Everest 2021 Camp 4

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  • Опубликовано: 30 янв 2025

Комментарии • 256

  • @amyurban3719
    @amyurban3719  3 года назад +67

    FYI, re: comments on "trash". What you're seeing in this video is the very recent effects of a cyclone that sent extreme winds through camp 4, literally shredding many of the tents in their place. Trash left sitting around camp 4 would quickly be blown from the mountain, the items you see here stayed in place only because they were secured. The "trash" that is here is mostly tents belonging to teams that are active on the mountain at the time the video was taken (i.e., before teams had taken their gear--including their destroyed tents--back down the mountain).

    • @stoneworx09
      @stoneworx09 3 года назад +3

      i was curious about the other human waste ? where do you go, that someone else has not been before .amazing video thank you very much.

    • @bari2883
      @bari2883 3 года назад +5

      More so oxygen bottles and plastic is the trash I think we are talking of. For being such avid nature enthusiasts it is contradicting.

    • @donniev8181
      @donniev8181 3 года назад +5

      @@bari2883 did you read what they wrote? "Trash" would be blown off the mountain, what you see is stuff belonging to people that are actively on the mountain at the time this was filmed?

    • @memoresactiprudentesfuturi7071
      @memoresactiprudentesfuturi7071 3 года назад +1

      Nothing out of the ordinary : some bottles of O ,tents etc . I was surprised to see some people starting to ascend to the top with the sun so high and after the cyclone . Everest makes its own weather,no matter what the broadcast is .

    • @GlockFan19
      @GlockFan19 3 года назад +1

      Thank you for the clarification. Although, I believe that any real mountaineer or even follower of “the scene” should have known that. Man, the amount of climbers in the video is truly scary to me. I gave up Everest on my bucket list a very long time ago…1996, anyone?

  • @coltseavers6298
    @coltseavers6298 9 месяцев назад +6

    This is the best vid I have seen showing the climbers heading up to the balcony; it gives a fantastic sense of the scale of that particular path.

  • @stepaukob
    @stepaukob 3 года назад +63

    These videos really give a sense on what it's like to be up there versus the videos that are edited, narrated, and have background music added.

  • @TheDeJureTour
    @TheDeJureTour 3 года назад +31

    Wow. This is the best B roll I've ever seen. Makes it feel like one is really there.

    • @lawrencecarmen2473
      @lawrencecarmen2473 3 года назад +1

      I guess u haven’t watched enough vids then. There r many more even more real, and even moving step by step from camp to the top.

  • @marksfirst1
    @marksfirst1 3 года назад +15

    Thanks for sharing, the amount of people on the mountain is just insane!

  • @blinderII
    @blinderII Год назад +5

    Excellent video!! Loved it! It gives an awesome perspective from the south col, how far the climbers have come, and the distance (and height) still ahead of them. I've seen MANY docs and videos on Everest, but have never seen great footage like this! Thanks for sharing!

  • @42papyrus
    @42papyrus 8 месяцев назад +4

    easily the most effective 'what it's really like up there' video I have ever seen...no wide angle 'fisheye' lense distortion, just basic 'here we are' footage. I wish climbers would shoot more video like this. Thank you so much for posting!

  • @Dulcimertunes
    @Dulcimertunes 3 года назад +7

    I like to watch these videos in the summer. They cool me off

  • @Wg-zx5ve
    @Wg-zx5ve 2 года назад +10

    From this base camp to the top of the world. Easier said than done. Congratulations to all who have been on the summit of Everest and made it back down the mountain safely (and RIP to those who did not make it).

    • @thomasdalton1508
      @thomasdalton1508 9 месяцев назад

      That's not base camp. That's camp 4. The last camp before the summit.

  • @Bapalooza
    @Bapalooza 5 месяцев назад +1

    Awesome video, I’ve been trying to understand the layout of South Col, to Balcony, to South Summit. The footage of people coming down from the balcony really helps to understand the scale of everything

  • @matthewjames206
    @matthewjames206 3 года назад +31

    It looks somewhat benign. But make no mistake that that's certainly the death zone. This is probably the best video I've seen from the South Col. Thanks for sharing.

    • @nisssan8559
      @nisssan8559 3 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/TAONofE36Ws/видео.html

    • @khzind
      @khzind 3 года назад

      How much distance between South col and death zone ?

    • @StNeurion
      @StNeurion 3 года назад +2

      @@khzind The South Col is situated at roughly 7,900 metres. The Death Zone is the name used by mountain climbers for high altitude where there is not enough available oxygen for humans to breathe. This is usually above 8,000 metres, but changes in atmospheric pressure and the climber's personal physiology can make the South Col as dangerous as the Summit.

    • @khzind
      @khzind 3 года назад +3

      @@StNeurion
      Aha, ok.
      I thought death zone was a fixed spot.
      Now I understand it's the whole mountain above 8000 meters.
      Which is also the starting level of stratosphere.
      thanks bro.

  • @staciejanes8820
    @staciejanes8820 3 года назад +20

    Watching with my face like this 😲😲😲😲😲
    Even though everyone knows how gigantic Everest is, its only when you see how absolutely tiny those climbers are compared to what they're climbing, do you grasp how actually gigantic we are talking! 😳😳😳 Absolutely unbelievable video. Many, many thanks to you 🙏🙏🙏

  • @2HitWonder
    @2HitWonder 3 года назад +42

    It must be surreal to be standing there at camp four on Everest.

  • @LokisimoxD
    @LokisimoxD Год назад +1

    Es algo muy mágico estar en ese lugar tanta adrenalina emoción el dolor cansancio y saber que estás tan serca y a la vez tan lejos de la cima es una experiencia inigualable

  • @robertmacdonald733
    @robertmacdonald733 3 года назад +4

    Excellent video. Really gives the real feel of the intensity of being up at the col. Excellent sir. Thank you. Stay safe

  • @nirvanafatal
    @nirvanafatal 3 года назад +17

    Wow ! this is an amazing video .

  • @LL-wu5ui
    @LL-wu5ui 3 года назад +49

    Woah. Like I wouldnt even have to reach the top... being here would be enough.

  • @justnews2021
    @justnews2021 3 года назад +5

    Thanks for sharing nice blog

  • @jakemarlow8998
    @jakemarlow8998 3 года назад +12

    I can't even imagine how miserable that would be. The most miserable weather I've been in was in Baja, Mexico with winds blowing 30-40+ MPH with the air temp at around 70 degrees! The wind chill in the video must be minus 100. Holy carp!

  • @rosangelagonzaga2749
    @rosangelagonzaga2749 3 года назад +9

    Olha, um dos melhores vídeos que mostra o acampamento 4. Muito bom mesmo. Sempre quis ver como seria a paisagem do último acampamento antes de subir no topo. Parabéns.

    • @carolla.carolinaa
      @carolla.carolinaa 3 года назад

      Também achei um dia melhores vídeos ao mostrar o acampamento! Vejo muitos documentários a respeito do Everest, e em todos, o que dizia é que quase não se cabiam barracas, não havia muito espaço e que as barracas que estavam lá armadas, precisavam estar penduradas no abismo. Também pode ser pelas condições climáticas, que a cada ano se tem o derretimento em abundância, mas pelo o q o vídeo mostra, a coisa deve estar bem séria quanto ao clima e o degelo, sem contar o tráfego de alpinistas! É muita barraca no campo 4, e nessa área já necessitam do oxigênio. Caos instalado.

    • @maxpowerx3349
      @maxpowerx3349 3 года назад

      Th rgggh it dog jiii I ur do myth I’d do k

  • @fairy2699
    @fairy2699 3 года назад +6

    thanks for the shooting😍

  • @TheShanu154
    @TheShanu154 3 года назад +2

    Weather seems to be nice and visibility is so much clear

  • @deniswinter9319
    @deniswinter9319 3 года назад +13

    I'm gonna turn up tomorrow and pitch my blue tent and piss everyone off🤣🤣

  • @COYOTE_N8
    @COYOTE_N8 3 года назад +2

    Is there ever calm days, where the wind isn't blowing constantly? I'm guessing not much at that altitude

    • @MrCollewet
      @MrCollewet 2 года назад

      yeah you could have a summitpush with 15kph winds but that's not the norm

  • @wayno23
    @wayno23 3 года назад +17

    Looks damn cold , a coffee shop would do well there ☕

    • @rmsmith2396
      @rmsmith2396 3 года назад

      good place for a hot tub.

    • @wayno23
      @wayno23 3 года назад

      @@rmsmith2396 yes that too 👍

  • @khzind
    @khzind 3 года назад +13

    We can comprehend the size of the mountain only when we see the people looking like ants even in very very near distance.
    Never seen Everest summit from this perspective before. 👍

    • @quantumpotential7639
      @quantumpotential7639 3 года назад

      I hear it's a walk in the park compared to K2 or Annapurna. It's big and wide not very technical and the only real risk is wind and cold but other than that a fairly liesurely walk up to the summit.

    • @khzind
      @khzind 3 года назад

      @@quantumpotential7639
      Aha.
      Now-a-days most Everest climbers die because of traffic jams created by 800 climbers yearly.

  • @cliffwheeler7357
    @cliffwheeler7357 3 года назад +12

    Look at that queue heading up the ridge to the Hilary Step @2:22, and there are still loads of people milling around in the camp waiting their turn to set off. There is no way that number people could possibly summit and return to camp in time. Many of them would run out of oxygen and have to turn around because of the queue. The overcrowding on Everest has become really serious, and more people are going to die unless steps are taken to limit the number of climbers.

    • @Crashed131963
      @Crashed131963 3 года назад +2

      No queue line on K2 and only 200 meters shorter. Good enough exchange for me.

    • @cliffwheeler7357
      @cliffwheeler7357 3 года назад +3

      @@Crashed131963 The problem with that theory is you are even more likely to die on K2. It's not referred to as the killer mountain lightly. The percentage of deaths per ascent on K2 is 26%, whereas on Everest it is 4•7%.

    • @rmsmith2396
      @rmsmith2396 3 года назад

      @@cliffwheeler7357 Holy shit, you mean that a fraction more than 1 in 4 climbers die on K2? That's a little hard to believe. You sure of that figure?

    • @cliffwheeler7357
      @cliffwheeler7357 3 года назад

      @@rmsmith2396 Yes, l am sure of that figure. Of the five highest mountains in the world, K2 is the second deadliest; approximately one person dies on the mountain for every four that reach the summit. These are the figures up too 2011. K2 ascents 302 number of climbers 298, number of deaths 78, percentage of deaths per accent 26 percent. Everest ascents 4559, number of climbers 2889, number of deaths 216, percentage of deaths per ascent 4.7 percent. The deadliest mountain is Annapurna, the percentage of deaths per ascent is 38 percent. I hope you find this helpful.

    • @rmsmith2396
      @rmsmith2396 3 года назад

      @@cliffwheeler7357 That is quite different from your first statement. Should read: "percentage of deaths per SUCCESSFUL ascent (unless I am incorrect in the meaning of ascent). I took what you said to mean 1 in 4 people who attempted to summit K2 died. That would be vastly more than 1 in 4 of people who summit. In either case thank you for the interesting figures

  • @chandrasekharkotillil4249
    @chandrasekharkotillil4249 Год назад +3

    Great video, shows how big the South col area is, almost like a football field, and the final 900 meters up to the summit looks incredibly steep, even more so than the Lhotse face

  • @lilijabukenberger4837
    @lilijabukenberger4837 3 года назад

    Tolle Wideo. Das war super. Vielen Dank.

  • @extrememountains
    @extrememountains 3 года назад +1

    Hermosooo, saludos desde ecuador

  • @lifeonmt.everest5852
    @lifeonmt.everest5852 3 года назад

    Great, i hope you always safe, next time come to my village, i live in nepal

  • @avocadorable4034
    @avocadorable4034 3 года назад +2

    this is amazing footage at camp 4..

  • @allfunnydogsstories2129
    @allfunnydogsstories2129 2 года назад +2

    As a viewer I can’t fathom the distances at all. Only the tiny dots reveal themselves as human beings. Further away a hint of movement. Hours into the distance.

  • @bari2883
    @bari2883 3 года назад +1

    Anyone notice the sick or injured being 2.08. Helped back to camp 4?

  • @Thingolfin
    @Thingolfin 3 года назад +2

    Nice Video. Just wondering: did they issue permits for the summit in 2021? Thought No, because of the CoVid pandemic.🤔

  • @davidvega462
    @davidvega462 5 месяцев назад

    Correct me if I’m wrong here, but this is the south col…is that correct?
    PS to anyone who has been to camp 4, with all that noise from the wind, is it hard to communicate? Seems like it would be too loud to hear anyone talk 🙃

  • @rhegagne3991
    @rhegagne3991 3 года назад +1

    @ 2:32. Is that a bird flying at 8,000 meters????

  • @seant4369
    @seant4369 2 года назад +1

    Heading there next year if funds permit. Loads of practice climbs elsewhere first though. Place is a beast and as we all know full of dangers.

  • @melplishka5978
    @melplishka5978 3 года назад +1

    Is that abc 4?.

  • @MrCollewet
    @MrCollewet 2 года назад +2

    I've never seen Everest so rocky

  • @jorgeyanez4779
    @jorgeyanez4779 3 года назад

    minuto 2:33 es un ave lo que pasa frente a la cámara? a qué altitud estaban?

  • @khzind
    @khzind 3 года назад +10

    We can feel being there.
    Not because of the views.
    But because of absence of RUclipsrs nasty addiction for music. 👍

  • @khzind
    @khzind 3 года назад

    What time of day is this?
    Looks like between 10am or noon

  • @tapubratbharali4309
    @tapubratbharali4309 2 года назад +4

    Mad respect for this climbers🙏🏻

  • @SunriseLAW
    @SunriseLAW 3 года назад +3

    Excellent vid, best quality video. Camp 4 City prompted me to do a search to learn 5,790 people 'climbed' Everest as of January 2021. Fixed ropes and ladders make it so pretty much anyone in half-way decent shape with $40,000 or so can make it to the top. Nothing like that on K-2 or Annapurna, the most dangerous and difficult mountains that kill c. 30% of those who attempt a climb.

    • @howtobeatadrum
      @howtobeatadrum 3 года назад +1

      Sure they can…keep up that Wikipedia/RUclips research bro…you are learning stuff!!

    • @SunriseLAW
      @SunriseLAW 3 года назад +2

      @@howtobeatadrum My GF tells people she doesn't need Google because I am so smart 😁

    • @howtobeatadrum
      @howtobeatadrum 3 года назад

      @@SunriseLAW Good one! This “climbing” of Everest that you speak about still involves extreme risk. You can easily die from altitude sickness, freeze to death in a sudden storm or return to base camp missing a few digits. Add that to your wealth of knowledge!

    • @SunriseLAW
      @SunriseLAW 3 года назад

      @@howtobeatadrum I could never do it and have never been able. I don't like the cold. Edited... I did manage to climb Mary's Peak here in OR where I live, mostly because a road goes to the top. :):)

  • @andreykarayvansky9549
    @andreykarayvansky9549 3 года назад +3

    Wow, this is so cool!
    1:50 I heard it's possible to get nasty CO intoxication, which is hard to distinguish from altitude sickness when using msr or jetboil in a tent. But, I guess considering the wind, it was the only option.

    • @jrehr90
      @jrehr90 2 года назад

      That was my first thought as well

    • @kohnea1
      @kohnea1 Год назад

      Yes, “into thin air” covers the fact that two sherpas on that journey had gotten sick and couldn’t be of any help because they got CO poisoning from cooking in a tent that wasn’t ventilated

  • @donniev8181
    @donniev8181 3 года назад

    How long does it take to summit from camp 4, on a good day?

    • @MrCollewet
      @MrCollewet 2 года назад +1

      average time for summit push : 6 to 9 hours. Couple hours to get backdown to camp 4. Depends on traffic too

  • @czarcastic1458
    @czarcastic1458 3 года назад

    Is the Hillary step still there or not?

    • @MrCollewet
      @MrCollewet 2 года назад

      it was mainly destroyed in the 2015 earthquake, only remains now

  • @annielambac
    @annielambac 3 года назад +4

    What a marvelous sight! Magnificent Everest! 👍👍👍😻😻😻❤️❤️❤️

  • @brandonneely9982
    @brandonneely9982 3 года назад +7

    It does seem like a perfect day for climbing. This makes it look easy.

    • @jeffstaton7805
      @jeffstaton7805 3 года назад +1

      Except at least three if those people perished. Beautiful day to die!

    • @GP-dz1yi
      @GP-dz1yi 3 года назад

      @@jeffstaton7805 Where can we check that info?

    • @jeffstaton7805
      @jeffstaton7805 3 года назад

      @@GP-dz1yi you can't, it's just averages. Only so many people go into the deathzone and make it back.

  • @raitikalaxmi125
    @raitikalaxmi125 3 года назад

    wow thanks for sharing 👍🙂☺🙏

  • @jamescraven5001
    @jamescraven5001 3 года назад

    Does the camp site come with electric hookup 🤣🤣

  • @nutium1991
    @nutium1991 3 года назад

    2:33 Do birds fly in the death zone?

    • @MrCollewet
      @MrCollewet 2 года назад

      yep, and some fishes live 12km underwater

  • @MonacoGP_On_YouTube
    @MonacoGP_On_YouTube 3 года назад +5

    Cool video. Made me chuckle. I encourage people to watch this whilst taking note of how people are standing around. They aren't. They're taking 2-3 breaths between each couple of steps and they're on supplemental O's. If you've been above 17K you know.

    • @XJarhead360
      @XJarhead360 3 года назад +1

      I've been above 17K climbing Orizaba in Mexico. We would take 10 steps and rest all the way to the top. We heated lemonade to keep warm. The night before the summit I slept with only my nose sticking out of the sleeping bag; yet i could feel body heat escaping through that tiny hole. I can imagine how much more difficult it is above 20K.

    • @bari2883
      @bari2883 3 года назад +1

      3 breaths per step.

  • @kcbm225
    @kcbm225 5 месяцев назад

    Looking at videos from the comfort of my chair it seem like a beautiful day with a beautiful view.
    But what we don't see is the frozen cold, the lack of air that screw up your brain, giving you the worst headaches, hallucinations, nausea, the struggle to even open eyes, the tiredness, vomiting and all sorts of pain you can't even imagine in the middle of nothing but rocks and snow hundreds of kms around you and you have to resist this urge to just want to lie down and close your eyes because it could be the very last thing you do

  • @sivayamsiva9343
    @sivayamsiva9343 3 года назад

    Amazing places thanks 👌👌👌

  • @rajandass5288
    @rajandass5288 10 месяцев назад

    There was a bird there flying. If birds can live there .. what other animals can be found at Camp 4.

  • @viniciusbegati8838
    @viniciusbegati8838 3 года назад

    Um pássaro no minuto 2:33? Como seria possível? 😅
    A bird in minute 2:33? How?

  • @si85451
    @si85451 3 года назад

    Great raw footage.

  • @leeyarbrough9636
    @leeyarbrough9636 3 года назад

    Very cool an majestic place.

  • @Guigui_Knap_78
    @Guigui_Knap_78 3 года назад +4

    The summit looks so close ;-)

  • @kalbomataba759
    @kalbomataba759 3 года назад

    How would anybody get lost or off route? Look at that line of people all the way up.

  • @pohorachspetom
    @pohorachspetom 3 года назад

    Really nice video 🙂

  • @dotpiazzola7822
    @dotpiazzola7822 8 месяцев назад

    It would be nice if there was an efficient way to get the trash (old tents, oxygen bottles) down.

  • @ahmadghazy5653
    @ahmadghazy5653 3 года назад

    Klu mau "ee" gmn ya...apa harus dplorotin seperti biasa tu celana

  • @indrapiliang
    @indrapiliang Год назад

    Wow...amazing👍💪💪💪

  • @MaxFromSydney1
    @MaxFromSydney1 3 года назад +5

    I don’t get it.
    They’re all leaving Camp 4 towards the summit in daylight?

    • @bcv2943
      @bcv2943 3 года назад +2

      Has to be a mock drill or something like that.

    • @braintagsgmbh8692
      @braintagsgmbh8692 3 года назад +7

      No they all are coming dow but what scares me by watching is that there still numerous people on the south summit and it seems to be quite late already. Best video i have seen from Camp 4 so far.

  • @manuprakash5766
    @manuprakash5766 3 года назад +2

    Mindblowing ❤

  • @gunghoadventures871
    @gunghoadventures871 3 года назад

    Awesome - Subscribed

  • @rajaaennajjar304
    @rajaaennajjar304 3 года назад +1

    Everest mon rêve !!🤲

  • @joelmaluans1582
    @joelmaluans1582 3 года назад +2

    E muita locura mais deve ser uma experiência incrível

  • @robertcretu4363
    @robertcretu4363 3 года назад +1

    So it’s whole lotta mountain to climb from C4.

  • @mackie_p
    @mackie_p 3 года назад +4

    Wanna climb Everest? Wait in line.....

  • @kutibalint
    @kutibalint 3 года назад

    Nice video!

  • @juliana8113
    @juliana8113 5 месяцев назад

    Seems a bit windy

  • @davidlea5155
    @davidlea5155 3 года назад +2

    Looks like a typical winter day in Canada to me. No big deal. I've gone skiing in worse conditions than that. We get winds and cold like that for weeks at a time and live in it year after year.
    If you like that, just move here. It like living on Everest 8 months of the year.
    Had a friend go do Everest 3 years ago, made it no problem.

  • @shahhassan7613
    @shahhassan7613 3 года назад +1

    K2 is dangerous mountain.

  • @hanigra
    @hanigra 3 года назад

    Doe’s this tent worm enoghf ? And what temreture you have there?

  • @Zarglog
    @Zarglog 3 года назад +5

    aaaaaaaw, they have matching clothes and everything. That's adorable.

  • @world-uk2vj
    @world-uk2vj 3 года назад +2

    cool vid

  • @rots3123
    @rots3123 Год назад

    2:31 its shocking to see a bird up there, i don't know if that's really a bird cause it look really like one.

  • @amirtbt
    @amirtbt 3 года назад

    Great video by watching this now i understand alittle bit why some lose their toes & fingers by insisting to climb mount everest or k2... but again it is love and not for everyone to understand it.

  • @ericfuhrer2013
    @ericfuhrer2013 3 года назад +1

    Can't believe I see a bird flying around at 2:33.

  • @biawaksalto1352
    @biawaksalto1352 3 года назад

    what tent is that?

  • @ahmadblogamatir564
    @ahmadblogamatir564 3 года назад

    Kerren bro mantap

  • @jayrock8868
    @jayrock8868 2 года назад

    This is what it would look like on another planet.

  • @quantumpotential7639
    @quantumpotential7639 3 года назад +1

    It's not the worlds tallest mountain. It's the world's tallest grave yard.

  • @Hidden_Destinations
    @Hidden_Destinations 3 года назад +3

    Human feces, O2 bottles, trash. Terrible way to treat a beautiful mountain.

  • @khzind
    @khzind 3 года назад +3

    At 2:33, I can't believe there is a bird flying at this height ?
    Must be an eagle or hawk ?
    These birds are cheating. Enjoying the views without even needing to get a visa 😀

    • @henryvanveen5365
      @henryvanveen5365 3 года назад

      The bar headed geese are known to fly OVER Mt Everest on their migratory travels

  • @alpinecenter
    @alpinecenter 3 года назад +1

    Why don't they just build a friggin' luxury hotel on the South Col? The rich climbers and guide services could pay for it.

  • @musicfunlax1224
    @musicfunlax1224 2 месяца назад

    They really need a hut up there. Just some small ones.

  • @Matrabhumindia
    @Matrabhumindia 3 года назад +1

    They should clan the place while comming back , carry a single tent plastic in there bag. 👍

    • @bari2883
      @bari2883 3 года назад

      Its impossible to walk let alone stop to pick up trash. I agree that the trash is shocking but coming down is more dangerous than summiting.

  • @mvnorsel6354
    @mvnorsel6354 3 года назад

    In mountaineering, climbers dont wear much white. White looks great at elevation.

  • @TheEverlast90
    @TheEverlast90 3 года назад +12

    It is so sad to see the amount of trash just being dumped on the ground, these people have no respect for the mountains!

    • @Crashed131963
      @Crashed131963 3 года назад

      The hope is the $11,000 Nepal permit or the $70,000 outfitters guide fee includes clean up.
      If not Nepal has corruption issues.

  • @chefhassanmuraad8660
    @chefhassanmuraad8660 2 года назад

    Nice 💖👋💖

  • @mrr4979
    @mrr4979 3 года назад

    We think the idea to built a resort here is good.

  • @marcusblymyer7441
    @marcusblymyer7441 3 года назад +1

    Following the path of least resistance, rite up the trail avalanche debris i wouldent even wanna go near that moutian let alone sleep in a debris field. Wonder why so many people die there its human error to even think u can make it to the summit they are asking to die mabe its the attention they get from it.

  • @matei-alexandrumocanu8150
    @matei-alexandrumocanu8150 3 года назад +5

    Overcrowded
    But beautiful

  • @steppenwolf63
    @steppenwolf63 3 года назад +3

    I remember the words of a mountainguide to the question, what he fears most: „Not a thunderstorm nor an avalanch, but too many people at one place.“

  • @kobametreveli3102
    @kobametreveli3102 3 года назад +3

    👍👍👍👍👍