Anna Tybor to Ski Dhaulagiri and Nanga Parbat

Another Pole is skiing down two more 8,000m peaks this spring. After doing Manaslu in 2021 and Broad Peak last year, Anna Tybor is now aiming for Dhaulagiri. Then in June, when the season switches from Nepal to Pakistan, she’ll try Nanga Parbat.

No woman has ever skied either Dhaulagiri or Nanga Parbat before. Tybor’s Broad Peak descent was also a female first. (Other women may have preceded her on Manaslu.) On both mountains, she went without supplementary oxygen.

Tybor with skis and skins on, going up a snow ramp with seracs in background, on a cloudy day.

Anna Tybor on Manaslu in 2021. Photo: Anna Tybor/Instagram

Dream lines

Tybor is an elite skimo racer with the Polish team. In the last few years, after the European competition season ends, she has turned to a series of high-altitude challenges that she calls her “Dream Line” project.

She will not be alone on Dhaulagiri. As on Broad Peak in 2022, she has teamed up with Tom Lafaille of France. The pair is already in Nepal and are about to start their approach trek to Dhaulagiri.

Ziemski and Pereira to Makalu

David Fojtik made the first ski descent of Dhaulagiri in 2009, but he took his skis off during a difficult section midway, according to rmf24.pl. So the first complete descent only happened last year, when Poland’s Bartek Ziemski skied the entire mountain.

Ziemski is also in Nepal to ski two more 8,000’ers of his own, Kangchenjunga and Makalu. His original plan was to do Kangchenjunga first, but logistical reasons prompted him and partner Oswald Rodrigo Pereira to start with Makalu. Here, the route to the summit is already fixed, and conditions are good. Pereira will climb but then descend on foot. The two are currently trekking to Base Camp.

Ziemski at an airport strip, with cap, t-shirt and sunglasses

Bartek Ziemski. Photo: Oswald Rodrigo Pereira

Angela Benavides

Angela Benavides graduated university in journalism and specializes in high-altitude mountaineering and expedition news. She has been writing about climbing and mountaineering, adventure and outdoor sports for 20+ years.

Prior to that, Angela Benavides spent time at/worked at a number of local and international media. She is also experienced in outdoor-sport consultancy for sponsoring corporations, press manager and communication executive, and a published author.