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Thevy29 · 41-45, M

Ynotisay · M
Just because I know a little bit about this stuff, it's WAY more expensive than that. The fixed permit cost is $11,000 per climber. And then there's guides and gear. All in you're looking at between about 30K and 100K depending on different factors.
But the big one is you don't take on something like that unless you have SERIOUS mountaineering skills.Very experienced people die up there most every year. It's also a two to three month endeavor. There's acclimation, in really hard conditions, that has to take place.
I get how people might think "anyone" can do it but they're so very, very wrong. And it most always comes from those with no real mountain time or mountaineering skills.
Don't mean to be a dick but for some things reality really does matter.
AthrillatheHunt · 51-55, M
It’s waaaaay more than that. Permits alone cost like 5k and they mandate you have (expensive ) equipment too so you don’t die. Then there’s the cost of a Sherpa and spending days in Kathmandu to acclimate to the elevation .
Antarctica can be done for under 8k. Everest is 10k minimum .
AthrillatheHunt · 51-55, M
@Ferric67 some gyms have work out rooms where they simulate the oxygen level at high altitudes . That’s the way to go if you live at sea level .Thats why the fourth quarter is the Denver nuggets sixth man .
Ferric67 · M
@AthrillatheHunt my friend works out with one of those respirator restricters
Kind of reminds of Darth Vader respirator
AthrillatheHunt · 51-55, M
@Ferric67 if I may : you should also start practicing your breathing. Try swimming underwater and holding your breath to increase lung capacity (a buddy hiked the tallest mountain in Mexico about a decade ago . I forget the name but it’s a gentle slope upward the whole way. Not treacherous like Everest . He trained for 2 years ).
Great... The world sorely needs even more city slickers who get winded climbing a hill cutting their mountaineering teeth on the world's highest mountain for their first ever climb.

Can't you just stick with a theme park or a beach somewhere in Spain instead of adding to the overall body count on Everest???

$1,500??? A bit cheap considering everything you might potentially need... do your own research before committing further to this.
Ynotisay · M
@whowasthatmaskedman Yeah. They implemented it this year. Each climber has to use wag bags and bring down at least 18 pounds of trash.
whowasthatmaskedman · 70-79, M
@Ynotisay Hopefully that takes some of the glamour out of it for the tourists..😷
@whowasthatmaskedman @Ynotisay Not before time!!!

I know that they've been cleaning up some of the dead in recent years, too... They finally managed to move Greenboots to his final resting place away from the public eye.

While I'm not looking to force them to bring the bodies back, the least they can do is to make sure they bring their own packaging, wrappers and trash back with them. At least that cuts out adding to what's already up there.
goodlil666 · 51-55, MVIP
Everest is I am sure at least in the $40-50,000 range , you will need at least a month off of work and better get some serious mountaineering skills before you even attempt it. It is a deadly trip for many who attempt it. Since 1920 over 330 people have died attempting it and over 200 of those bodies remain on the mountain . Unable to be recovered. So you may never come back even dead from the adventure.
WillaKissing · 56-60
I hope you do some elevation training and hiking before you go, mountaineering training as well. Hate to see a bunch of folks showing up unprepared thinking it is a walk up a steep hill. It would suck to get between 2800 and 4000 feet and get elevation sickness let alone freezing to death and not being prepared mentally and physically for that kind of challenge.
Ynotisay · M
@Ferric67 I'm really curious. What's the highest elevation you've been to with a pack? What's your longest time out on a backpacking trip?
Ferric67 · M
@Ynotisay not nearly enough to what is necessary for this journey, that is why if I commit I will seriously train...and it may be a two to three year out endeavor that I will be undertaking.
I'm a patient dude, I can put in the work in and earn the results I sow
Ynotisay · M
@Ferric67 Gotcha. But just to toss this out there, you may want to strongly consider getting up high first though.Training and fitness has nothing to do with mountain sickness or high-altitude edemas. I live at 7K and some get sick even getting up just that high. You don't know until you do it. I'm ok with elevation but my partner can only get to, almost exactly, 11.5K before it hits her. It's a trip. And it can get dangerous fast. I've walked strangers down when I've come across them suffering. No fun. That's why there's a series of ups and downs on big mountains to acclimatize.And it takes a while. Gas doesn't usually kick in until around 22K. So you may want to try to get someplace with some real elevation just to get a taste of how your body will respond before your commit money. And it's one of those things where you won't know until you're there. Good luck.
If she can’t even accurately calculate the cost of the trip, she might want to reconsider attempting to scale tall, tall mountains.

Ugh, and I’ve heard that Everest has become a heavily populated, heavily littered tourist trap. I was fortunate enough to visit the Great Wall of China years ago. But quite dismayed to see a KFC at its base. That kinda thing. 🙄
Ynotisay · M
@OlderSometimesWiser It's been a big controversy for a while. And it's even worse given that it's Sherpas who die most frequently. A lot of people now have little to no real mountaineering experience. If they made it a requirement that climbers had to carry most all of their own gear, or set their own lines, I bet you'd see a 90% reduction in climbers.
@Ynotisay That would be great but it would also mean a 90% reduction in money and sadly, I think we both know which side is likely to win. It’s just so sad to see something so worthwhile, so admirable, so downright awesome go the way of the Kardashians.
Ynotisay · M
@OlderSometimesWiser Yep. Money. But not everyone is inexperienced. There's still skilled mountaineers, who live to climb, going up. But it's the wealthier people driven by ego, which can be the kiss of death in the mountains, that's the issue. And it's not necessarily their own death or injury.
But where it gets tricky is with the Sherpa people. Guides can make more in a few months than most make in Nepal in a year. And where they live $5-10K is huge money. Take that away now and lives are impacted.
What I do on occasion is buy outdoor clothes from a company called Sherpa Adventure Gear. It's a Sherpa company and most of the money goes back in to the community. Typically through education. And they make some good stuff.
I think that eventually they will need to set quotas on climbers. But what it will take is another major accident due to bottle necking before it happens. Once tourist climbers start dying in big numbers because there's just too many people on the mountain, they'll have to do something.
Jimmy2016 · 61-69, M
🤔..............It will cost you around $50K to climb Everest......You have to be expert mount climber with years of climbing difficult mountain peaks to climb Everest...........The Best of the Best die on that climb every year..........200 climber bodies lay dead, completely frozen solid as the moment they died on that mountain. Green boots is one of them......Another climber who died in 1924 is still one the mountain frozen solid............It will cost your family $70K to bring your body down if you die, that is if they can get it down.........
whowasthatmaskedman · 70-79, M
Take a look at the actual lines waiting to go up the mountain. Its like queing for Taylor Swift tickets..😷
In the Nepalese travel brochure, did "hike" actually mean climb, and something just got lost in translation?
SW-User
You should go! Look on Youtube and you will see lots of videos of people trekking to Everest base camp. It looks perfectly achievable with a reasonabel level of fitness.
SW-User
Sorry, in addition to my previous reply. I assumed she meant the trek to base camp, not an actual ascent of the mountain?
lumberjackslam · 41-45, M
Is this the same co-worker scarfing Little Debbies from the vending machine?

 
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