Path cleared for Everest climbers after huge ice block
Nepali "icefall doctors" and expert Sherpas have successfully established a
Nepali "icefall doctors" and expert Sherpas have successfully established a
A large ice chunk is blocking the climbing route to Mount Everest's summit, causing delays in the upcoming spring climbing season. A team of "icefall doctors" began fixing ropes and ladders on the mountain last month to prepare for the season. However, a serac above the Khumbu icefall has disrupted their work for nearly two weeks. The team is waiting for the ice chunk to melt, expecting it to clear in a few days. Climbers must cross the Khumbu icefall, a treacherous maze of crevasses and ice blocks, to reach higher on Everest. The route typically opens by the third week of April, according to Nepal's tourism department.
A large ice chunk is blocking the climbing route to Everest's summit, risking delays in the summit season at the world's highest peak.
— officials
The Khumbu icefall, a constantly shifting maze of crevasses and ice blocks, to reach higher on Everest.
Climbers must cross the Khumbu icefall, which typically opens by the third week of April.
— Himal Gautam, spokesman for Nepal's tourism department
The route is being fixed by a team of highly skilled mountaineers, known in Nepal as 'icefall doctors'.
A large, unstable ice block in the Kh
A large ice block on the route just above the Mount Everest base camp has forced hundreds of climbers to delay their attempt to scale the peak.
The serac between base camp and camp one was unstable and risky for climbers.
— Himal Gautam of Nepal’s department of mountaineering
410 foreign climbers had been issued permits to attempt to reach the Everest summit during the spring climbing season.
— Nepal’s department of mountaineering
The Sagarmatha pollution control committee planned to assess the serac by aerial survey.
— Sagarmatha pollution control committee
In 2014, an avalanche killed 16 Sherpa guides.