volunteering in Nepal please contact us at sagar@himalayanglacier.com
WE’RE BETTER TOGETHER
We are humbled by our members’ overwhelming response and the collective power of the co-op. In just 24 hours, over 4,500 of you donated more than $350,000 to help the people of Nepal. This unprecedented level of support is indicative of the strong connection our members have to the people of this area.
If you want to share with others, here’s how to get involved: SUPPORT NEPAL RELIEF EFFORTS
Jerry Stritzke, REI President and CEO
- Golden, CO
- Mt Everest — still a go…for now
- Everest model – AMAZING! Hoping to take route depicted on the right.
- Pete Schoening saved 5 climbers with this axe in 1953
- [Buddhist] Prayer Wheel: ‘Om Mani Padme Hum’
- Boulder’s Pemba Sherpa requests help in rebuilding his hometown Sengma, Nepal
Kilian Jornet
“Nepal will climb now one of the most difficult mountains, and we, this time, must be their porters”
We are back home, Jordi Tosas and me have been almost 20 days in Nepal, changing the plans from climbing to helping the people who has been giving so much to all alpinists. We arrived at Kathmandu 2 days after the earthquake, expecting a big destruction on the city as we saw on the medias. Kathmandu was (is) not collapsed, just a few located buildings. After a week the life on streets was “normal”.
Jordi has been many (28) times on Nepal and has many friends on Langtang area, so we were going straight there. The destruction there is huge, the valley did not exist as it was anymore. Big landslides and avalanches collapsed the valley and all the people there. The dimensions of the avalanche on the upper valley are not human, not even on a science fiction film. We was reporting identities and finding persons. After that we meet people from ACTED association and we join them to run on remote villages in Ganesh and Tamang areas asking their needs and making the trails destroyed, and giving after food and shelters. Last days we saw the help has been well expanded, many associations are working really hardly to give food and shelters to all the country, after a few weeks where the corruption and slow decisions of Nepali government was slowing down the help. In Kathmandu we had a last earthquake that make more fear to the population.
Now Nepal need help, mostly on remote areas to get shelter before the monsoon that is coming soon. Many ONG are on place giving the help on the moment, and it is important to help them, they are many good options. But it will be really important to continue traveling there, to impulse the local economy and reconstruct the trails and villages and give the continuity and money they will need to survive from tourism.
Nepal is a poor country, many people is living with nothing and after the earthquake on many mountain areas they lose everything. But the smile was always on the their faces, Nepali people have a incredible capacity to fight problems, to be positive and strong on the pain, to find the happiness on the small cracks. We was going there to help them and they help us with their friendly reception, with their smile and shearing all they have.
Namasté
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z7Ebe9A2oOg
National Geographic: People’s Choice Adventurer of the Year
WASHINGTON (Feb. 12, 2014)—Spanish ultrarunner Kilian Jornet has been named the 2014 National Geographic People’s Choice Adventurer of the Year for pioneering a hybrid sport that combines trail running and alpinism to break numerous speed records and redefine what is possible in the mountains. He also popularized “sky running,” which involves blazing up technical terrain such as glaciers, rock ridges and steep snowfields in competitions. Jornet was selected from a group of 13 adventure innovators whose extraordinary achievements in exploration, conservation, humanitarianism and adventure sports distinguished them in the past year. More than 75,000 online votes — the most ever — were cast on the National Geographic Adventure website.
“I’m very proud of this award,” said Jornet. “While I don’t run to be admired or to have more followers, it’s truly an honor to be recognized by National Geographic and to know that people voted for me.”
Jornet, 26, brought sky running into the public eye with his unprecedented streak of breaking records and winning races. Most recently, he blazed up and down Mont Blanc, the highest mountain in the Alps, in under five hours and went up and down the Matterhorn in a record-breaking two hours and 52 minutes. Both runs were part of Jornet’s Summits of My Life (www.summitsofmylife.com) project, which is his personal quest to set speed records on mountains around the globe. Through the project, Jornet hopes to share his love of mountains and the outdoors, a passion that began when he was growing up in a small ski village in the Catalan Pyrenees.
“We believe that Kilian exemplifies the spirit of adventure in the truest sense of the word. He has demonstrated over and over that limits are meant to be pushed, and his growing list of remarkable accomplishments is truly inspiring,” said Mary Anne Potts, editor of National Geographic Adventure online. “We received a record number of online votes from our fans across the adventure community, and we’re thrilled to call Kilian the National Geographic 2014 People’s Choice Adventurer of the Year.”
Doing it just for the love of sport — I’m a HUGE fan. CONGRATS Kilian!
National Geographic has named their 2014 Adventurers of the Year.
“For nine years, National Geographic has combed the globe to find the Adventurers of the Year, each selected for his or her extraordinary achievement in exploration, adventure sports, conservation, and humanitarianism.
This year, we picked people who embody the spirit of adventure in diverse ways—a sky runner reinventing the rules; a skier reimagining his backyard; a climber seeking the hardest routes; a solo woman walking across the globe; a pair of veterans creating community where it’s needed most; and five more incredible feats.”
Folks know I’m a HUGE Kilian Jornet fan. That said, I was inspired by ALL of this year’s honorees.
The Honorees
• Adventure Educators Amy and Dave Freeman
• Alpinists Raphael Slawinski and Ian Welsted
• Big-Wave Surfer Greg Long
• Climber Adam Ondra
• Community Builders Stacy Bare and Nick Watson
• Explorer Sarah Marquis
• Long-Distance Swimmer Diana Nyad
• Skier JP Auclair
• Sky Runner Kilian Jornet
• Snowboarder Kevin Pearce
VOTE HERE for People’s Choice Adventurer of the Year: https://on.natgeo.com/1aGpYtW
(If you don’t vote for Kilian, check out Explorer Sarah Marquis. WOW – super inspired!)