Nepalese mountain guide sets Everest record with 27th ascent - Action News
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Nepalese mountain guide sets Everest record with 27th ascent

Kami Rita Sherpa, a Nepali mountain guide, scaled Mount Everest for a record 27th time on Wednesday, beating his own record, a government official and his hiking company said.

Kami Rita Sherpa scaled the 8,849-metremountain Wednesday while guiding a foreign climber

A man holds up a Nepali flag.
Nepalese mountaineer Kami Rita Sherpa is shown in this May 2019 photo. On Wednesday, he reached the summit of Mount Everest for a record 27th time. (Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters)

A Nepalesemountain guide scaled Mount Everest for a record 27th time on Wednesday, beating his own record, a government official and his hiking company said.

Kami Rita Sherpa, 53, scaled the 8,849-metremountain early in the morning along the traditional southeast ridge route, guiding a foreign climber.

"Yes, Kami Rita climbed Sagarmatha for the 27th time," said Department of Tourism official Bigyan Koirala, referring to the mountain by its Nepalesename.

Thaneswar Guragai, general manager of Seven Summit Treks, for which Kami Rita works, said he got to the summit at 8.30 a.m. local timealong with the foreign climber.

"We're trying to get details. For now, it's 100 per centconfirmed that Kami Rita scaled for the 27th time,"Guragai said.

Kami Rita reached thesummitjust three days after a fellow Sherpa climberhad equalled his previous record.

First scaled Everest in 1994

Separately, Ishwari Paudel of the Himalayan Guides company said British climber Kenton Cool, 49, made his 17th ascent of the mountain on Wednesday, the most by any foreign climber.

"Cool is now descending after guiding his own private client," Paudel said.

A man has sunglasses on his head and carries a red backpack.
British mountaineer Kenton Cool, seen here in May 2022, made his 17th ascent of Mount Everest on Wednesday, the most by a non-Nepalese climber. (Niranjan Shrestha/The Associated Press)

Kami Rita, who refers to himself by his first names, scaled Everest for the first time in 1994 and has climbed it almost every year since then, except in 2014, 2015 and 2020, when climbing was halted for various reasons.

Garrett Madison of the U.S.-based Madison Mountaineering company, who has climbed Everest 12 times, five of them with Kami Rita, described him as a "very strong climber."

"Very inspirational to see a local climber continue pushing the limits on Mount Everest," Madison told Reuters by telephone from Everest's base camp, where he is preparing for a 13th ascent.

Kami Rita's company said in a statement he had "dedicated his life to mountaineering and has become synonymous with the world's highest peak."

Sherpas are known for their climbing skills and many make a living guiding foreign clients up Everest and other mountains.

May is the ideal time for trying to reach the top of Everest, with clear weather before the monsoon arrives from the south, bringing cloud and snow to the peaks and rain to the lowlands.

Record number of permits

This year, Nepal has issued 478 permits, the most ever, for people to climb Everest compared with the previous record of 408 in 2021.

The Himalayan nation, which is heavily reliant on climbing, trekking and tourism for foreign exchange, has been criticized for allowing too many climbers, many of them inexperienced, to try for Everest's summit.

Dangerous overcrowding can develop, especially at a bottleneck called the Hillary Step, just below the summit. In 2019, nine exhausted climbers died on Everest after queues built up of climbers going up and down.

Everest has been climbed more than 11,000 times, from both the Nepali and Tibetan sides, since it was first scaled in 1953, with many people going up multiple times.

More than 320 people have died on the mountain, hiking officials said.

With files from The Associated Press