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Assault on the Summit
part 7 |
back to part 6
The Decision to Continue
Poised to summit on the 13th, David, Ed, Araceli, Sumiyo and
Jamling have joined the largest rescue effort ever on Everest.
Twenty four people (including an Indian team from the North
side) reached the summit on May 10, but as of midnight that
night, 20 people had still not returned to Camp 4 on the South
Col due to severe weather. Gradually they trickled in
overnight, until just 6 people were definitely missing. All
rescue attempts were halted, beaten back by extremely high
winds. The drama that unfolded can be read about in detail in
Audrey Salkeld's Newsflashes, written from Base Camp.
For the MacGillivray Freeman IMAX/IWERKS Everest Science
Expedition team, climbing on Everest is mostly about safety.
As evidenced by their efforts these past few days, their
concern for safety extends far beyond the immediacy of their
own expedition to all climbers on the mountain.
Although there is little one can do from a radio several
thousand feet below a lone climber left to fight for his life
through a cold night, David and Ed's encouragement and
soothing words will not be forgotten by those of us who can do
so little from afar. Having led a climber down off the Lhotse
Face, racing through the night to get him low enough to be
flown out by helicopter, the team has done everything possible
to bring a climber, previously presumed dead, back to life.
For the support team at Base Camp, it's been a game of waiting
by the radios for news from the mountain. Ed's wife, Paula,
helps in any way possible to share information she gets from
the team with other expeditions at Base Camp.
Click here to hear Paula talk about how she copes with the
dangers Ed faces on his climbs
(RealAudio). With their efforts given to rescuing other
climbers on Everest, the team is exhausted, their supplies
have been diminished, and so they must return to Base Camp to
assess.
NEXT WEEK: Will the team make another bid for the summit?
Learn how weather and the jet stream can affect climbing
on Everest.
Liesl Clark, NOVA Online's producer and writer, joined the
expedition up to Base Camp. Audrey Salkeld of Clevedon,
England is one of the world's premier Everest historians and
photo researchers. Her photo editing credits include
Everest: The Ultimate Book of the Ultimate Mountain
and
Everest: The Best Writing and Pictures from Seventy Years
of Human Endeavour. She is currently with the expedition at Base Camp.
Broughton Coburn, author and long time resident of Nepal is
an advisor to MacGillivray Freeman Film's IMAX/IWERKS 1570
large format film "Everest." Charlie Houston, authority on
pulmonary medicine, a mountaineer, and author, is film
advisor to the MacGillivray Freeman Films IMAX/IWERKS Large
Format Science Expedition.
Photos: (1-3) courtesy Robert Schauer.
Lost on Everest
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