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Everest continues to attract climbers 70 years after 1st summit

30-05-2023

KATHMANDU: When Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay Sherpa first climbed Mount Everest 70 years ago, they paved the way for thousands of foreign climbers to try to follow in their footsteps.

The eight-day trek to the Everest base camp is among the most popular multiday hikes in Nepal with tens of thousands of tourists making the journey every year.

What were small farming villages when the British expedition passed through in 1953 have since been transformed into tourist hubs with hotels, tea houses and equipment shops, boosting the livelihoods of local communities?

In many homes, three generations have found employment in mountaineering, a far more lucrative occupation than farming or yak herding.

The work is hazardous by definition, but in a climbing season of about three months, an experienced guide can make up to $10,000, several times the country’s average annual income and other Sherpas and Himalayan community members have opened restaurants and guesthouses that line Everest’s money trail.

Veteran mountain guide Phurba Tashi Sherpa was born and raised in Khumjung, a village about 10km (6.2 miles) from base camp.

He grew up watching his father and uncles go to the mountains for work and soon joined them on expeditions, eventually climbing Everest 21 times before he retired.

“There would be just a few expeditions before, but now there are so many every year,” he said.

“That means an increase in income. It has helped improve the lifestyle here. A lot has changed.”

Since the first British teams set their sights on summiting Everest in the 1920s, Nepali climbers, mostly from the Sherpa ethnic group, have been by their side.

“Sherpa” became synonymous with high-altitude guiding as they became the backbone of the multimillion-dollar industry, bearing huge risks to carry equipment and food, fix ropes and repair ladders.

Local expeditions no longer play second fiddle to foreign climbing agencies but bring the bulk of paying clients into Nepal.

And a younger generation of Nepali climbers is slowly being recognized in their own right.

Renowned Italian climber Reinhold Messner told the Agence France-Presse news agency in a 2021 interview that it was a well-deserved climb up the ladder. (Int’l News Desk)

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