How To

How to Climb Mount Everest

By eHow Sports & Fitness Editor
Rate: (230 Ratings)

In life, and sometimes in death, Mount Everest has had a lasting effect on all of those who have challenged its heights. It can vanquish those who disrespect it, and mercilessly test those who honor it. Yet Everest is indifferent to your presence. Climb it and you will receive a lifetime dose of humility and exhilaration.

Difficulty: Challenging
Instructions

Things You'll Need:

  • Climbing Ropes
  • Tents
  • Climbing Harnesses
  • Winter Outerwear
  • Sleeping Bags
  • Camping Stoves
  • Camping Gear
  • Climbing Gear
  • Camp-stove Fuels
  1. Step 1

    Start training today. Take mountaineering courses that teach you about technique, equipment, routes and survival. Then begin a minimum of two to three years of regular practice climbs in high alpine terrain, including steep faces, rough rocks, night climbs, ice falls and snow climbs.

  2. Step 2

    Get a complete physical checkup. You'll need healthy veins and arteries to pump lots of blood to your brain and muscles, as well as to warm your body. Keep your blood pressure and cholesterol down.

  3. Step 3

    Raise the cash. You'll need plenty, even a low-budget trip will cost $25,000, with guided package trips soaring to as much as $60,000. Realize that $10,000 goes to permits alone; then add travel, food, equipment, oxygen, insurance and Sherpa fees. Consider approaching corporations for sponsorship deals to cover your expenses.

  4. Step 4

    Plan a May expedition. The weather is most cooperative then (when it isn't a whiteout, blowing 100-mph winds, and 50 degrees below zero). Six months in advance, you'll need to file for permits and send copies of passports and climbing letters of recommendation for your team to the Nepal Ministry and Administration, as well as to a trekking agency to help you with transporting your gear. You'll also need to contract with Sherpas to aid you on your voyage. For more information, contact the Nepalese Embassies and Consulate Offices in Washington, D.C., or in Kathmandu, Nepal.

  5. Step 5

    Pack a first aid kit, medications, satellite phone, walkie-talkies, laptop computer, padlocks for bags, tents, sleeping bags, mountaineering clothing, climbing equipment and ropes, water, food, trash bags, sun-screen, vision protection, oxygen bottles and anything else you can fit on a yak or on your back, or that you can hire a Sherpa to carry for you. Make sure you've tested all your gear in cold, severe conditions before you pack it.

  6. Step 6

    Get yourself to Kathmandu, Nepal, where your expedition truly begins. You can fly a number of international carriers connecting through major airports; none of these flights will be direct or nonstop. Jet lag is guaranteed. Check in with the local authorities, pay your fees and organize your crew.

  7. Step 7

    Trek from Lukla to Base Camp at 17,600 feet. Scale the Khumbu Icefall up to 19,500 feet. Rest at Camp I in the Valley of Silence. Push on to Camp II at 21,300 feet. Scale the Lhotse Face and climb to Camp III at 23,500 feet. Rest and acclimatize for the trip to Camp IV, which at 26,300 feet is the only camp located in the 'death zone.'

  8. Step 8

    Charge the summit when you have a weather window. Start early in the morning, before sunrise, with extra down mittens and plenty of oxygen.

  9. Step 9

    Sit atop the 29,028-foot summit and know that you are at the highest point on earth. And then mentally prepare for the descent, because getting down is just as dangerous.

  10. Step 10

    Pack out all of your empty oxygen bottles and trash to get back your $4,000 environmental deposit and leave the mountain with good karma.

Tips & Warnings
  • Test all of your gear in cold, severe conditions before you take it up Everest.
  • Climb with people you know and trust, and who have extensive experience.
  • Ask other climbers who have tackled Everest to recommend the most skilled and reliable Sherpas.
  • Drink lots of purified water to stay hydrated.
  • Rest often when prudent.
  • Stay warm, or risk losing body parts.
  • Climbing Mount Everest puts you at risk of severe injury, disease and possibly death from avalanche, falling rocks, crevasse falls, exhaustion, dehydration, frostbite, pneumonia, dysentery, Khumbu cough, whiteout disorientation, hypothermia, high-altitude cerebral and pulmonary edema, and other hazards.
  • Be prepared to call off your summit attempt due to fatigue or poor weather conditions.

Comments  

| View All 9 Comments
Flag This Comment

on 3/29/2009 Great article well done. I am glad that you mention (step 10) about bringing down your empty bottles, as there is far to much rubbish left on Mount Everest.Mount Everest The British Storyhttp://www.everest1953.co.ukhttp://www.everest1953.blogspot.com

sagarmatha said

Flag This Comment

on 3/21/2009 Sagarmatha is the Nepalese/Nepali name for Mount Everest and people should call it by original name. Sagarmatha means "summit over the sky".

Flag This Comment

on 3/11/2009 Very nice article- thank you for this one.

chascona said

Flag This Comment

on 1/5/2009 For a great first-person account of climbing up Everest, check out this site by Lorenzo Gariano, a mountaineer from Italy who blogged throughout his climb of Everest, with photos and podcasts in English and Italian. His website also has useful information such as a list of equipment etc. He has also blogged about his summits of Vinson Massif and Carstensz Pyramid.

http://everest.open.ac.uk/

Flag This Comment

on 3/21/2008 alway"s stay +ve....
no matter how hard the circumstances r ,coz that"s d only thing dt can carry u forward on top of d world even u loose anything to everything!!

Post a Comment

Post a Comment

Have you done this? Click here to let us know.

I Did This

Related Ads

Copyright © 1999-2009 eHow, Inc. Use of this web site constitutes acceptance of the eHow Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

eHow Sports and Fitness
eHow_eHow Sports and Fitness