Read Flying Off Everest Online
Authors: Dave Costello
“I am not special,” he says later, reflecting on his and Babu’s expedition, thinking of how a kiwi farmer who couldn’t swim and a kayaker who couldn’t climb somehow managed the impossible. How they flew off Everest and then paddled to the sea.
“I set a challenge for myself, and that’s the important thing,” Lakpa says, interpreting both the meaning and reasoning behind what he and Babu had done. “I don’t want to tell my children what to do with their lives. I want to show them. I want to show them that whatever they want to do—they must do it.”
This book exists because of the amazing feats, generosity, insight, and patience of others—many others. First and foremost, I am indebted to both Lakpa Tsheri Sherpa and Sano Babu Sunuwar, who, after climbing Everest, flying off of it, and paddling to the ocean, somehow managed to not only survive, but sit cheerily through countless hours of tedious interviews with me. It is a feat beyond reckoning. Their kindness, patience, and bravery know no bounds.
Almost everyone included within the pages of this book went out of their way to assist in the making of it, particularly (in alphabetical order by first name) Alex Treadway, Balkrishna Basel (Baloo), Charley Gaillard, David Arrufat, Erik Boomer, Hamilton Pevec, Kelly and Nim Magar, Kili Sherpa, Kimberly Phinney, Krishna Sunuwar, Mahendra Thapa, Pete Astles, Phu Dorji Sherpa (Ang Bhai), Ryan Waters, Shri Hari Shresthra, Susmita Sunuwar, Wildes Antonioli (Mukti), and Yanjee Sherpa. This book would not have been possible without their assistance.
Many people not included within the text also played a vital role in my ability to report it, including (in alphabetical order by first name) Anup Gurung, David Michael Smith, Grayson Schaffer, Lalit Tamang, Mark Gunlogson, and Sagar Poudyal. Each provided valuable logistical support and sound practical advice that I would have been lost without. To Sagar Poudyal, in particular, I owe an extreme debt of gratitude for helping me arrange numerous key interviews in Nepal, oftentimes bringing me to them himself, with me sitting white-knuckled on the back of his motorcycle. No words would be on these pages without him.
This book wouldn’t be what it is without the help of my fellow writers Eugene Buchanan, Joe Glickman, and Jon Turk, who all helped me in drafting the initial proposal. Similarly, I owe many thanks to
Falcon’s former senior acquisitions editor John Burbidge, who initially accepted it and had enough faith in the story and myself to send me to Nepal to report it. Thanks are also owed to editor Katie Benoit and copyeditor Sarah Zink, who significantly polished the story and consistently provided sound practical advice through each stage of the drafting process. Additional thanks to Jeff Moag, editor at
Canoe & Kayak
magazine, for publishing the first article I wrote about Lakpa and Babu’s expedition.
I, of course, was influenced greatly by the published work of others, namely (in alphabetical order by title)
Buried in the Sky: The Extraordinary Story of the Sherpa Climbers on K2’s Deadliest Day,
by Peter Zuckerman and Amanda Padoan;
Dark Summit: The True Story of Everest’s Most Controversial Season,
by Nick Heil;
Fallen Giants: A History of Himalayan Mountaineering from the Age of Empire to the Age of Extremes,
by Maurice Isserman and Stewart Weaver;
Ganga: A Journey Down the Ganges River,
by Julian Crandall Hollick;
Hell or High Water: Surviving Tibet’s Tsangpo River,
by Peter Heller;
The Himalayan Database: The Expedition Archives of Elizabeth Hawley,
by Elizabeth Hawley;
Himalayan Whitewater,
by Peter Knowles and Darren Clarkson-King;
In Cold Blood,
by Truman Capote;
Into Thin Air,
by Jon Krakauer;
Life and Death on Mt. Everest: Sherpas and Himalayan Mountaineering,
by Sherry B. Ortner;
Nepal in Transition: From People’s War to Fragile Peace,
by Sebastian von Einsiedel, David M. Malone, and Suman Pradhan;
The Snow Leopard,
by Peter Matthiessen; and
The State and Society in Nepal: Historical Foundations and Contemporary Trends,
by Prayag Raj Sharma.
During the drafting process I came to rely on the clear-sighted advice of several trusted readers: Dave Shively, managing editor at
Canoe & Kayak,
provided remarkably detailed line edits on each chapter draft; Kyle Dickman, a remarkably talented writer
,
read through each chapter and provided consistent direction; Brandon Keinath, a wizard by all standards, not only provided thoughtful line edits, but helped keep me in good humor—a great trick when writing your first
book; Guenther Hobart looked very closely at every word, whether I wanted him to or not…
Heartfelt thanks are owed to my parents, Tom and Wendy, as well as my brother and sister-in-law, Ryan and Rachel, who have always stood by me and supported me in my own adventures.
Lastly, I’d like to thank the love of my life, Natasha, who has proved to be not only my harshest critic, but also my best editor, staunchest supporter, and greatest friend. This was all for you, you know.
acclimatization,
52
,
79
,
83
,
86
–
87
Action Asia,
120
Ang Bhai
altitude sickness,
85
equipment,
82
Everest, ascent of,
xii
–
xiii
,
85
–
86
,
95
Antonioli, Wildes (Mukti),
101
,
115
–
17
,
127
–
30
,
174
,
182
,
185
Arnette, Alan,
86
Arrufat, David
expedition, end of,
179
moviemaking plans,
115
–
16
,
127
–
30
,
182
,
185
Arrufat, Wildes.
See
Antonioli, Wildes (Mukti)
Association of Paragliding Pilots and Instructors (APPI),
41
,
87
,
121
–
23
,
128
–
29
,
183
,
185
Astles, Pete,
36
–
39
,
42
,
43
–
44
,
117
–
18
,
132
,
137
Barish, David,
47
Basel, Balkrishna (Baloo),
81
,
87
–
88
bergschrund,
84
Bernbaum, Edwin,
64
Boivin, Jean-Marc,
xiii
,
45
,
46
,
47
,
50
,
105
Buddhism, Tibetan,
64
Chimborazo,
68
Chu, Nima Wang,
xii
,
77
–
80
,
85
–
86
,
110
–
11
,
112
Climbing
magazine,
48
Colonica, Craig,
49
Cook, Frederick A.,
65
Coupe Icare (Icarus Cup),
115
–
17
,
129
,
183
,
184
Cross Country,
112
,
123
,
179
,
183
–
84
D’Arrigo, Angelo,
105
Dead Man’s Eddy,
136
,
137
–
38
,
141
–
44
Delsalle, Didier,
106
documentary,
115
–
17
,
127
–
30
,
182
–
83
,
184
–
85
“Downwind Dave,”
47
Elizabeth II (Queen of England),
73
Erroz, Matias,
xiii
Everest, Mount
ascent, first successful,
72
–
74
British attempts to climb,
66
,
68
–
74
expedition costs, typical,
55
weather window for climbing,
45
,
83
–
84
,
92
–
93
Everest Base Camp
Exodus Rafting,
34
Falconer, Squash,
45
,
52
,
76
,
86
,
87
,
91
–
92
Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI),
106
Free Flight International Film Festival,
115
–
17
,
129
,
183
,
184
funding,
56
,
77
,
81
,
124
,
167
,
180
.
See also
sponsors
Gaillard, Charley,
33
–
37
,
39
–
41
,
53
,
130
,
145
Ganesh Kayak Shop,
33
,
35
,
37
,
41
,
53
,
130
–
31
Ganga, Mother (Hindu goddess),
158
–
60
Ganges River
human bodies floating down,
161
geology of Indian subcontinent,
61
–
62
Gevaux, Pierre,
47
glacial lake outburst flood (GLOF),
135
–
36
Gondwana,
61
GPS tracker,
59
,
81
,
101
–
2
,
121
,
144
,
158
Gurumg, Devika,
128
Hanuman Airlines
(documentary),
115
–
17
,
127
–
30
,
182
–
83
,
184
–
85
High Altitude Dreams (HAD),
29
–
30
,
55
Himalaya,
56
,
62
,
89
.
See also
Everest, Mount
Himalayan River Girls,
146
Himalayan Trailblazer,
76
,
77
,
78
,
114
,
180
Himalayan Trust,
22
Himalayan Whitewater Challenge,
39
,
53
,
146
–
47
Hitch, Rick,
87
Honnold, Alex,
176
Icarus Cup (Coupe Icare),
115
–
17
,
129
,
183
,
184
India
kayaking in,
153
–
54
,
155
–
58
,
161
–
64
,
166
–
68
,
169
–
70
Indian subcontinent geology,
61
–
62
International Mountain Guides (IMG),
82
,
86
,
87
,
108
Isserman, Maurice,
89
K2,
46
kayaking
in India,
153
–
54
,
155
–
58
,
161
–
64
,
166
–
68
,
169
–
70
Knowles, Peter,
135
Koirala, B. P.,
64
lunar eclipse, full,
163
Macartney-Snape, Tim,
168
Magar, Nim,
53
–
54
,
124
,
130
,
137
–
38
,
142
,
155
mani
stones,
78
Mauna Kea,
67
Maya, Ang,
124
McKinley, Mount,
68
McLean, Leonardo,
xiii
Mercer, Mount,
47
Miura, Yuichiro,
90
Morris, James,
73
Mountain Blackstone,
77
Mountain Institute,
64
Mountain Professionals,
76
mountains, tallest,
51
,
62
,
67
–
68
movie,
115
–
17
,
127
–
30
,
182
–
83
,
184
–
85
Namgyal Monastery Audio Visual Archive Center,
128
Nanga Parbat,
62
National Geographic Adventure,
181
–
82
National Geographic
Adventurer of the Year
Nepal
child brides,
145
economics,
10
North Pole,
65
Northwest Mountaineering Journal,
47
–
48
Odell, Noel,
71
Paddle Nepal,
53
,
54
,
117
–
18
,
130
,
147
,
155
paddles, loss and recovery of,
149
,
152
–
53
Pahari, Madhukar,
118
,
130
,
132
,
140
,
142
–
43
,
155
paragliding