K2 2025 Coverage: Risk Taking Case Study

K2 2025 Coverage: Risk Taking Case Study

Released Sunday, 10th August 2025
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K2 2025 Coverage: Risk Taking Case Study

K2 2025 Coverage: Risk Taking Case Study

K2 2025 Coverage: Risk Taking Case Study

K2 2025 Coverage: Risk Taking Case Study

Sunday, 10th August 2025
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With teams still hoping to summit, popular American climber Ryan Mitchell, Phurba Sherpa, Terray Sylvester, ⁠Madison Mountaineering⁠ lead guide, and several other Sherpas ended their expedition after climbing to Camp 1. Terray felt the rockfall was too dangerous to continue despite several teams already higher on the mountain, hoping to summit on August 11.
Only a few teams remain on the mountain, each with a few climbers, including a few independent ones foregoing supplemental oxygen and HAP/Sherpa support like Czech climbers ⁠Jan Polacek⁠, ⁠Lenka Polackova⁠, and Pakistani ⁠Sohail Sakhi⁠. French climber ⁠Charles Page⁠, guided by Vinajak Malla, was last reported at 7661 m/25,134 feet, higher than the elevation of traditional Camp 4 of 25,080'/7600m as of August 11, 2:00 a.m. local time per his ⁠Inreach⁠.
Regardless of classification, they must work together to set the ropes, break the trail, and reach the summit. Then, they must descend, which might be one of the riskiest in recent history. Remaining teams include Seven Summits Treks, Imagine Nepal, and Elete Expeditions. As of yesterday, the fixed ropes are 200 meters above Camp 3, around 7400 meters or 24,300 feet. With Page's report, they are obviously higher now as they are on their summit push. Teams expect to summit on Monday, August 11.
Climb On!
Alan
Memories are Everything
⁠https://www.alanarnette.com/blog/2025/08/10/k2-2025-coverage-risk-taking-case-study/⁠

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