This place sounds like the Japanese equivalent of Mount Washington, which has extreme climate conditions despite not being that high, about 7,000 feet.
How do you casually tell people you climbed Everest/Chomolungma, anyway? Most people would probably hear that you did and think, “Yeah, right.”
Occasionally on the hike up Half Dome in Yosemite, people die. But that’s usually if they’re stupid and don’t stick to the cables. The cables get crowded and jammed with people, and sometimes an idiot tries to bypass that congestion. But if you slip, it’s a steep dome and once gravity has a hold of you, you’re not going to stop rolling.
I have an intense fear of heights but learned in the service that if you listen to and follow the instructions carefully, you’ll be safe, and you don’t have to focus your eyes on how high you are. Just focus on the immediate task at hand.
Wow - and she then thought attempting 29,000 feet was a good idea? I thought altitude sickness was one of those things that some people are more prone to than others, and if you’re prone, you might not be able to train yourself out of it? When I first learned that you can get debilitating, life-long altitude sickness effects just from relatively ‘easy’ climbs like Kilimanjaro, that was enough to put me off ever risking it.
It’s like being a vegan or owning a Tesla - it WILL come up in conversation .
Angel’s Landing is amazing, and still ranks as my favorite hike ever many years later. Don’t step back while trying to take a photo and don’t go in questionable weather, and you’ll be fine.
With the new lottery/timed-entry system a lot of the congestion has been removed. That makes for a safer hike for sure. But you need to plan your trip in advance or hope for a day before ticket. I’d still try to go at dawn before the first shuttle arrives.
Yeah, I hiked Mt. Whitney, and I got altitude effects at only 13-14k feet. I’ve done it once and have no desire to do something like that again. Of course, I’m old now and have osteoarthritis in my knees, so it’s not happening anyway. But I’ve heard the same thing – some people are more susceptible, and it can recur if it’s happened to you before.
I was reading a Medpage Today story about Jonathan Sugarman, a family medicine physician much-published in the field of public health, who died in a climb on Everest May 1st.
The story shows a photo of him where he looks to be in his mid-thirties. Turns out he was a lot older than that and had suffered what sounds like serious health issues on a prior ascent.
“Sugarman was reportedly an avid mountaineer, who rediscovered the sport later in life after a long hiatus, according to a profile on uphillathlete.com. In the profile, Sugarman is described as a 68-year-old, retired physician who had climbed to Camp 3 on Mount Everest in 2022. It also noted that Sugarman had developed high-altitude pulmonary edema (HAPE) during a 2016 climb to Camp 1.”
Personally, I plan to rest on my mountaineering laurels, having successfully summitted Mount Agamenticus in Maine.*