Doomed to Fail - Ep 95 - The Highest Graveyard on Earth: Mt. Everest
Episode Date: March 20, 2024Get out your winter jackets and an extra $55,000 - we're climbing Mt. Everest! You will also need a lot of time off work, some tents, extra oxygen, and an unparalleled disdain for your loved ones. Far...z takes us from Sir Edmund Hilary's historic climb (maybe there's another unconfirmed first guy) to some of the most famous dead bodies slowly rotting away on the path to the summit.We ended with, if people want to --- sure, they can do whatever, but we would never. How about you? Join our Founders Club on Patreon to get ad-free episodes for life! patreon.com/DoomedtoFailPodWe would love to hear from you! Please follow along! Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/doomedtofailpod/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/doomedtofailpod Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@doomedtofailpod TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@doomed.to.fail.pod Email: doomedtofailpod@gmail.com
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It's a matter of the people of the state of California versus Hortlandthal James Simpson, case number B.A. 019.
And so, my fellow Americans, ask not what your country can do for you.
And we are back on, I don't know, Taylor Wednesday, Thursday, I think it's going to be Wednesday.
But we are back and recording to discuss my topic for, oh, wait, I'm doing to fail.
Sorry, this is doing to fail.
We're doing your right, Taylor.
So we, guys, we record these back-to-back, you know, release them on different days.
And I forget sometimes when I do my intro in which podcast episode.
I just, when you took a break for two seconds, I've been on Instagram and here's a picture of murder she wrote.
And it says she could find Kate Middleton, Angel Lance Graham, murder she wrote.
This is what I'm talking about business stuff on this is.
Also, happy St. Patrick's Day.
We didn't say that they had to each other.
Oh, yeah.
Happy St. Patrick's Day.
It'll pass by them. We're going to a bar. My daughter's friend's dad is in a band. And it's
going to be a cute like dad band. And we're going to go watch them play. So it's going to be sweet.
I think that the kids are going to like it. Yeah. Get yourself a Guinness or several guineas and have a good time.
I'm going to have so many guineas. Oh, God, I also have other bad news about me if you want to hear it.
Let's hear it. I officially have prediabetes. So I have to like talk to my doctor and start eating no carbs again and potentially getting on insulin.
and I'm bummed.
Well, it's pre-diabetes, so you don't have to do insulin yet, right?
Not yet, but, like, I could to, like, try to, like, get it under control.
I have to talk to the doctor still, but it's just, like, because I had diabetes when I was
pregnant, so it was, like, kind of bound to happen, you know?
So I've just been...
Aren't all those weight loss drugs?
Weren't they designed for diabetes?
Yes.
So I'm also wondering why I should just take Ozmpic and weigh 120 pounds again.
But I don't
I don't think I should do that.
I mean,
if it controls your diabetes
in front of being diabetic,
then yeah,
for sure you should do that.
Yeah,
we'll see what happens.
We'll see what they say.
But yeah,
it's been a rough week.
Man,
getting older is great,
isn't it?
Fucking sucks.
Yes.
It sucks.
But anyhow,
I'm going to get into my topic.
Should we do a guessing game?
Yeah, that's it.
It is based on a geographic formation that was created through the process which you have covered.
An island.
And has killed hundreds of people.
An island with a monster on it.
A tsunami.
Is it a tsunami?
It's an island with a monster on it.
You got it.
No, I am going to be covering Mount Everest.
Oh, fun.
But I'm going to cover it in like an interesting way because I think Mount Everest has been done to death
and it's like kind of boring to talk about at this point.
But I'm going to cover it in three parts, guys.
So what I'm going to do is I'm going to cover the history of climbing Everest.
I'm going to cover what it is like to climb Everest today.
And I'm going to discuss what you all really hear for, which is kind of the disaster stories
about climbing Everest.
That's it.
Let's kind of wrap this up.
So let's get into the history of Everest itself.
So obviously we all know Mount Everest is the tallest mountain in the world.
It sits at just over 29,000 feet, which is somewhere around 5.5 miles above sea level.
One fun fact I discovered, which is good to know, is it's actually not the tallest mountain if you measure it from its base.
So the tallest mountain in the world measured from its base, you were kind of close to.
It's actually in Hawaii.
It's called Mona Tia.
and it's 30,600 feet.
So about like 1,600 feet taller than Mount Everest,
but that's if you measure it from the base,
and the base is 17,000 feet underwater.
Oh, sure, sure, sure, sure, sure, sure, sure, sure, sure.
Well, isn't the base of everything underwater it?
I mean, if you go that far into the logic of it, then yes.
Then technically, if you measure Mount Everest from where the Mariana trenches,
then it is very tall.
what about that part of the earth that's hollow where the monsters live where all the monsters are and where i don't know so so for context uh that height 29,000 feet for Everest that's only 6,000 feet short of how high a Boeing 737 flies it's pretty it's pretty tall yeah um it runs through the border between Nepal and Tibet slash China kind of depends on how you feel about Tibetan autonomy um but that's kind of geographically where it's located
locally it's been named
so basically it didn't really have a
agreed upon naming convention
in the local communities that surround it
and it wasn't until 1865
that we actually started calling it Mount Everest
the reason we called the Mount Everest was
that the Brits had this chief surveyor
who was responsible of kind of surveying the entire globe
and then the new chief surveyor
decided to name this mountain after the
former chief surveyor.
And that guy's name was Sir George Everest.
So they called him Mount Everest.
That's what we call on Everest.
That is dumb.
I didn't know that.
To his credit, so George Everest was actually alive when this happened.
He died like five years after this.
To his credit, he actually was like, no, don't need this thing after me.
First off, it doesn't translate into anything meaningful to the local communities.
And also in the local Hindi language that the Nepalese speak, you can't really say that easy.
and so he was like just call it something different but like we're just going to go with not Everest so well good for him for acknowledging that yeah yeah um so climbing Everest uh was a fascination since its discovery obviously in many ways doing so was essentially a suicide mission for anyone who's been to Denver as an example Denver's one mile above sea level so with Mexico City by the way but when you're in Denver yeah when you're in Denver you have 83
percent of the breathable air you would find at sea level so you have a 17 percent diminish
auction level auction concentration at one mile up for context i have a stupid joke that i saw on
the internet because i just thought through that and i was like well yeah mexico doesn't use miles so like
why would they even say that but there was a joke that i heard where some guy said my wife she just left
me for being un-american i saw it coming from a kilometer away that is a good one i might reuse that
one um so Denver 83% breathable air uh Everest obviously a lot higher you get 33% of air you get a
sea level so that causes a lot of problems obviously not being able to breathe is a really
tough issue but it also causes a hypoxia oxygen starvation of the brain it causes edema's in the
lungs there's a whole there's like so many ways you can die on Everest that it is that's just one
of them the other fun one is I didn't know this but apparently
if you go high enough into the air
you hit what's called the jet stream
which I think I've heard
through meteorology reports for
I'm sorry
we talked about it with the volcanoes as well
because part of the problem
is when the volcano ash has the jet stream
that's when it goes over the whole world
goes everywhere yeah
so they've recorded winds
in the jet stream
on the peak of Everest
at 175 miles per hour
and then after that
the weather up there
is somewhere around negative 30 degrees Fahrenheit
because it's bad
It is really bad.
I hate it.
I hate everything about it.
Those are all things I hate.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, regardless of that, people keep trying to climb it.
So let's get into the first documented version of this.
That happened in 1953.
So this was done by a New Zealander named Sir Edmund Hillary and a Nepalese Sherpa named Tenzing Norgay.
It was around 11.30 a.m. that they summited Mount Everest.
I think it's very romantic to think like.
these two guys just like we're hanging out and tent together and do this. That's not how this works.
Like this is like teams of people that come together to kind of help make this happen.
I have a dumb question. Sure.
I don't even if I want to ask it. Like I guess how do you know that you're at the top?
Like aren't there like other is it just like so super clear that it's at the top?
Because I feel like when I climb mountains here sometimes like obviously like they're not
that tall but they can go up a mountain and you're like, oh, there's one taller right there or like
whatever. Like I guess do they go on like a prescribed path?
So they created the path that is now the prescribed path.
There's a North and South Face, and that's why we have North Face as a brand now.
But that's most possible that.
Oh, that's fun.
But I try to remember the exact name of this thing, but it was called the British did a thing called the Great Chief Survey or Great Survey.
I forgot what it was exactly.
But basically, there was this massive project that the British.
British, the Britain took on to essentially survey all the major geographical territories under
the kingdom.
And actually, yeah, it was kind of under the kingdom because it was partially India as well.
And they basically were able to, from a distance, figure out how tall Mount Everest was
that essentially, like where the peak was and how that peak was the tallest place on Earth.
And so that happened many, many years earlier.
It was like 1850s or something that we actually learned that it was the
tallest spot on Earth.
But that's how they knew this is the peak.
You know, like, we did the measurements.
That's the tallest spot.
Go to that spot, basically.
So, yes, they were the first ones to technically step on the mountain face.
I will say, like, at first I had like these weird colonial thoughts about Edmund Hillary.
And then the more you learn about him, the more you learn about him,
the more you're like, this guy was kind of an awesome dude.
like he was i know it's so interesting because
like
it gave him the opportunity to do what he was wanted to do
right
yeah um wait what year are we in again
1953
wow
yeah
how long it was in how long it was
I thought it was like 1850
yeah I know
but
but there is some theories
that it was actually summited 29 years
earlier so oh i forgot to mention this but apparently the date that this happened was like a few
days before queen elizabeth was going to be going to go through her coronation and become queen
and this news got to her like right before she was about to go through her coronation so that
the first thing he did as at her coronation was announced that the UK has summited mount
Everest so it was like a big hoopty hoopla but there is a theory that 29 years earlier in
1924, the peak had actually been summited, but it was not documented.
So that year, there was a team that included two guys named George Mallory and Andrew
Irvine, and the team attempted its summit twice before a third attempt was made.
Those two times it failed because in one situation, one of the climbers, the lining of
his throat peeled off because of the cold, and he was choking on his own throat.
shoot I hate that that's the worst thing I've ever heard
and the other one went completely blind for three days from snow blindness
so that's why those two failed but Mallory and Irvine decided to attempt a third
attempt on this expedition and on this attempt they were somewhere in the 26,000 foot
range which is called the death zone and that's when the weather picked up they decided
to camp overnight before trying it again in the morning and they never made it back
So we don't know what actually happened.
But what we do know is that in 1999, 1999, so what is that?
75 years after they die, George Mallory's body was found at 26,700 feet.
And it's weird.
His body, he had a puncture wound in his skull.
His right foot was completely shattered and his leg was broke.
What they assume happened was he was trying to come back down.
And so he was doing a controlled slide.
down the side of the mountain with his ice pick behind him kind of serving as like a break essentially from him going all the way down too quick and what they think happened was that he probably skipped that thing on a rock going kind of fast and it bounced up and he hit himself in the head puncturing his head with this thing and then he slid all the way down and broke his leg broke everything and the neurological theory on what happened was that he was probably dead before he even finished going all the way down the mountain essentially
my mom yesterday just told me a crazy story her brother owns a boat in florida and they were boating
through like a place that had low-hanging trees with a friend and a friend got a stick from a tree
through his head on the boat like not through like an already available hole like just like through
his skull and my uncle had to take him to the hospital obviously and he ended up staying with him
for like several months because he had like rehabilitated but he didn't die so he almost gave himself
a lobotomy essentially yeah yeah that crazy it's crazy yeah yeah
I guess your skull's soft than you would think.
So, yes, 1989 is when they found this guy's body.
And some people reach the conclusion that based on some of the evidence from his body,
that he must have been the first one to summit Mount Everest.
The reason was that he was found with no oxygen.
He was not wearing his goggles.
So it means he was coming down at night.
And also, well, the reason he also didn't have oxygen because when you're coming down,
you're trying to offload as much as possible so you can get down as quickly as possible.
And so the auction tanks way of shitload.
And that's why you want to get rid of him.
But he also had carried a picture of his wife, Ruth, for the entire trip.
Because his goal was, when I get to the summit, I want to put the picture of my wife on the summit.
And everybody knew this.
They all talked about it.
It was a known thing.
He did not have the picture with him.
So he must have already done it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But it was undocumented.
So the other guy, Irvine, his body's never been.
found, then he's the one who actually had the cameras on him that would have showed that they
actually summoned it.
They haven't found his body yet, so they don't know.
And so as of now, it's still Norgay and Hillary who summoned it first.
You got to write it down.
Like, if you're doing anything, you're about to die, like, write in a note and put it in
several parts of your body.
Yeah.
Well, he was probably suffering from hypoxia.
So he probably didn't know what was going on by the time he died.
So let's get to climbing Everest today.
So climbing average today kind of sounds more annoying than anything.
There are no guides or tour companies that conduct these expectations.
Wait, there are no guides or tour companies.
I don't know why I wrote that.
There's a million guides in touring companies that do these expeditions.
And the pricing is kind of all over the map.
So the average I found was somewhere around $50,000 to pay to try to summit Everest.
You're not, you're, somebody is not guaranteed.
a lot of people don't but
I saw a range of somewhere
in the $30,000 range I saw one
that was $200,000 to
do this expedition
the $200,000 one
selling more like a luxury vacation than
like a harrowing track. That company is
called Furtt
Furttbock Adventures
so if anybody wants to book a $200,000 expedition
of Everest then you can do it for
through the Furttnbach Adventures
they're not paid
sponsors of this podcast
did you imagine because we know that your listeners are the kind of folks who's been
$200,000 to climb whatever so if you listen to this and you have done that please let us
know because we'd love to know how you found a podcast and can you write us a check
so there's a way to do it cheaper on your own so basically go without an expedition
I'm going to tell you why you shouldn't do sign up for that option later on which it should be
clear I know why yeah but in that situation you can expect
pay somewhere on $20,000.
Most of that seems to be, like, in fees that you pay to the Nepalese government.
So $11,000 is just for the permit to be able to get to base camp in Climb Everest.
Anyways, all of that to say that you are then also going to run an additional cost of $25,000 or so on food and gear, so you can actually climb up to the mountain.
Some places tack on additional $5,000 for a private cook.
And apparently most places advise that you do this because,
was like you spend so much time on the hiking that trying to make food is kind of impossible after
you're done.
How does a cook do it then?
Well, that's all they do, though.
Because like you're not assembling.
They don't hike.
No, they don't hike.
They don't assemble and disassemble tents.
Like, I'm going to explain like what the actual process is of getting up to creating tents.
Like, it is arduous doing it.
And so you have somebody who's dedicated to sit inside a tent chopping cauliflower.
I don't know what they do, but cooking something.
so just chopping collie flowers on my address no big deal all day long so all you do is just chop
cauliflower so the trek itself uh includes walking for about six to eight hours a day in negative
30 degree weather for about two weeks straight so timing wise you have to acclimate to reduce oxygen
so you can't just run up the mountain like you can do it a lot faster if you didn't have to acclimate
but you have to acclimate right so you have to stop in these different checkpoints or what's called
base camps to give your time, give your body time to adjust.
Are those permanent?
So base camp, there's two base camps that are semi permanent.
So they're transitory.
So people, like, if you look at pictures of base camp in Everest, it's not like one tent.
It's like, it's like a refugee camp of people.
And they pack their stuff up and they go.
And then other people show up.
And so it's like a, it's like a transitory thing.
there's not like a permanent station there but it's just like where our base cam happens to be it's about 17,000 feet up yeah so that was the other part of this I want to mention was in addition to walking and climbing you're also constantly assembling and assembling a tent nearly every day that you're not using the time to acclimate to the complete journey takes about six weeks long it starts in a nepoly city called luckla when you land at this airport called the tensing hillary airport which is absolutely
it's considered one of the most dangerous airports in the world it is car so edmund hillary
is the one responsible we're building this thing it's carved into the side of the mountain and an
elevation of nearly 10,000 feet if you look at pictures of it you'll see that if anything goes
wrong during takeoff all you do is go straight down for two miles until you like explode into the
side of the mountain but it's terrifying um from that airport you go to base camp like I
said base camp is going to be 17,000 feet.
And from there, you spend about the next four weeks or so going up and down the mountain,
putting down new camps, putting provisions and food and auction tanks there and doing all
that stuff further and further up.
But you go up and down?
No, you just go there's going out.
Yeah, you're going up.
So you start a base camp, you go up, you stop at a certain elevation.
You establish a new base camp.
Then you go up, establish another base camp.
You go up, establish another base camp.
And then you get to like kind of like the depth zone in.
But what it sounds like when you're in the death,
so you kind of have to go all the way to the top,
and then you have to get back down to sub-26,000 feet.
And that's usually where people end up dying.
But yeah, it's like a four-week-long process of doing this.
If you decide that you want to climb Everest,
you're going to basically join a group of somewhere around 8,800 people
who are also trying to summit the mountain every year.
Those are people trying to summit.
Those are the craziest of the crazy people.
There's about 500 people a day that show up at base camp just to hike.
Basically, they're trying to go 17,000.
feet it's already arduous enough they're going to go back down so that's usually what you're looking at
yeah um there are currently about 330 bodies on everest and they're going to stay there because
trying to reclaim these bodies is another suicide mission so we're going to get into one of the
fun gory stories that persist around it so i'm going to break this down into several things
one i'm going to break down to like famous deaths on everest one i'm going to break down to uh most deaths
in a single day and then the last is going to be like the particularly creepiest story I heard
about what was what happened on Everest before so some more famous tests there are three of them
that I'm going to highlight I'm going to do the previous one of the last so green boots um this is
someone that everybody's heard of green boots if you I'm trying to pay I'll try to paint a visual
picture of this it's a guy laying on his side his legs are elevated and it looks like his
head and lower body or upper body are kind of like angled downward in this little
crevasse area so we don't know who this is we assume yeah we assume that this guy is someone
named oh man swung peli darch door it's totally nailed it but but we don't we don't know
for sure the reason we think it might be this guy is that we know that swang was in a
1996 disaster on
Everest. That's when a Blizzard rolled
in and killed eight people
and nobody's been able to
positively identify this body.
How can that be?
Have they not tried?
Like, how can that be? I don't know if
they've tried or not. Yeah, we don't know.
How can you have a picture of this dead body
as close as I'm seeing this picture
of this dead body and not have like
checked his pockets? Yeah, I don't know.
That's a good point. I don't know.
well i'll describe the last story maybe that'll explain why people don't do this um long story short
is that the the quote i heard is that trying to keep yourself alive on everest at trying to
summit is an extreme challenge trying to think about anything else going on around you is almost
impossible because all your focus is trying to stay alive so um but there have been some some efforts there
So, for example, sorry, going back to who this guy is,
the reason they assume it's this guy is because there was,
there was, he was spotted late May.
So the blizzard hit like May 9th, late May was the first time
somebody was trying to summit and they spotted this body there.
And they're like, the only thing that's happened has been this blizzard.
So it's got to be this guy.
This is the one one of the guy that's on account for.
There's other theories that he's another person as well,
but that that was like disproven.
so you look like you were to say something um no that that was my question was like they must
have a list of people he could be because people on account for right right right exactly exactly
so um in 2014 his body was basically just like kicked over and relocated to fall down the
side of them they're like because they're trying to keep these dead bodies out of view of climbers
and they just, like, rolled them away.
They're like, just do the middle effort possible
and get this thing out of the way, and they did that.
There's another person there named Sleeping Beauty.
That's her nickname.
Her real name is Francis Arseniov.
She died in May of 1998 while attempting the Summit Everest
with her husband.
On their way down, the two somehow separated.
I keep picturing just, like, crazy snowfall
and you're just going blind from, like, snow hitting you from every angle
while you're freezing, and that's probably how you end up getting separated.
did but she was separated from her husband her husband's name is sergey and
sergey made it to base camp um his wife francis did not another team of climbers came across
francis and they tried to carry her down before they were like this is too much this is too difficult
we have to leave you they're like that's how it is it's so do or die up there it sounds like um
she's just laying there in her coat yeah yeah so they left her on the mountain and
witnessed uh witnesses say that her husband was ascending
asked them as they were going down to base camp, presumably to go find his wife.
She ended up staying alive for about another day before dying of exposure, frostbite,
hypoxia, all of it.
A year later, Sergei's body was discovered having died from a fall trying to climb to get
to Francis.
She was left there.
So there's pictures of her.
Have you seen this?
I'm looking at a picture of her and her purple coat just laying there.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's it.
She was left laying on her side for about nine years before, again, another group of climbers just push her off the side because they were like, this is, we need to stop.
We don't want to look at this anymore, basically.
Wait, so the first climbers that tried to bring her down, was she still alive or no?
She was still alive.
Yeah.
Oh, no.
Yeah.
But they were like, it's too much.
Yeah.
So, I mean, you're carrying oxygen tanks.
No, I know.
I know, but this is terrible.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So the creepiest one to be is, don't look rough yet.
I want to get your reaction when you look rough.
Her name is the German woman.
Well, her nickname is a German woman.
Her real name is Anilor Schmats.
And this one's like the creepiest me, mostly because of what she looks like.
So scary.
So she was a German woman.
She down Everest, obviously.
She grew tired from the climb.
And basically, the Sherpa is we're telling her, we can't stop.
We have, there's windows of time that you're supposed to make it between.
camps. Like, it's all planned out so that you're not out in the open when the weather and the
winds become the worst. And she was like, I need to stop and rest. The shirt was like, please don't,
please don't, please don't. She did it anyways. The Sherpa did his credit, saved with her long enough to
where he actually suffered from frostbite and lost some fingers as a result of this. But her last
words where the Sherpa left was just asking her for water. She said water, water, and then she died.
that was on October 2nd of
1979
she died sitting up
and her body froze basically in that posture
on the southern route up the mountain
so pictures of her
she has this like a mummified face
it looks really scary
yeah look her up now
a lot of these are tell me
I shouldn't look at it
view image
oh god
is that creepy
it is not oh my gosh
her face looks like the most terrifying
face I've ever seen in my whole entire
fucking life. So what they were saying was
before her body decomposed and her flesh
kind of turned, whatever that is.
Oh my God.
They said that her eyes were wide open.
So you're so scary. It's so freaking scary.
Dude, this is on like the main trailer.
This is not like, she's not like hidden. Like she was on,
you're walking by these bodies as you're going
up to the summit it's like crazy i i i i am literally right now having nightmares and i'm not even
asleep but the way but we can describe the way she looks so she's leaning against a backpack in that
picture um and yeah the last the last time they saw her she was like wide open her eyes were
wide open and she was just like frozen in time like right there and then obviously you see what
you see now which her face just fucking peeling off oh my god well that was a
worse than I ever could have imagined. Apparently
if her body is also not there anymore, but
that wasn't because people moved her. I think that people were too
scared to move her. I read so many reports of people
coming up to her body being like, this has to be like a tent or something.
Like, oh my God, that's a woman.
That is the scariest thing to see on a hike.
That is the scary. Yeah, you turn around. If you see that on the hike,
just turn around. But apparently the winds are pretty harsh there.
And so her body ends up ended up getting hit by some wind
and just tumbling the other direction. So she's
still in the mountain. She's still somewhere. Like,
that same body in that exact same posture frozen exactly like that is somewhere on that mountain
are there any animals there no right so there are not at the elevation that she would be at
but they're down lower down the mountain under base camp there are like yaks and stuff like that
they found um one species a black spider that was able to survive like above base camp but that's it
like that's all there is like i don't know how that thing eats so um um
On the deadliest expedition, this would be an avalanche that occurred in 2015.
So this is pretty straightforward.
It was April 25th, 2015.
A 7.8 magnitude earthquake hit Nepal was fucking huge.
And that triggered a massive avalanche on Everest.
The avalanche essentially killed 24 people and injured 61 others.
So, like, again, most of those people, their bodies are still on the, like, they're all there.
Like, everybody's still there.
So the creepiest story, in my opinion, was.
was actually a guy named David Sharp.
And you're probably going to recognize this one because this happened fairly recently
in May of 2006 and it got like a ton of media attention.
So this was a Brit trying to summit Everest and he tried doing so before.
He tried in 2003 and failed to summit in that endeavor.
He eventually suffered some frostby that led to him losing some toes in 2003.
He tried again in 2004.
But for reasons that like feel like stupid to me, he was really answering.
using supplementary oxygen.
His take on it was if you use supplementary oxygen, then it's just a hike.
But it's not a challenge if you don't.
But it's like, but your brain doesn't, your brain doesn't know that.
Your organs don't know that.
Your organs just know that they're not getting oxygen.
So he tried again.
So in 2006, he decided to do it unguided.
So he went without a Sherpa, without a guy, without an expedition party that he was joining.
And on that attempt, he got to about 28,000 feet, which was.
exactly where green boots is and he sat down in that crevasse next to him and just like was shaking
and just like sitting there like unable to continue on it is assumed that due to the lack of oxygen because
of the lack of having the supplemental tanks with him it's assumed that he suffered from
altitude sickness which can result in swelling of the brain fluid building up in the lungs
confusion like a general hangover feeling and add to that the fact that it was also the
coldest night of the season that night and others around him mostly assumed that he wasn't
going to make it so about 30 to 40 people walked right by David as he was like dying on this hill
next to this provost next to green roots and they didn't help nobody helped him um the media in general
was pretty hard on them but like I said one climber said that uh that at 8,000 meters high
it's incredibly hard to keep yourself alive much less keep somebody else alive and so nobody
Right, and it's like, it sucks because, like, it's not fairtransibility that he's an idiot.
Yeah, yeah.
And, you know, one thing I read, well, two things.
One is Edmund Hillary himself was incredibly critical by hiking community, saying,
summiting isn't as important as saving someone's life, which I would agree with.
But then his own mom.
And also, they're putting themselves at risk.
Yeah, they're putting themselves at risk.
And his own mom was like, I don't blame them for not helping him.
but it's also worth noting that the general theory now is that he probably would have died anyways
so what probably would have happened is the lack of oxygen would have already damaged his organs
and his brain what probably would have happened if they gave him oxygen was a they would have risked
their own lives and b you probably would just got into basing him and died anyways that's probably
what would have happened because he was like so hurt yeah exactly so that's really through
as far as far as that guy's concerned but yeah people were still climbing people are still going
up to Everest. Apparently, it's not even considered the most intense hike out there out of the
large what's called the 8Kers, which is 8,000 meter and up mountains. K2 is presumably more difficult
and more challenging as a mountain climber to actually get up on top of. But yeah, people are still
doing it. People are still dying on it. And I assume they're going to keep doing it. It does feel
so much less scary to me than trying to go down, like the Mariana Trench or the Titanic or something.
Yeah. I mean, like, did you watch the deepest breath?
No.
It's like documentary about people who do like the like deep diving without air and they dive so deep that scuba divers can't save them because scuba divers have to like go up slowly.
And they do like one deep breath and they dive all the way down and then they like remember they didn't go up and people die all the time and it's terrible.
Also a sport I don't need to be a part of.
Yeah, I know I definitely remember that to do that.
I was also so I know people who didn't die.
So I feel like I told you this before.
This is so stupid, but when I was painting my guest bathroom, I watched two Mount Everest movies.
I remember I remember I think about Mount Everest.
But I watched like the dramatization and the documentary.
Do you remember that guy in the 90s who had had to grow a nose on his forehead?
Yeah, yeah.
That guy, I feel like I remember when he was on the cover of people with like his, his black nose that was like rotting off from frostbite.
And they grew him a nose on his forehead and twisted it down.
I remember that.
Yeah.
You remember?
Yeah, you're right.
It was it was they cut it here.
And they tested it all.
Yeah, wow.
And that was like a thing.
Yeah, man, it's very dangerous.
And it's such a weird, rich person's sport, right?
Does anyone, who are these people?
So a lot of them, yeah.
So there's a lot of people who fall in the category of like positions and lawyers and business people.
There's a lot of engineers to get into stuff like this.
there's the the 2015 avalanche killed like a pretty well-known engineer he was a executive at google
in charge of like their ex program um i don't even know if that's still around but um so so it's that
it's that caliber of person right it's it's like you have to be rich to get into this it's like
there's no poor people into a polo or like yachting right like yeah but i guess it's like i mean how much
money does Nepal make from it?
Yeah, yeah, I mean, look, like the Sherpas, like, yeah, like, I mean, it is a, it is a huge
industry there. And so it's probably, like, a net positive overall for them, despite
the fact that they have to look at dead bodies constantly, but, um, are they like, are they, like,
is something about, are they all the same? Are the Sherpa's all, like, from the same group of
people, like, have, are they able to handle the high altitude better than everyone else, you know,
like people are not from that area?
like they're from there so they're like used to it so that helps them i'm sure yeah so part of reading
about david's situation was they mentioned how what he was trying to do would have been a challenge
for even a sherpa so they rank it that way it's like a sherpa just like is easy breezy my life
is on this mountain whatever um but yeah so they're they're much more acclimated to it yeah
i mean their airport starts at 10,000 feet oh what's the name of the airport again i'm gonna google it
Tenzing Hillary Airport.
Yeah, like, at first, at first I was like, when I started like thinking about this, I was like,
God, these people are idiots and like Hillary is probably terrible and all that.
Then the more I research, like, okay, like.
Yeah.
I mean, it is like legitimately risking your life.
Questionable why you would.
I wouldn't for this.
But, you know, to your point, don't yuck someone's yums, I guess.
Yeah, I mean, if they're not hurting anyone but themselves, you know, it's cool.
if they do it and but i just the the the leaving the the the dead bodies there is is is
really hard to to like i don't know wrap your head around yeah like how like none of my
hobbies involve walking past the people who tried to do it before and died yeah you know like
that just is a lot and it's when you see that you're like what it's wrong with you but also like
who cares yeah if they want to do it and
it's the same thing that i mean like bringing up the titanic situation like yeah you're
just going down to see a grave where the body just happened to have been consumed by the
elements but like that's that's what you're doing you're like so i watched this like when i was
watching all those disaster movies and i was thinking about yellowstone exploiting there was
one where the i can't remember which one it was but where like the people were on these like big
arcs that they had like to go to to like try to stay alive like the rich people were on them because
they knew the world was ending and the world was ending and it was shifting so quickly that they were like
on a boat and the boat was going to hit mount Everest and it was just like really dumb but
they were like how could we how could there be a mountain this high and they're like it's not
Everest and it was like a big flood and like a thing that was 2012
was it 2012 yeah yes okay okay um yeah that was so stupid
Oh, the earth was shifted.
Oh, because then there was, like, that Russian and then, like, his, like, girlfriend.
And then she had, yeah.
Yeah.
And then, like, the people who you're supposed to think are of the, like, the main characters of that movie, like, do something that makes a bunch of people die.
Right about that part?
And then it's okay.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Anyway.
Yeah.
But, like, where does the water come from?
Like, how do you get enough water to fill about Everest?
Like, it makes no sense.
Like, we have a lot of very serious questions.
about the truth behind the movie 2012.
It's good, though.
That's so funny.
That's so funny.
Yeah.
Sweet.
That's my story.
Hope people liked it.
I'm looking for some fun, cool ideas.
So anybody has a cool idea for me.
I will take cool ideas.
Yeah.
What kind of ideas do you want?
More murder stuff, but I'm kind of getting gassed out on murder.
Because there's only so many crazy people in the world
and so many ways you can say,
and then he cut her head off, you know?
Fair.
So.
I think there's one that someone sent to us on Instagram,
may make sure I send it to you in our messages.
That would be a fun one.
Yeah.
Sweet.
Well, write to us, please,
do you know, fill to pott at gmail.com.
Give us your ideas, your suggestions,
anything you're thinking about,
want to be, want us to be thinking about.
And by the time you hear this, Taylor will be on her way to see the incredible Dan
Carlin.
Oh, my goodness.
I am just wildly excited.
So I will keep everyone posted.
And if you're coming, I can't wait to see you.
Love it.
Love it.
Awesome.
Thanks, Taylor.
We'll go ahead and cut this off.
Thank you.