Mt. Everest still tops, 50 years later

Published: Thursday, May 29 2003 9:40 a.m. MDT

"Climbing high mountains is a very finite way to achieve a most tangible sense of accomplishment in a relatively short time frame. Since Everest is the highest on earth, the 'superlative,' it naturally provides an allure and challenge for more people to summit than other very high, even more difficult mountains." — Dick Bass

I start this piece off with a quote from Snowbird owner Dick Bass because he is one of only two people I've ever known, if only remotely, who have stood on top of the world. The other was a man named Larry Nielson, a schoolteacher from Olympia, Wash., who in 1983 held me spellbound with his account of becoming the first American to climb Mount Everest without aided oxygen. He said he cracked several ribs as his lungs sucked for air at the summit, where oxygen is available at only a third the rate at sea level. When you reach the top of the world, the view truly is breathtaking.

Mount Everest is very much in the news this week because tomorrow marks the 50th anniversary of the day the world's tallest mountain was first summited. On May 29, 1953, Edmund Hillary of New Zealand and Tenzing Norgay of Nepal reached the top, in that order, and since Hillary had the camera, Norgay is the first person to have his picture taken on top of the world.

Despite the fact the event took place in one of the planet's most remote places, people the world over quickly plugged into the news. Queen Elizabeth — who was inaugurated, as it turned out, on Summit Day — knighted Hillary (a British subject), and people near and far were inspired to name their quests and challenges after the mountain that produced the momentous accomplishment.

Everest itself is named after George Everest, the British-appointed surveyor general of India, who in 1865 sighted in on the Himalayas (a Sanskrit word for "Abode of Snow') and determined that a tip in the mountain range known as "Peak 15" was in fact the tallest of the tall.

For 88 years, men tried to stand on the scientifically defined summit of the world before Hillary and Norgay finally did it.

Everest is no walk in the park and has claimed its share of climbers over the years — more than 1,200 have summited in a half-century and about 200 have died. But true mountaineers (see Bass above) have long maintained that it is hardly the most difficult mountain in the world to climb, particularly with the fixed ropes and ladders now in place along the most popular routes.

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