‘Dead Lucky’ Aussie climber to raise funds for charity here
Kathmandu, May 25:
An Australian climber, who was given up for dead on the slopes of Mt Everest but miraculously survived the long night of exposure, will return to Nepal soon to raise funds for charity.
“On the evening of Thursday, 25 May 2006 I died on Mt Everest” — that’s how 51-year-old Lincoln Hall begins to describe his experience on Mt Everest last year that dubbed him a modern-day Lazarus who was miraculously resurrected on Mt Everest.
The guide and author created worldwide furore — as well as mountaineering history — last May after he was struck by cerebral oedema (swelling in the brain due to lack of oxygen at high altitude) while descending from the 8,848m summit of Mt Everest.
Hall’s companions thought he was dead and left him at 8,600 m, less than 300 m below the peak. After the ill mountaineer lay in the open for 12 hours, he was found by a team of climbers the next day.
A year after the “resurrection,” Hall is ready to tell the world what happened with his new book, “Dead Lucky: Life After Death on Mt Everest”. Launched in Australia this month, the new book is slated for international release this week.
After that, an undaunted Hall is ready to return to Nepal in October.
This time, however, he will not attempt the highest peak. Instead, he is leading a trek to the Everest region to raise money for his Australian Himalayan Foundation that is involved in various charitable projects.
The 15-day AHF Everest Sherpa Trail will cover Namche Bazaar, Thami, Khumjung, Khunde and Thyangboche, villages in mountainous northern part of the country where the Sherpas live, to share the daily-life routine of the community who are the pillars of mountaineering.
“I had plenty of time to appreciate just how close I had come to being just another frozen statistic on the world’s highest peak,” Hall says. “I also realised how far removed from the truth were many of the web-reports being issued from the base camps during the weeks when 11 people died on Everest.