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Journal #4 Krakauer  specifies early on how important it is to be able to trust one's Journal #4 Krakauer  specifies early on how important it is to be able to trust one's

Journal #4 Krakauer specifies early on how important it is to be able to trust one's - PowerPoint Presentation

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Uploaded On 2022-08-04

Journal #4 Krakauer specifies early on how important it is to be able to trust one's - PPT Presentation

Krakauer climbs primarily with strangers and he is uncomfortable putting his life in the hands of people whose presence on the mountain is not necessarily a tribute to their climbing skills What ID: 935782

krakauer camp altitude climb camp krakauer climb altitude fischer team ngawang everest mountain climbers pete expedition high base body

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Presentation Transcript

Slide1

Journal #4

Krakauer

specifies early on how important it is to be able to trust one's teammates: "In climbing, having confidence in your partners is no small concern. One climber's actions can affect the welfare of the entire team" (47). On this expedition,

Krakauer

climbs primarily with strangers and he is uncomfortable putting his life in the hands of people whose presence on the mountain is not necessarily a tribute to their climbing skills.

What

character traits would you need to lead an Everest expedition?

Slide2

Slide3

Slide4

Slide5

Slide6

Everest

summons dreamers.

Earl Denman

Very little mountaineering experience

In 1947, convinced

two Sherpas to accompany him on Everest. Denman made it across Tibet, and up the way to 22,000 feet before encountering a storm that forced him to

turn back.Maurice Wilson Wanted to climb in order to achieve publicity to spread his belief that fasting and having faith in God could solve the problems of the world. Repeatedly got lost.

He reached 21,000 feet and made an attempt at the summit. One year later, another climber found his body.There is an increasing number of unqualified climbers attempting to climb Everest, but just because someone pays a large amount of money to climb the mountain doesn't necessarily mean

that

he or she is unqualified.

Chapter 7-

Camp One

Slide7

While waiting for his teammates at Camp One,

Krakauer

sees

Klev

Schoening and Pete Schoening. Pete Schoening is a climbing legend. A

member of Scott Fischer's team.69 at the time of this climbWell known because of the rescue he performed on K2. While trying to lower a climber stricken with altitude sickness, Pete was holding a rope

attached to the sick man and four other climbers. One of the climbers slipped, pulling all of them off, but Pete was able to hold all five men and prevent them from falling.

Slide8

Krakauer

says that his

team is not as strong as Fischer's, but is stronger than some of the other teams he has seen on the

mountain.

“If someone like Pete Schoening was the equivalent of a major-league baseball star, my fellow clients and I were like a ragtag collection of pretty decent small-town softball players who’d bribed their way into the World Series.”

For example, the Taiwanese team is notorious for being untrained and careless, and for getting in trouble on the mountains. He tells a story about a Taiwanese expedition getting into serious trouble on Alaska's Mount McKinley. Makalu

Gau, the leader of that expedition, is also leading this climb.

Slide9

The South African team

was

also

troublesome

.

The expedition was supposed to represent the end of apartheid, climbed by both white and black men and women. Some of the climbers resigned before heading to the mountain because the lead guide, Ian Woodall, was a total jerk and they didn't want to

trust him with their lives. Lied about who would be making the climb on the climbing permit. Claimed was from South Africa when he was actually British. Kicked the journalist assigned to cover the story off his team.

Slide10

Chapter 7 ends with Rob Hall saying…

“With so many incompetent people on the mountain, I think it’s pretty unlikely that we’ll get through this season without something bad happening up high.”

Slide11

Slide12

Slide13

The group begins its

second acclimatization climb

from Base Camp to Camp One.

Hall

wants them to spend

two nights at Camp One, then spend three nights at Camp Two before heading back down to Base Camp. Krakauer feels that he is getting used to the high altitude.Krakauer makes it to Camp One ahead of most of the climbers, and tries to help Sherpa

Ang Dorje set up camp, but he finds physical labor at the high altitude nearly impossible. Chapter 8- Camp One 19,500 ft

Slide14

In the morning they leave for Camp Two, situated almost four miles above them.

Just before Camp Two,

Krakauer

sees a dead body.

It is probably the body of a Sherpa that died a number of years before.

The next two days at Camp Two are extremely difficult due to the altitude. Krakauer cannot do much except "lay in my tent with my head in my hands, trying to exert myself as little as possible" (138).

He climbs above Camp Two to help accelerate the acclimatization, and stumbles upon another dead body.

Slide15

One

of Fischer's

Sherpas

,

Ngawang

Topche, had been feeling weak and strange for a couple days. Sherpas are not supposed to suffer altitude sickness, so acknowledging altitude-related problems often ends a Sherpa's career. Instead of

going back to Base Camp as Fischer suggests, Ngawang continues up to Camp Two. At Camp Two, Ngawang is having trouble walking, is delirious and is coughing up blood. These are symptoms of HAPE, or High Altitude Pulmonary Edema.

The only cure is to descend as quickly as possible. None of Fischer's guides are with Ngawang because Fischer allows guides and clients to go up and down at their will during the acclimatization process.They have to carry him down to Base Camp, and he improves temporarily, then begins to deteriorate.

U

nwilling

to admit that he actually has HAPE,

Ngawang

defies

the camp doctor's orders and removes his oxygen mask. He continues to get worse.

They are able to get

Ngawang

to

Pheriche

, and then flown to Katmandu, but he eventually

dies in

the hospital.

Slide16

Websites are broadcasted

from Everest by a number of teams, including a group filming an IMAX movie.

An

Internet correspondent with Fischer's team,

Sandy Pittman

, dispatches information for NBC Interactive Media. Pittman had attempted to climb the mountain three times in the past, and this time is accompanied by much publicity and fanfare.

Sandy wanted to be the first woman to climb all Seven Summits, Everest being her last, but another woman finished all seven first.