Everest action is ramping up from near nil to 100 very fast. Yesterday, sherpas fixed the route to the summit of Lhotse. Meanwhile, in Tibet, local climbers have already fixed the ropes to the summit of Everest along the North Col route.
Currently, the South Side is bustling with porters carrying supplies and oxygen. In a matter of hours, the rope-fixing team may summit. Many clients and their personal sherpas are heading up now, not far behind them.
Lhotse open – everybody up
Seven rope fixers summited Lhotse yesterday. Now, they’ll focus on fixing the last section of Everest, from Camp 4 to the top. They should finish before this weekend. A long line of people, mainly porters, are now heading up the Lhotse Face and the Geneva Spur toward Camp 4.
“The winds have died,” Mike Hamill of Climbing the 7 Summits told ExplorersWeb. “We have been getting some snow at Base Camp and on the upper mountain the past few days.”
While fresh snow is sometimes an impediment, climbers have welcomed the snowfall because it has been sticking to the Lhotse Face and covering the slippery, steel-hard ice. This will make it safer and easier to climb this section.
“Our team is back from their final acclimatization and getting ready for their summit bids as soon as the weather allows,” says Hamill.
Each team will have to consider its summit options to avoid crowding. But several groups are leaving Base Camp tonight for Camp 2. From partway up the mountain, they can better plan their strategy.
Icefall crowds
The Khumbu Icefall was busy yesterday, as Tenzi Sherpa’s video below shows. This will continue for some days, as climbers edge up to the higher camps.
Tenzi Sherpa often posts about the impact of mass tourism and climate change on Everest. He is also not impressed by some widely publicized “cleaning” campaigns.
“Some are raising a bunch of money to clean…[but] I have never seen these big mountaineers and influencers carrying their own waste,” he noted.
No-O2 Lhotse climbers
Piotr Krzyzowski of Poland aims to climb Lhotse without oxygen. To do so, he needs to go ahead of the crowds, so he has been climbing in the footsteps of the sherpa team. He reached the “lower” Camp 4 (7,800m) on Lhotse yesterday.
Krzyzowski is carrying his own gear and tent, which makes the going harder.
“It was a 9.5-hour climb to Camp 4, and I spent two more hours digging a platform for my tent. I need to rest today, I am exhausted,” he admitted earlier today on Instagram.
Tyler Andrews and Chris Fisher are also planning Lhotse without O2, in a fast, single push. The American sky-runners will take their time before their speed climb, however.
“We are still hoping to tag Pumori first, and waiting for the big crowds to get up and down, as the next 7-10 days look very good,” Andrews told ExplorersWeb.
The ropes on Pumori are not yet fixed to the summit, so they will probably not attempt Lhotse for some days.
Summit waves ahead on both sides
Teams now check weather forecasts, gather information about others’ plans, and prepare their summit push. If a long summit window has indeed arrived, the next few days will feature waves of climbers on both sides of Everest. North Side teams have already acclimatized, and the route is ready.