As the Ice Doctors begin work on Everest’s Khumbu Icefall, climbing teams head to to the early-season 8,000’ers, Annapurna and Dhaulagiri.
Annapurna and Dhaulagiri climbers approach
Taiwan’s Grace Tseng is done with K2 for now but not with mountaineering. She has not even returned home. Instead, she flew to Nepal instead for the next two stages of her 14×8,000m quest. She hopes to climb Annapurna in the next few weeks, then Makalu. Should she succeed, the Instagram influencer might enter summer with seven 8,000m peaks already complete.
Jill Wheatley of Canada is also on the move. The visually impaired climber, who suffered a traumatic brain injury in 2014, was one of those who reached the true summit of Manaslu last fall. Now she wants to tick Dhaulagiri off her list. Check her story here.
Everest Icefall Doctors en route
Overall, Everest will be a little quieter this year than in 2021. Despite COVID, Nepal issued a record 408 permits last spring. This season’s estimate suggests about two-thirds of that number. The bigger teams have already staked out their tent sites in Base Camp. The climbers themselves begin arriving in early April.
Summits and cyclones
Last year, two consecutive cyclones disturbed the typical good weather between May 20-26. The second one caught many climbers in Camp 2 during their summit push. Such storms used to be more common during the monsoon, but as climate changes, cyclones might begin to strike earlier.
Michael Fagin of EverestWeather suggested recently on his blog that the odds of this are increasing, though it’s still too soon to be sure.
“Recent extensive research of weather data shows an increase in cyclones in March to May,” he wrote. “These cyclones coming out of the Bay of Bengal tend to bring heavy snow and strong winds when they get close to Mount Everest.”
Fagin points to the warming of the Indian Ocean and other oceans as a possible cause.