Left For Dead On Everest... | S5 E3 | Full Episode | I Shouldn't Be Alive

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  • Опубликовано: 21 янв 2024
  • 50 year-old Australian mountaineer Lincoln Hall attempted to climb Everest, but is struck by a deadly form of altitude sickness known as a cerebral oedema. Unable to climb and suffering from hypothermia, Lincoln is left for dead at 28,000ft.
    Experience the gripping tales of survival in the heart-pounding series I Shouldn't Be Alive. Witness incredible true stories of those who defied the odds and emerged victorious from near-death experiences, including astonishing encounters like shark attacks.
    These compelling documentaries take you on a journey filled with adrenaline, resilience, and the triumph of the human spirit. Brace yourself for jaw-dropping narratives and gain a newfound appreciation for the power of survival.
    Subscribe to make sure you don’t miss the latest clips: ruclips.net/channel/UCFSr...
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Комментарии • 674

  • @Mt.Everest.
    @Mt.Everest. 4 месяца назад +344

    Hats off to the Sherpas they are the true Hero's!! I wish they would have given us their names!! They deserve all the credit‼️‼️

    • @chimom7112
      @chimom7112 4 месяца назад +22

      Latching and data tenzing. Amazing men.

    • @dianocka1
      @dianocka1 4 месяца назад +4

      Rather true idiots but not heroes 😅 They know it's really dangerous but still do it...

    • @soulsurfer639
      @soulsurfer639 4 месяца назад +39

      @@dianocka1 The sherpas do this work because Nepal is very poor. It is soo poor that Nepalese people often sneak into India to look for work. These Sherpas earn a decent living by our standards (which means by Nepalese standards they are killing it!) It is a risky job, but the shirpa men who engage in this line of work have financial security and are able to send their children to University.
      *not trying to white-knight on RUclips, just filling you in ;)

    • @cjane_world
      @cjane_world 4 месяца назад +15

      Incredible that they forced him down that mountain! I hope they got great rewards for that. That's what Real heroes look like ❤

    • @custardgirl
      @custardgirl 3 месяца назад +22

      ​@@dianocka1you understand nothing about the poverty these sherpas and their families live in. The guts and determination these sherpas have to provide for their families is incredible, they don't risk their lives through choice, they do it because they don't have the opportunities that many of us are afforded.

  • @505fastlife6
    @505fastlife6 4 месяца назад +167

    RIP Lincoln its crazy you survived this only to die six years later from cancer. The world works in mysterious ways.

    • @rossbob9786
      @rossbob9786 4 месяца назад +5

      Wgattt really?

    • @rocnoir4233
      @rocnoir4233 4 месяца назад

      @@rossbob9786 As a boy he helped his father build two cubby houses from asbestos cement sheet.

    • @lisaconway2553
      @lisaconway2553 3 месяца назад +8

      ​@rossbob9786 He passed away in March 2012 unfortunately

    • @cinemasurge1851
      @cinemasurge1851 2 месяца назад

      @@MCP18796better than not having those 6 years

    • @AlaborJinta
      @AlaborJinta 2 месяца назад

      the stress gave him cancer lol --- delayed reaction. you only have the moment you have. the quote is the Lord...are you an atheist or some shit?

  • @a13suraadventures93
    @a13suraadventures93 4 месяца назад +170

    He should be washing sherpas feet for rest of his life they literally dragged him out from a point where death was certain.
    Him surviving is the story of sherpas being the toughest and most loyal to thier job

    • @heather173
      @heather173 3 месяца назад +7

      Lincoln died 6 years later of cancer. (Mesothelioma)

    • @gittejensen1229
      @gittejensen1229 3 месяца назад +1

      I AM so sorry

    • @badgoat666
      @badgoat666 3 месяца назад +7

      I want to be Nepalese when I grow up.

    • @a13suraadventures93
      @a13suraadventures93 3 месяца назад

      @@heather173 sorry to hear that

    • @kayhollings1777
      @kayhollings1777 2 месяца назад +7

      I think the other 200+ bodies that have been left there by their Sherpas, literally left for dead, might argue otherwise... you go down on this mountain, most of the time you're staying there and, if lucky, your body might get retrieved years later.

  • @jaylee5853
    @jaylee5853 4 месяца назад +206

    His survival literally defied modern science. So crazy. What an absolute warrior this man is. Surviving the altitude along with the freezing conditions that night with no gear is astonishing. And shout out to those men risking their lives in one of the most dangerous rescue missions possible.

    • @stoneysdead689
      @stoneysdead689 4 месяца назад +46

      I will say him surviving while laying there basically waiting for death is amazing- but it's hard to credit him with that- he really didn't do anything. He was like "I can't fall asleep..." then he fell asleep. Then he was like "So I made up my mind I had to see my family, I had to find a way through..." and then- fell back asleep. He didn't find a way, a way found him- literally, and then fought him to keep him alive until some other guys came and literally kicked and pushed him down the mountain- he gave up like 3 different times, even telling them "Just leave me." They refused though and by the end walked on each side of the man and basically carried him on to camp refusing to let him give up. I'm sorry but- that's no warrior- that's a guy who got lucky somehow and even though he did everything you shouldn't- lived anyway, mostly because of other ppl not letting him die.

    • @karmakile
      @karmakile 4 месяца назад +21

      really was a warrior...almost killed the group of sherpas

    • @kieranhart5776
      @kieranhart5776 4 месяца назад +19

      He’s not a warrior. He’s a lucky sob

    • @chimom7112
      @chimom7112 4 месяца назад +4

      Rip lincoln.

    • @TG-fq6vy
      @TG-fq6vy 4 месяца назад +22

      Let’s not forget the Sherpas, who actually saved his life

  • @Fogon59
    @Fogon59 13 дней назад +15

    If you climb Everest, K2, or any other big mountains, be capable of looking after yourself. To expect other people to risk their own lives to help you is bang out of order.

  • @kaymarie7427
    @kaymarie7427 4 месяца назад +112

    The only reason I'd ever go to everest is to hug the sherpas and gift them with anything I could afford...they are so amazing I love them so much 😢

    • @gely_
      @gely_ 4 месяца назад +5

      Not all Sherpas are good. Some are terrible

    • @lynnkesh254
      @lynnkesh254 4 месяца назад

      ​@@gely_How so?

    • @effkay3691
      @effkay3691 4 месяца назад +3

      You could remind a couple of them to leave one’s pack alone.

    • @kaymarie7427
      @kaymarie7427 4 месяца назад +6

      @effkay3691 all groups of people have bad apples. The majority of them are kind and honorable and literally risk their lives over and over again to make sure people make it home safe. Not to mention carry people's big ass packs for them.

    • @effkay3691
      @effkay3691 4 месяца назад +3

      @@kaymarie7427 It was a joke. They took his pack which may have been handy.

  • @Kiraiko44
    @Kiraiko44 4 месяца назад +105

    You know it's a good episode of I Shouldn't Be Alive when you tear up a little. I wish they'd bring this show back!!

    • @sunnystormy4973
      @sunnystormy4973 4 месяца назад

      -ikr !-

    • @isaiahwakeen3539
      @isaiahwakeen3539 4 месяца назад +2

      Not enough people to tell the stories, I'm sure they could find them though

  • @flyingchimp12
    @flyingchimp12 5 дней назад +4

    Man the sherpas really are amazing, they’re not getting paid millions and seem to treat the climbers with more compassion than is necessary.

  • @albertawheat6832
    @albertawheat6832 3 месяца назад +116

    Andrew Brash, a high school teacher,from Calgary Alberta, was 200m from the top of the world's highest mountain in 2006. When he cut his trip short to rescue Australian climber Lincoln Hall, who had been left for dead suffering from altitude sickness.

    • @MsJubjubbird
      @MsJubjubbird 3 месяца назад +15

      see I don't think as many people will do that these days. When you've paid 100k for the trip and been waiting hours in a line to move a few metres, are you going to stop and help someone who will likely die and whose rescue could put you at risk when mountain etiquette excuses you?

    • @MARLEYANDPEE
      @MARLEYANDPEE 3 месяца назад

      yeah id piss on him see if that helps@@MsJubjubbird

    • @EShirako
      @EShirako 2 месяца назад +8

      Lincoln Hall (Climber) has a Wikipedia page about his rescue and it mentions Brash as well as several others, and especially a fellow by the name of Osborne. From the article, "Sitting to our left, about two feet from a 10,000 foot drop, was a man. Not dead, not sleeping, but sitting cross legged, in the process of changing his shirt. He had his down suit unzipped to the waist, his arms out of the sleeves, was wearing no hat, no gloves, no sunglasses, had no oxygen mask, regulator, ice axe, oxygen, no sleeping bag, no mattress, no food nor water bottle. 'I imagine you're surprised to see me here', he said. Now, this was a moment of total disbelief to us all. Here was a gentleman, apparently lucid, who had spent the night without oxygen at 8600m, without proper equipment and barely clothed. And ALIVE."
      The full team of folks summiting that stopped to save his life was, per the same Wiki article, " Daniel Mazur (U.S.), Andrew Brash (Canada), Myles Osborne (UK), and Jangbu Sherpa (Nepal)." On speaking about their decision to abort the summit attempt 'just' to try to save Hall, Mazur was quoted as saying, "The summit is still there and we can go back. Lincoln only has one life."
      Seems like a lot of amazing people made an amazing effort to get him back alive. It's quite impressive...the rescue, I mean. I suppose as I think about it, if I found out the guy was written off as dead the DAY BEFORE I was there, finding him alive and at all lucid would almost surely provoke me to do the same thing. I mean, if he made it overnight...ok, fine, I can pitch in a bit of rescue-energy too since he has already handled the most terrible part of surviving so far...not dying overnight of cerebral edema or hypothermia! If he made it to morning...afternoon, even!...I think I'd feel honor-bound in a way to try to match his 'not dying yet' energy, even if he had only scraps of it left by the time I arrived. If he were semi-lucid, I would have sighed, taken a photo of the summit from where we were, and...off we go with the not-dead-man!
      Though...can someone bring big plastic sleds up there to toss semiconscious-but-alive people into and then two people can maybe drag them down to rescue them if they are that exhausted? I mean, if the alternative is "...or die", well, I'll have to take my chances that I don't go for a sled-ride down 10,000 feet of mountain face, but if I did 'go for a ride' while being pulled back to a lower camp, at least it would look amazing on the way down! So...maybe sleds, for lulz AND for rescue-assists! You'd need ones rated for that insane cold, most everything 'civilian-grade' gives up or gets massively-weakened by reaching 'only' -20C or so! One of my Civic's CV shaft seals is rated down to -20C, and I had to ask National what happens past that when it reaches -35F like it was the day I asked! They said it EASILY cracks or tears with the tiniest of provocations, so I just started it up and let it warm up before I tried to move it that day! Oddly, and I even checked this with National, my OTHER CV shaft seal is rated to -40C. Only one of them is -20. So confusing...but anyway, I bet they can't use Wal-mart sleds up there, they'd almost surely shatter like they are made of crackers at -40 and below when the polymers stop trying to flex at all...but is there something they can use in a pinch?

    • @soavemusica
      @soavemusica 2 месяца назад +6

      What is a man, who is willing to put his family through fear of death, to get some adrenaline kicks on a mountain? MATTHEW 4: 5 Then the devil taketh him up into the holy city, and setteth him on a pinnacle of the temple, 6 And saith unto him, If thou be the Son of God, cast thyself down: for it is written, He shall give his angels charge concerning thee: and in their hands they shall bear thee up, lest at any time thou dash thy foot against a stone. 7 Jesus said unto him, It is written again, Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God.

    • @kayhollings1777
      @kayhollings1777 2 месяца назад +3

      ​@MsJubjubbird This is where the minority of decent people get separated from the majority of self-centred, unthinking sheep. Most people are sheep and most would leave him there simply because they "have an excuse". Some, the precious few, have things called inner morals that fuel them to think for themselves and make their own decisions.

  • @madamlt5758
    @madamlt5758 3 месяца назад +73

    If you’ve already went that many years without climbing Everest and now have a family, it is foolish to risk it all for a stupid mountain. I don’t get how this mountain is so much more important than these people’s lives and families. Just let it go.

    • @erichughes284
      @erichughes284 3 месяца назад +5

      He probably finally had the finances to do it.

    • @MissX905
      @MissX905 2 месяца назад +3

      Maybe he knew he had the beginnings of Cancer (he died 6 yrs. later) so he knew this would be truly his last chance? If he knew he had Cancer starting I don't think he should have done the climb. He put a lot of people's lives in danger besides his own.

    • @kamakaziozzie3038
      @kamakaziozzie3038 Месяц назад +1

      It’s impossible for me to walk in another man’s shoes and judge his decisions. Or boots and crampons in this situation

    • @debsam77
      @debsam77 Месяц назад +3

      I agree that it’s selfish. That mountain is so beautiful and majestic and man has trashed it. Deep oceans, fiery volcanoes and high mountains is no place for humans

    • @Kakwasi
      @Kakwasi 10 дней назад

      Some feel it's good they have a generation Incase they die

  • @rey5597
    @rey5597 4 месяца назад +80

    I can’t imagine the amount of effort required on the sherpas part to keep him going every time he fell. Exhausted, cold, at risk of death. I hope he sent the sherpas many thank you gifts lol

    • @mirzamay
      @mirzamay 4 месяца назад +9

      Yeah they're all crazy, but the sherpa's are very poor so I understand why they do it. Without them the death toll would be waaaay higher than the 1% it is now.

    • @danieltoth3900
      @danieltoth3900 3 месяца назад +6

      ​@@mirzamay Actually, and this is obvious to most, without the local sherpas skills and genetic resistance to altitude sickness there would be no Everest "product"! Meaning almost no death as the extreme climbing industry would cease to exist save the few true professionals that do not require support etc.

    • @albertawheat6832
      @albertawheat6832 3 месяца назад +2

      Andrew Brash, a high school teacher,from Calgary Alberta, was 200m from the top of the world's highest mountain in 2006. When he cut his trip short to rescue Australian climber Lincoln Hall, who had been left for dead suffering from altitude sickness.

    • @lady.stardust-tn3um
      @lady.stardust-tn3um 3 месяца назад +6

      ​@@albertawheat6832 enough with the cut and paste, andrew blabla

    • @lady.stardust-tn3um
      @lady.stardust-tn3um 3 месяца назад

      @@danieltoth3900& if they weren't so poor there would not be Everest industry, no one financially stable would risk their live all the time for very little money, they ( and their families) are the true victims of all this.

  • @rubenfrankish
    @rubenfrankish 2 месяца назад +18

    Sherpas are the heros in this story... talk about going above an beyond to save his life. Great story,

  • @NoelG-IRE
    @NoelG-IRE 6 дней назад +5

    Considering he died 6 years later from what appears to be lung cancer, I’m gonna assume he survived the night, but didn’t get away from the reaper…

  • @tamisullivan8548
    @tamisullivan8548 4 месяца назад +50

    THOSE TWO GUYS THAT SAVED LINCOLN AT THE END THEY ARE TRUE HEROES ♥️‼️

    • @albertawheat6832
      @albertawheat6832 3 месяца назад +5

      Andrew Brash, a high school teacher,from Calgary Alberta, was 200m from the top of the world's highest mountain in 2006. When he cut his trip short to rescue Australian climber Lincoln Hall, who had been left for dead suffering from altitude sickness.

    • @tamisullivan8548
      @tamisullivan8548 2 месяца назад +3

      @@albertawheat6832 now there's the hero... The ones that bypass just to get to the top forget about somebody leaving for dead they are not Heroes

  • @rikstapaul3677
    @rikstapaul3677 4 месяца назад +62

    I was so annoyed, yelling at the screen for sherpas to leave him there and not risk their life. The first two did as much as they could and the 2nd two are awesome for going up to save him. Underrated sherpas the real hero’s

    • @albertawheat6832
      @albertawheat6832 3 месяца назад +7

      Andrew Brash, a high school teacher,from Calgary Alberta, was 200m from the top of the world's highest mountain in 2006. When he cut his trip short to rescue Australian climber Lincoln Hall, who had been left for dead suffering from altitude sickness.

    • @erichughes284
      @erichughes284 3 месяца назад +6

      Sherpas are not underrated .Anyone who knows anything knows how awesome they are

    • @lady.stardust-tn3um
      @lady.stardust-tn3um 3 месяца назад +1

      @@albertawheat6832 no one cares, this is about sherpas keeping that dumbass alive.

    • @MsJubjubbird
      @MsJubjubbird 3 месяца назад +5

      The real story was that 12 sherpas went up to rescue him and carried him most of the way, bar the last walk to camp 1. So there was less risk involved than what is portrayed here. But it would have been so dependent on weather

    • @PNGUncharted
      @PNGUncharted 4 дня назад

      Not all heroes wear capes. I salute them

  • @jefferee2002
    @jefferee2002 Месяц назад +9

    I was thinking that what he did was very selfish, but I'm a recovering alcoholic, and choosing alcohol over my family was equally selfish

    • @glendaknight9017
      @glendaknight9017 Месяц назад +1

      My daughter has recently lost her partner to alcohol. He was only 52 but had been drinking from a young age.
      She never once said he was selfish. She simply said he wasn't strong enough to make the right choice.
      Good luck with your recovery. You have made the right choice but you don't have a couple of Sherpas helping you along
      Stay strong and focussed and you can do this for yourself and those you love.

    • @jefferee2002
      @jefferee2002 Месяц назад

      @@glendaknight9017 very kind of you. My sympathy for your loss. I am 16 months sober but still fight the occasional lie alcohol tries to tell me

  • @Dovelunalove
    @Dovelunalove 4 месяца назад +46

    Why weren’t the hero sherpas identities revealed ? I hope they were compensated additionally for going beyond & putting their life at risk to save Lincoln. Saving him from suicide & the mountains!

    • @albertawheat6832
      @albertawheat6832 3 месяца назад +2

      Andrew Brash, a high school teacher,from Calgary Alberta, was 200m from the top of the world's highest mountain in 2006. When he cut his trip short to rescue Australian climber Lincoln Hall, who had been left for dead suffering from altitude sickness.

    • @AlaborJinta
      @AlaborJinta 2 месяца назад

      because only out of touch privileged people want to get on camera...that is just another day to the sherpas

    • @paddytrihey1189
      @paddytrihey1189 2 месяца назад +6

      I was at Lincoln’s funeral, and there I met one of the Sherpas that rescued. They were friends forever after the event

    • @lf67hh28
      @lf67hh28 Месяц назад

      It's their job, stop acting like they aren't compensated. Too many people have no clue about elite mountaineering.

    • @Kakwasi
      @Kakwasi 10 дней назад +2

      ​@@lf67hh28are they paid enough to die

  • @snipingpyro
    @snipingpyro 2 месяца назад +16

    i dont understand why there is so much hate here. the guy had HACE, a fatal condition.. its actually amazing how this guy survived like 24hrs near the summit with nothing. it takes real will power, fortitude, and luck - thats his story to tell. yes the sherpas ultimately saved him and are the heros of the mountains but they live for the mountains and choose to go up there. they chose to go save him which is awesome. but how this guy lived that long in those conditions is remarkable just as much. i didnt think lincoln was being selfish or arrogant at all, and at the end he said he was eternally grateful to the sherpas - i am sure he let them know how thankful he was for them outside of this story.

    • @Mila_Brearey
      @Mila_Brearey 2 месяца назад +4

      I don't understand why not one member of Lincoln's team carried the dex shot!
      That's complete negligence on behalf of the exped leader. The main guide usually carries one jic.

    • @TheDanAge
      @TheDanAge 14 дней назад

      because only rich people full of hubris climb everest and nobody does it without sherpas.

    • @snipingpyro
      @snipingpyro 13 дней назад

      @@TheDanAge what are you talking about dude? rich people arent the only ones who climb everest. plenty of normal blokes go up there. the guy in this story went up there with sherpas! they thought he was dead, but he survived. he fought to survive. sure the sherpas ultimately saved this guy but he could have mentally given up and died at any moment.

  • @thesisypheanjournal1271
    @thesisypheanjournal1271 4 месяца назад +60

    He put all those people through that -- traumatized his wife and kids -- just to have an adventure and feeling of accomplishment.

    • @erichughes284
      @erichughes284 3 месяца назад +2

      Yes and I would do it again.They didnt need to tell her anything til my death was confirmed

    • @thesisypheanjournal1271
      @thesisypheanjournal1271 3 месяца назад +9

      @@erichughes284 I would divorce you so fast just for that "My family doesn't matter to me nearly as much as my ego" comment. ANYBODY with children who does something that risky just to feed their egos is a bad parent. If you need an adrenaline rush to feel alive, at least be a firefighter and risk your life for a legitimate reason. EDITED TO ADD: You could have spent that money having adventures with your family instead of spending it to traumatize them.

    • @erichughes284
      @erichughes284 3 месяца назад +2

      @@thesisypheanjournal1271 I dont think that it is fair to pass judgement on that man on this incident alone .All his children have gone on to be successful and happy and they love their father who took out a large life insurance policy on himself to assure that they are taken care of.Whether they would have paid the money for such a dangerous undertaking is questionable .Idk I would not have done it ,but im not him .I dont have his thoughts and feelings

    • @erichughes284
      @erichughes284 3 месяца назад

      @@thesisypheanjournal1271 I agree with the last part of what you said though.

    • @thepatrickjr5524
      @thepatrickjr5524 3 месяца назад +1

      Good for him on doing it too. I’m sure he had long discussions about it with his family. He went out and did something and had an adventure doing it. I’m sure he’s sorry that living his life and doing something exciting didn’t live up to your standards 🙄

  • @meganprowse1102
    @meganprowse1102 4 месяца назад +51

    Yaaay the 'nameless' sherpas who saved the self-obsessed visiting climber. 🎉

    • @ferreira8649
      @ferreira8649 4 месяца назад +7

      I mean nobody was pointing a gun to their heads. That’s the job they chose to do and they’re like rich for Nepal standards.
      Sure, their job is hard and they’re crazy skilled (and genetically superior performing in higher altitudes), but still… most sherpas love what they do, no need to be hating on their clients.

    • @albertawheat6832
      @albertawheat6832 3 месяца назад +1

      Andrew Brash, a high school teacher,from Calgary Alberta, was 200m from the top of the world's highest mountain in 2006. When he cut his trip short to rescue Australian climber Lincoln Hall, who had been left for dead suffering from altitude sickness.

    • @Terrisg187
      @Terrisg187 3 месяца назад +1

      @@albertawheat6832was he climbing by himself

    • @kayhollings1777
      @kayhollings1777 2 месяца назад +1

      Self-obsessed because he wanted to climb a mountain..?

    • @Terrisg187
      @Terrisg187 2 месяца назад

      @@kayhollings1777 didn’t mention how the sherpas saved him and who exactly did what

  • @TwoBs
    @TwoBs Месяц назад +9

    I’m glad they included the wife’s side of the story, because when these deaths occur on Everest … we often don’t see or hear much from the family outside of something they maybe said in the media or in-passing about the death of their loved one.
    With her believing her husband was dead, she really did experience the grief and sadness, because she was outright told he had died. She was able to tell us how heartbreaking it was for, the emptiness she felt inside, and having to hear her son cry himself to sleep.
    It affects them greatly, especially when it comes to a body never being able to come home. Imagine the grief one endures knowing they can’t even have a funeral for their loved one to be able to look at them and tell them goodbye because they’re stuck on the side of a mountain.
    Attempting to climb Everest becomes such a selfish act when one has a family back home waiting on them to return, and when they don’t? It’s absolute heartache … and all for what? Ego? Self gratification? Sheesh.

  • @iconickid2397
    @iconickid2397 Месяц назад +9

    Imagine the brute strength of the Sherpas to pick up a fully grown man who's wearing 30lbs of equipment every 5 seconds whilst they're also wearing 30lbs of equipment, plus they are dehydrated and have extremely limited oxygen. Linkon doesn't deserve any credit for this, it was the sherpas who saved him.

    • @windycityliz7711
      @windycityliz7711 Месяц назад +2

      Hall deserves a lot of credit. Without his extraordinary mental/spiritual effort through the night there would have been no one for anyone to rescue.

    • @daysoff4ever
      @daysoff4ever 5 дней назад +1

      correct, truth is he failed to climb Everest

  • @effkay3691
    @effkay3691 4 месяца назад +23

    This is not a sport to share with or rely upon other human beings or friends for that matter. This is an odd obsession for people who are fighting some serious demons. Starving your organs of oxygen for 15 hours to see if your liver, kidney, lungs, vessels, brain will or won’t pack it in is truly depressing.

  • @TG-fq6vy
    @TG-fq6vy 4 месяца назад +25

    God bless these incredibly amazing Sherpas

    • @albertawheat6832
      @albertawheat6832 3 месяца назад +1

      Andrew Brash, a high school teacher,from Calgary Alberta, was 200m from the top of the world's highest mountain in 2006. When he cut his trip short to rescue Australian climber Lincoln Hall, who had been left for dead suffering from altitude sickness.

  • @CMPLT_PLYZ
    @CMPLT_PLYZ 3 месяца назад +15

    for anyone watching this wandering why the sherpa's don't just put him on a sled or something and drag/carry him instead of making him walk is because the slopes are way to fragile and steap. he would most certainly end up sliding down the mountain uncontrollably despite how many sherpas tried to stop him. plus you have to take into consideration how utterly exhausting this is and how weak the sherpa's themselves were by the time they even made it to him.

    • @msbeecee1
      @msbeecee1 23 дня назад +1

      Thanks I had that exact question 🙏

  • @jencapp-se9dq
    @jencapp-se9dq 4 месяца назад +38

    No one is really left for dead up there. The sherpas are paid to guide, not die for their clients. If you can’t move that high, you die. What they did was beyond heroic. I had to keep yelling at a friend with asthma to keep them moving whilst descending a hike at 11k elevation once and that was a pain. I can’t imagine trying to keep someone moving at 29k.

    • @albertawheat6832
      @albertawheat6832 3 месяца назад +1

      Andrew Brash, a high school teacher,from Calgary Alberta, was 200m from the top of the world's highest mountain in 2006. When he cut his trip short to rescue Australian climber Lincoln Hall, who had been left for dead suffering from altitude sickness.

    • @johnnyringo4463
      @johnnyringo4463 2 месяца назад +1

      I tried to run 3 miles once, probably 2 miles in I had to stop due to cramps and being tired. No amount of yelling or anything would have gotten me to run again. 😂. I couldn't imagine 29k, even 11k is high. Lol.

    • @priuss6109
      @priuss6109 23 дня назад

      Them? Wtf

  • @5funnyCats
    @5funnyCats 3 месяца назад +19

    2:49: if having a family actually made "a huge difference for Lincoln" why did he go up there in the first place?😒

  • @andrewmurray9898
    @andrewmurray9898 2 месяца назад +10

    Dude better have rewarded those Sherpa’s handsomely. He owes them his life.

  • @jessicamark4602
    @jessicamark4602 2 месяца назад +9

    Obsessed with the Sherpa people and culture. They are superhuman and without them, climbing Everest and anywhere in the Himalayas would have never been possible. They save so many and do such a thankless job of hailing everyone’s stuff up and down the mountain. I’d love to meet and converse with them one day instead of climbing any mountain.

    • @LyndaHarris-cj1vm
      @LyndaHarris-cj1vm Месяц назад

      Absolutely agree with you!

    • @rickp3753
      @rickp3753 Месяц назад +1

      They're NOT superhuman ffs. They get sick and die on the mountains every year like the climbers.

  • @mrsseasea
    @mrsseasea 4 месяца назад +21

    This past week at our home it was -20 degrees. Going out side for more than 5 minutes was so cold, I don’t k ow how this man survived over night.

    • @EShirako
      @EShirako 2 месяца назад

      Well, to be fair, that gear is a WHOLE different level from 'normal cold-wear'. I have an outfit for the snowy, can-be-super-cold-and-windy area I live in, and it is so insulating that when I tried to test the fit and make sure I liked it before removing the tags, I put it on inside my 65F house. I took it off again IMMEDIATELY because I was sure I would overheat and die if I closed that jacket up while inside my house. I went out onto the front porch to try it on, where it was 20F or so, and even there it was still promptly 'quite toasty'. This was with it not even zipped up. THEIR gear is even crazier.
      Then again, when he was half-undressed due to extreme hypothermia, he really should have just DIED and been done, so maybe part of it is just something about his metabolism. That really should have quickly been the end of him, even if cerebral edema should have already been. MAYBE edema faded...the cold remains cold. Physics plays no favorites. That man was several different kinds of lucky.

  • @BabuBhaiya697
    @BabuBhaiya697 4 месяца назад +19

    Once a legend said about SHERPA
    “It is not the strength of the body that counts, but the strength of the spirit."

  • @Diazzz1998
    @Diazzz1998 4 месяца назад +16

    This video reminds me never to climb Mount Everest because I’m not a maniac lmaoooo

  • @molliwilson5639
    @molliwilson5639 4 месяца назад +14

    I’m in my cozy bed watching this..going down a sheer ice face.. nope

  • @Ravendireokami
    @Ravendireokami 4 месяца назад +15

    Those Sherpas do NOT get paid enough for all they do

    • @albertawheat6832
      @albertawheat6832 3 месяца назад

      Andrew Brash, a high school teacher,from Calgary Alberta, was 200m from the top of the world's highest mountain in 2006. When he cut his trip short to rescue Australian climber Lincoln Hall, who had been left for dead suffering from altitude sickness.

  • @no.1fangirl
    @no.1fangirl 4 месяца назад +25

    After reading Chris Bonnington 'Everest The Hard Way' when I was younger I knew I'd never want to be a mountaineer !
    The sherpas were incredible putting their own lives on the line to push Lincoln on. They are the heroes in this amazing story of survival.

    • @Loudes012
      @Loudes012 4 месяца назад +3

      After reading "Into thin air," I knew I could never be a mountaineer. To climb Everest is a triumph over sensibility. It is beyond the sway of reason, and yet these high altitude experienced mountaineers have delighted to be at the summit.

    • @buffalobill9793
      @buffalobill9793 4 месяца назад

      ​@@Loudes012john krakauer?

    • @ferreira8649
      @ferreira8649 4 месяца назад +2

      The hardest part for me is having 60k to spare…

  • @kieranhart5776
    @kieranhart5776 4 месяца назад +18

    Usually if you have trouble up the mountain no matter how many you’re with or how much you tipped the guides you're on your own. More people die coming down than going up. As soon as that adrenaline where’s off you’re finished. The second I feel trouble I’m sliding my ass back down that mountain to thicker air!

    • @danielhyde3243
      @danielhyde3243 3 месяца назад

      There are places you can be rescued from and places you can't, while the climbers he was with understandably couldn't rescue him, he was only 4 hours from camp, the expedition leader dropped the ball. He should have sent a team immediately, at least 4. Probably would still have all his didgets.

  • @brendandylanmaloney
    @brendandylanmaloney Месяц назад +4

    Imagine being the wife and best friend thinking that he's dead and then getting a phone call from your husband that he's alive ! Unbelievable ! 🥰🥰🥰

  • @helgashubat8238
    @helgashubat8238 4 месяца назад +15

    The Sherpas are incredibly brave men, we admire so much. They deserve a medal.
    Selfish Lincoln caused so much grief for many people, just to stand on top of the earth.
    I am sorry, I know it is a stupid comment, but really, how can you put this tragedy on your family and friends?
    Not even mention again the heroic Sherpas.

    • @albertawheat6832
      @albertawheat6832 3 месяца назад +1

      Andrew Brash, a high school teacher,from Calgary Alberta, was 200m from the top of the world's highest mountain in 2006. When he cut his trip short to rescue Australian climber Lincoln Hall, who had been left for dead suffering from altitude sickness.

  • @MrRdh567
    @MrRdh567 3 месяца назад +9

    Read about Beck Weathers. He also survived incredible odds. He hobbled back into camp by himself! Lost some body parts but he lived.

    • @EShirako
      @EShirako 2 месяца назад +1

      Wow, on his own? I'll try to look them up.

    • @miguelpereira1262
      @miguelpereira1262 2 месяца назад

      Just watch the "Everest" movie with Josh Brolin,Jake Gyllenhaal​ etc...tells about the tragedy of 1996 that killed 9 people,Beck Weathers is played by Josh Brolin...great movie@@EShirako

    • @mariavieira6438
      @mariavieira6438 18 дней назад

      @@EShirakoit was in 1996

    • @mariavieira6438
      @mariavieira6438 18 дней назад

      Not totally on his own he made back to camp 4 , was left there again but got help after.

  • @margieb.4346
    @margieb.4346 4 месяца назад +17

    Fantastic episode. Love this series,never disappoints.

  • @ElizaC765
    @ElizaC765 2 дня назад

    Amazing experienced, I watched documentaries like this about mountains and I’ve learned so much, it’s amazing how Lincoln survived many hours in that place, it’s a different world. So wonderful that he got helped from Sherpas and they never gave up on him and was able to come back home. Thanks for making and sharing this, amazing real life stories.

  • @dominuslimo4147
    @dominuslimo4147 4 месяца назад +19

    RIP Lincoln Hall he sadly passed away in 2012 from cancer

    • @dacypher22
      @dacypher22 4 месяца назад +5

      Yeah I just saw that. So sad to survive this only to die 6 years later to cancer. RIP

    • @bensaxton7425
      @bensaxton7425 4 месяца назад +4

      ffs thats actually sad R.I.P

    • @brigitte951
      @brigitte951 4 месяца назад

      Lincoln H.'s been sik off mestheliom-cancer, wherebye extendet lak of oxigene as a seriously harming on hes respiratory system could have formed the base to it.

    • @thisfatgirlruns6710
      @thisfatgirlruns6710 4 месяца назад

      Fuck cancer 😡

    • @danieltoth3900
      @danieltoth3900 3 месяца назад +7

      Why couldn't them sherpos do something about the cancer?

  • @peterstocks6638
    @peterstocks6638 4 месяца назад +12

    This is my absolute favorite episode is this wonderful series what an amazing fascinating story I try to put myself there in my mind being alone on the top of the world absolutely freezing. It's just an amazing story

    • @marloninquirer
      @marloninquirer Месяц назад +1

      yeah one of the most unimaginable not too many can survive mt everest under those circumstances

  • @gbedmonds1594
    @gbedmonds1594 3 месяца назад +7

    They've always said it's the trip down were you can expect to die.

  • @shaunusher3818
    @shaunusher3818 3 месяца назад +4

    The title is so appropriate. Thank God Lincoln survived.

  • @stephanielloyd4053
    @stephanielloyd4053 4 месяца назад +11

    Something I heard recently was on Google earth Everest and parts of the Himalayas are blacked out because of the amount of bodies on there!!

  • @dawn8542
    @dawn8542 9 дней назад +1

    I'm watching a lot of documentaries on Mt Everest, and I have a great deal of respect for the sherpas. Someone will train for a year to get up that mountain, and then hire Sherpas to do the dirty work.
    I climbed a mountain in Mexico that took two hours to climb. I kept taking breaks. My face was the same color as my red lipstick . At the top of the mountain was a little stand selling lemonade and chips. And the guys working there would run alongside us as we struggled to get up.

  • @angelaberni8873
    @angelaberni8873 3 месяца назад +7

    HATS OFF TO THE SHERPERS WHO SAVE LIVES !!!

    • @albertawheat6832
      @albertawheat6832 3 месяца назад

      Andrew Brash, a high school teacher,from Calgary Alberta, was 200m from the top of the world's highest mountain in 2006. When he cut his trip short to rescue Australian climber Lincoln Hall, who had been left for dead suffering from altitude sickness.

  • @toasternfriends3329
    @toasternfriends3329 4 месяца назад +7

    "Left for dead" my ass, he was saved. And he knew what he was getting into, rescue is almost impossible up there.

    • @Empress.420
      @Empress.420 3 месяца назад

      Exactly! THANK YOU. 😂
      Many people have been there for years. Some make it to the top & some don't. They pay up to $100-$120k a few years back. Could be higher now since it's very popular.
      I don't feel bad for them one bit because they died doing what they love. At least he didn't die there and was saved. However, I feel awful for their families and the no-name sherpas.

  • @TheOrganizedLawyer
    @TheOrganizedLawyer 3 дня назад

    Glad to have this show back ..so informative

  • @cjane_world
    @cjane_world 4 месяца назад +5

    I've heard of so many people dieing on Everest, but I've never heard actual accounts of what they're going through while dieing. It must be a very lonely death, but at least their loved ones can take some comfort in knowing that at the end they probably felt peaceful, if they died of hypothermia.

    • @Parkerlee1000
      @Parkerlee1000 3 месяца назад +4

      The weird part to me is that they feel like they're hot before they die, and they start to undress is so alien to me how the mind works is insane.

    • @MissX905
      @MissX905 2 месяца назад +1

      And how they remember what was happening after they survive it. How did he have such vivid recall of what he heard and seen while nearly comatose and literally frozen?

  • @Halcyon1861
    @Halcyon1861 3 месяца назад +7

    I find Everest shows intriguing. I think of them as a rich foolish mans endeavor. Intriguing though.

  • @vortex162
    @vortex162 4 месяца назад +6

    People do all kinds of crazy things just make them selves feel alive, that's how dull regular life must feel to them. Lost sensitivity I call it!

  • @bobbyhillthe3rd
    @bobbyhillthe3rd 4 месяца назад +9

    I've been watching these for over 10 years. This is the first time I ever made it this early. Only an hour into the realse

  • @drips1030
    @drips1030 4 месяца назад +15

    I hope the Sherpas are paid extremely well. Anybody know how much they get???

    • @jencapp-se9dq
      @jencapp-se9dq 4 месяца назад +5

      It’s extremely sad how badly they’re paid. Average is probably 5-6k USD. Top guides can earn double that a season, esp with a summit, but yeah, it’s paltry. I always read that they’re tipped like 💩 as well. Sometimes as little as 2$. Considering how well off most of these climbers are, it’s disgusting. People that go with cheaper expedition companies risk not getting helped if they get in the weeds up there. The sherpas won’t risk their lives for the cheaper aspiring summiteers, so Hall musta paid on the upper end if they went back up there for him.

    • @alishaoneal2610
      @alishaoneal2610 3 месяца назад +1

      Hi I read they were paid 5 grand x

    • @bidensdiaper394
      @bidensdiaper394 Месяц назад

      These "classy" climbers generally tip them $10. DISGUSTING

    • @glendaknight9017
      @glendaknight9017 Месяц назад +1

      I don't know but would guess it depends upon which of the trekking companies they are employed by.
      Not enough I would suggest for what they do!

  • @Henry-cf4oo
    @Henry-cf4oo 4 месяца назад +5

    Lincoln sure had a strong will to live, that "I'm not going out like this" drive.

  • @jayjoy331
    @jayjoy331 3 месяца назад +1

    Wow! What an amazing story. It just goes to show miracles can happen. And the will to survive is strong!

  • @Meeshnmatt
    @Meeshnmatt 4 месяца назад +8

    This episode pulled at my heart! What an amazing testimony. I’m so happy he made it out of there ❤

    • @albertawheat6832
      @albertawheat6832 3 месяца назад

      Andrew Brash, a high school teacher,from Calgary Alberta, was 200m from the top of the world's highest mountain in 2006. When he cut his trip short to rescue Australian climber Lincoln Hall, who had been left for dead suffering from altitude sickness.

    • @I.pray.to.George.Carlin
      @I.pray.to.George.Carlin 3 месяца назад

      This tugged at my heart strings as well. Amazing and beautiful episode 💜

  • @user-uo5kp8nr7p
    @user-uo5kp8nr7p 3 месяца назад +2

    Sherpas are the heros... they always seem to be...risking their very lives to save a stranger... Amazing story....

    • @albertawheat6832
      @albertawheat6832 3 месяца назад

      Andrew Brash, a high school teacher,from Calgary Alberta, was 200m from the top of the world's highest mountain in 2006. When he cut his trip short to rescue Australian climber Lincoln Hall, who had been left for dead suffering from altitude sickness.

  • @rebeccahoneysett3993
    @rebeccahoneysett3993 3 месяца назад +3

    A big shout out to the guides thank u for not giving up on him ❤❤❤

  • @m.d.1249
    @m.d.1249 3 месяца назад +3

    Grate documentary, congradulations 🎉

  • @fasterridernepal3939
    @fasterridernepal3939 4 дня назад

    The real story of lincon documentry was great. Solute this film maker who makes real Everest summit. Sherpas are our real hiro. From Nepal

  • @brigitte951
    @brigitte951 4 месяца назад +2

    Lincoln Hall is an invitable proof to the mighty power of human..hes spirit, joyned to a clear vision it remouves mountains indeed.
    So wathever and whoever of destructif intentions out there's trying to embararce whoever, we all got or may get the entire strenght of our spirits to keep creating holy good things for us and all.
    Might be an essential messague to the mankind. Namaste

    • @albertawheat6832
      @albertawheat6832 3 месяца назад

      Andrew Brash, a high school teacher,from Calgary Alberta, was 200m from the top of the world's highest mountain in 2006. When he cut his trip short to rescue Australian climber Lincoln Hall, who had been left for dead suffering from altitude sickness.

  • @miketausig4205
    @miketausig4205 Месяц назад +1

    Surprisingly similar to the Beck Weathers story being left alone in a blizzard, then finding his way back to the camps. Based on what the narrator said about a second step, that makes me think they took the northern route, while Beck’s group took the southern route.

  • @jsEMCsquared
    @jsEMCsquared 4 месяца назад +1

    This tops amazing survival stories! GET IT, TOPS

    • @femalearmyveteran6906
      @femalearmyveteran6906 3 месяца назад +2

      😭😭😭I see what u did there😂

    • @badgoat666
      @badgoat666 3 месяца назад

      I get the joke, but check out the episode of the guy stuck on a life raft in the middle of the ocean for 76 days! Low point!

    • @SavingSoulsMinistries
      @SavingSoulsMinistries 3 месяца назад

      Maybe Khans kill people without looking them in the face, but I ain’t a fink, dig?
      You’ve made your last delivery kid. Sorry you got twisted up in this scene. From where you’re kneeling it must seem like an 18-carat run of bad luck. Truth is…the game was rigged from the start.
      What in the goddamn…?

  • @jd4262
    @jd4262 Месяц назад +2

    How does this guy look so young?! It happened when he was 50🤯

    • @anas-ee6qx
      @anas-ee6qx 6 дней назад

      Well, he was frozen 😊

  • @outdoorfr3ak
    @outdoorfr3ak 7 дней назад

    This might be the best recreation of the entire series

  • @SOz-uf5yq
    @SOz-uf5yq 22 дня назад +3

    Seriously, lol. He can remember every detail and couldn't walk. > The biggest con artist I have ever seen.

  • @kathleenfinnerty226
    @kathleenfinnerty226 3 месяца назад

    What a story just wow ❤, just a miracle 🙏 Thank you to the Sherpas 💖💖💖

  • @jazpertube
    @jazpertube 3 месяца назад

    Great stories, great dramatization, great series

  • @taxiuniversum
    @taxiuniversum 4 месяца назад +4

    The unsung heroes are the sherpas here.
    The madness they have to go through because some folks are obsessed with this mountain. SMH

    • @albertawheat6832
      @albertawheat6832 3 месяца назад

      Andrew Brash, a high school teacher,from Calgary Alberta, was 200m from the top of the world's highest mountain in 2006. When he cut his trip short to rescue Australian climber Lincoln Hall, who had been left for dead suffering from altitude sickness.

  • @MsJubjubbird
    @MsJubjubbird 3 месяца назад +2

    Very Hollywoodised that the guy is supposed to be 50 and they get an actor that looks no older than 30. It also took 12 Sherpas to rescue him and he only walked the last bit. But this is better for the camera

  • @michaelbradford4444
    @michaelbradford4444 4 месяца назад

    Amazing!

  • @user-ey5om1td2q
    @user-ey5om1td2q 4 месяца назад +9

    God was on his side a guess..Like he helped David against a lion and a bear and in the end against evil people as well.

    • @albertawheat6832
      @albertawheat6832 3 месяца назад

      Andrew Brash, a high school teacher,from Calgary Alberta, was 200m from the top of the world's highest mountain in 2006. When he cut his trip short to rescue Australian climber Lincoln Hall, who had been left for dead suffering from altitude sickness.

    • @DENVEROUTDOORMAN
      @DENVEROUTDOORMAN 3 месяца назад

      Yes I was

    • @MsJubjubbird
      @MsJubjubbird 3 месяца назад

      except then he got cancer and died six years later. Final Destination vibes

  • @nataliemeenakshithegreat7780
    @nataliemeenakshithegreat7780 2 месяца назад +2

    What a story wow talking about survival

  • @captaindoeverything
    @captaindoeverything 2 месяца назад +2

    " . . . it was so cold, lawyers had their hands in their own pockets . . . "

  • @calij586
    @calij586 4 месяца назад +15

    I hope he continues to pay those Sherpas a monthly stipend for saving his life and almost losing theirs!!

    • @ZeeTheySay
      @ZeeTheySay 3 месяца назад +1

      He died to cancer in 2012 - 6 years after Everest

    • @albertawheat6832
      @albertawheat6832 3 месяца назад

      Andrew Brash, a high school teacher,from Calgary Alberta, was 200m from the top of the world's highest mountain in 2006. When he cut his trip short to rescue Australian climber Lincoln Hall, who had been left for dead suffering from altitude sickness.

    • @badgoat666
      @badgoat666 3 месяца назад +2

      There was a tourist recently who was literally carried down from the death zone on a Sherpa's back and they flaked on the payment.

    • @boos4644
      @boos4644 7 дней назад

      To pay nothing because they let to day there😂

  • @gp-fe6zy
    @gp-fe6zy 4 месяца назад +5

    In 2012 Lincoln hall died from mesothelioma rip

  • @Patty62172
    @Patty62172 Месяц назад

    Amazing. He has someone beside him all the way❤❤❤

  • @angelaberni8873
    @angelaberni8873 3 месяца назад +3

    I hope Lincon rewarded them generously !!!

  • @agnesmaloco2818
    @agnesmaloco2818 4 месяца назад +12

    I would climb my bed and watch these videos..

  • @outdoorfr3ak
    @outdoorfr3ak 7 дней назад +1

    Always remember. The summit is only the halfway point

  • @davesmith5656
    @davesmith5656 4 месяца назад +2

    As I gather from videos, the Second Step is on an alternate route up Everest, the one that Mallory and Irwin tried. I believe that route does not cross the dangerous Khumbu icefall, so the shot from within a crevasse at around the 5:40 mark must be just for color about a different route? Whatever, I think the elevation of the Second Step is above the icefall. Odd, how people put videos together, a clip here, a clip there ... who'll know the difference!

    • @MsJubjubbird
      @MsJubjubbird 3 месяца назад +2

      So there are two main guided routes. The most popular one is the south side, which is done from Nepal. It is the longest route the icce fall is just above base camt. It is also the one Hillary and Tenzing completed. The one Lincoln did was from the north side, which is done from Tibet. It is shorter but much more technical- ie the rock faces and such. But this video uses a lot of poetic license and stretches the story a bit.

    • @davesmith5656
      @davesmith5656 Месяц назад +1

      @@MsJubjubbird ---- Just repeating here for grins one of the best comments in this series of videos: "Seems like the series should be titled, 'I shouldn't be here at all!' " Alternate form: "I shouldn't have been there in the first place!"

  • @georgesaunders3532
    @georgesaunders3532 Месяц назад

    If there's just one episode to pick that really defines I shouldn't be alive it's this one... super human
    The mind and brain is so amazing. Its saying here have all this lovely vision while I try and sort this body and situation out. Yes, I get that on the external it really isn't helping, but its doing everything it can to make this work and you are just a passenger

  • @AhmadyarAhmadi-pm6kv
    @AhmadyarAhmadi-pm6kv Месяц назад +1

    This man has been given another life gifted.He’s strong off state mind and will power is amazing and extraordinary.i had experienced cold weather in mountains in 5500 meters and nothing close for what mr Hall been through. In some point your body wants to give up and then you realise the power off mind…………..

  • @christinereeves1740
    @christinereeves1740 4 месяца назад

    Wow incredible

  • @KPistols1993
    @KPistols1993 3 месяца назад +2

    Watched a ton of these I think being stuck in the middle of the ocean might be the worse, then being stuck in volcano 🌋 then option the cold like this

  • @TaurusMoon-hu3pd
    @TaurusMoon-hu3pd 2 месяца назад +3

    Let's see.....$65,000 for 15 minutes on the summit is $4333 a minute😮

  • @jonesy9035
    @jonesy9035 2 месяца назад +2

    Awww! He died of Mesothelioma in 2012 😢

  • @southernlady160
    @southernlady160 Месяц назад +1

    They need to do a documentary JUST on the Sherpa's!

  • @anhserc3534
    @anhserc3534 4 месяца назад +1

    What a freaking stud!

  • @jacobsmith3526
    @jacobsmith3526 3 месяца назад +2

    They did his wife dirty with that casting 😂

  • @user-rc9nf4gx3g
    @user-rc9nf4gx3g 4 месяца назад +6

    Now this is what wtf I’m talking about.

  • @molliwilson5639
    @molliwilson5639 4 месяца назад +8

    Mount Everest does not want us up there

  • @ericmarin6454
    @ericmarin6454 3 месяца назад +3

    Why in the fuck do these people put themselves in situations?! 🤯

  • @gimche263
    @gimche263 25 дней назад +2

    His team left him to save their lives without first attempting to save him..Worst they removed his pack and things.. What a shame..These guide is the hero.

  • @KikoVideoProduction
    @KikoVideoProduction 4 месяца назад +3

    New Climbing Rules for Everest Left For Dead... : Leave their gears behind incase they came back from the dead...

  • @Steve-dk3md
    @Steve-dk3md 3 месяца назад

    Truly miraculous

    • @albertawheat6832
      @albertawheat6832 3 месяца назад

      Andrew Brash, a high school teacher,from Calgary Alberta, was 200m from the top of the world's highest mountain in 2006. When he cut his trip short to rescue Australian climber Lincoln Hall, who had been left for dead suffering from altitude sickness.

  • @darksoul479
    @darksoul479 3 месяца назад +1

    I used to be a climber. I once woke up naked and alone in a blizzard on the summit of K2 at midnight. Long story.

    • @I.pray.to.George.Carlin
      @I.pray.to.George.Carlin 3 месяца назад +2

      Were you naked and afraid 😂

    • @Empress.420
      @Empress.420 3 месяца назад

      ​@@I.pray.to.George.Carlin ROFL!! 😆🤭🤣😂☠️

    • @DENVEROUTDOORMAN
      @DENVEROUTDOORMAN 3 месяца назад

      ​@@I.pray.to.George.Carlin stupid comment

    • @alishaoneal2610
      @alishaoneal2610 3 месяца назад

      I've had nights out like that ha ha x

  • @sharronunger7053
    @sharronunger7053 4 месяца назад

    True miracle