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British Columbia

'I made it': B.C. teen becomes youngest climber to reach Canada's highest peak

The day after Naomi Prohaska reached the top of Yukon's Mount Logan, she woke up in her tent with a blister on her face. The 15-year-old had frostbite on her cheek, nose and ear, caused by frozen air seeping through cracks between her mask and goggles.

Naomi Prohaska, 15, trained for two years before attempting climb of Mount Logan

Naomi Prohaska trained for the Mt. Logan expedition for two years. (Naomi Prohaska)

The day after Naomi Prohaskareached the top of Yukon's Mount Logan, she woke up in her tent with a blister on her face.

The 15-year-old had frostbite on her cheek, nose and ear, caused by frozen air seeping through cracks between her mask and goggles.

She wasn't too bothered, though she'd just become the youngest person to reach the top of Canada's highest peak.

Prohaska, who lives in Pemberton, B.C.,decided to climbthe 5,959-metre mountain two years ago.

She got to the top on May 24. Most people would have been ecstatic, being a record-setteron the highest spot in the country.

But Prohaska wasall business.

"When I was at the top, I was super happy and super excited but I couldn't be relieved because you're only halfway. You still have to go down. It's a different feeling than other sports where you cross the finish line and you're done," she told CBC North.

"When Igot to base camp was when Icould sit back and go, 'Whoa. I made it all the way up there.' Then I was so excited just sitting in my tent smiling."

Prohaskamade the trip with a teamled by her father. They took the King's Trench route up the mountain, stopping athalf a dozen camps along the way. Each climber was responsible for lugging his or her own gearin a backpack or on a sled.

The round trip took three weeks.Temperatures near the peak dropped as low as 40C.Prohaska's father, an experienced mountaineer who hascompleted a climb of MountLogan eight times,also hadfrostbite.

Prohaska, a Pemberton Secondary School student, trained for the trip by running, cross-country skiing and going out into the backcountry whenever she could but she said the mental aspect of the trip was the most gruelling.

"The biggest challenge was the end of summit day. We were coming down after a long day and it was windy, I was getting really cold, and bad weather was coming in. I was exhausted, and we actually had to go back uphill to get to camp. That was a challenge keeping my mental game strong through that."

Weather and avalanches were also a concern. In April, a pair of avalanches left a solo Argentine climber stranded on the same mountain for four days until she could be rescued.

Luckily, Prohaska said, those slides didn't affect the King's Trench route.

The teen and her dad returned from their trip earlier this week, reuniting with hermom and siblings.

Prohaska said the scale of her accomplishment isstarting to sink in.

"I'm just relaxing. I'm happy to be off the mountain, safe.I know what can happen when you're up there. There was such a big buildup for me.

"Right now I'm just glad I'm down."

Naomi Prohaska, 15, is believed to be the youngest person to summit Mt. Logan Canada's highest peak. (Naomi Prohaska)

With files from CBC's Steven Hossack