Hope is
like a bird that senses the dawn and carefully starts to sing while it is still dark
- Unknown.
The Times
May 17, 2006
Legless
mountaineer makes it up Everest - thanks to the spare part in his pack
From Bernard Lagan in Sydney
A NEW ZEALAND mountaineer who lost his legs to frostbite in a
climbing accident 24 years ago has become the first double amputee to scale Mount Everest
Mark Inglis, 47, reached the 8,850m (29,035ft) summit of the
world’s highest mountain after 40 days of tough climbing during which he snapped one of his artificial legs in two.
He spoke to his wife, Anne, in New Zealand by satellite phone
from the summit. “He only had time to say, ‘I’m at Camp 4 — I did it’, and the phone cut off,”
she said. He told a New Zealand television station that it was “bloody cold, bloody hard”.
Mrs Inglis said yesterday that her husband had dreamt for most
of his life about reaching the summit of Everest and had regarded as “a minor hiccup” the mishap at the end of
April in which he snapped the limb while climbing the North Col of the peak.
A fixed-line anchor that he was using pulled out of the ice,
leaving him sliding uncontrollably down a rope, sometimes upside down. Mr Inglis stopped the slide but noticed that his right
artificial limb had broken. Fortunately, he was carrying a spare set of legs and repair equipment.
Mr Inglis began climbing in his teens in the Southern Alps of
New Zealand. He lost his legs below the knee to frostbite in 1982 after being trapped for two weeks by severe storms in an
ice cave on Aoraki (Mount Cook), the highest peak in New Zealand.
He and a companion were barely alive when they were taken off
the mountain. He earned a degree in human biochemistry, became a research scientist and then a leading winemaker. At the 2000
Paralympics in Sydney he won a silver medal in cycling.
Before leaving for Tibet Mr Inglis said that having artificial
legs made climbing about 20 per cent more difficult, but that there were physiological advantages because he had less muscle
and a proportionately larger blood volume.
This ensured that his body was warmer at higher altitudes and
received more oxygen.
In 2004 he became the second double-amputee, after the Briton
Norman Croucher, to climb the sixth-highest mountain in the world, Cho Oyu, 48km (30 miles) west of Everest. Mr Inglis wrote
on his website that that ascent had emboldened him to tackle the ultimate peak.
Last night Mrs Inglis said: “He’s incredible. He
has dreamt of this all his life, probably. He’s over the moon. They didn’t expect to do it this early, so Mark
will be stoked. I imagine they will be having a few whiskies.”
Sir Edmund Hillary, the New Zealander who conquered Mount Everest
in 1953, was among the first to send congratulations to Mr Inglis.
Helen Clark, the Prime Minister of New Zealand and an amateur
climber, said that Mr Inglis’s feat would tell others with disabilities that their ambitions should never be limited.
MAKING IT TO THE TOP
1975 Junko Tabei, of Japan, becomes the first woman to reach
summit of Everest
1980 Reinhold Messner, of Italy, is first alone and without the
aid of artificial oxygen
1998 Tom Whittaker, a Briton, is first amputee
2001 Erik Weihenmayer, an American,is the first blind person
2003 Yuichiro Miura, of Japan, is oldest person to reach the
summit, aged 70
Source: www.EverestHistory.com and www.Guinnessworldrecords.com
No.72 WINS HANDS DOWN The
Metro 22.5.06
Double amputee Shaho Qadir completes the final 10m of a 10km run on his
hands after taking off his artificial legs yesterday. The Kurdistan athlete was among 25,000 competitors who took part in
a rain lashed Manchester.