A Day to Die For: 1996: Everest's Worst Disaster - One Survivor's Personal Journey to Uncover the Truth (45 page)

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Authors: Graham Ratcliffe

Tags: #General, #Biographies & Memoirs, #Memoirs, #Specific Groups, #Biographies, #Travel, #Nepal, #Adventurers & Explorers, #Asia, #Mountaineering, #Education & Reference, #Mountain Climbing, #Sports & Outdoors

BOOK: A Day to Die For: 1996: Everest's Worst Disaster - One Survivor's Personal Journey to Uncover the Truth
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That said, it is inconceivable that Henry would have stuck to our agreement to go on 11 May had he subsequently been made aware that the weather was going to deteriorate badly that day. This agreement was referred to by Paul Deegan in his article that appeared in the British Mountaineering Council’s official journal
High
, August 1996, issue number 165.
Paul wrote:
Based partly on the report of deep snow, Rob Hall and Scott Fischer (leaders of the Adventure Consultants and Mountain Madness expeditions respectively) together hatched a master plan. Their two large, well-equipped, strongly supported teams would combine forces to summit on the 10th, fixing the South East Ridge above the South Col as they went to make it ‘client-proof’. Henry agreed not to clutter the route with our team on the same day but instead slip in their wake on the 11th. On paper it made a lot of sense. A large body of people to break the hitherto unbroken trail to the top, giving smaller teams (like ours) a realistic chance once the route had been breached.
From the book by Brigitte Muir,
The Wind in My Hair
:
They [Rob and Scott] decided that they would summit on 10 May, a date which had been auspicious for Rob in the past, and asked all the others to follow one day behind, to ‘avoid traffic jams high on the mountain’. There were rumours of deep snow, which a couple of renegade groups had encountered on their – failed – summit bids in the last few days. So of course it made sense to someone like Henry, who was an old mate of both Rob and Scott, to comply with their wishes. Their teams of Sherpas were much bigger than ours, and would trench a route to the summit for all to enjoy afterwards. In theory. I was a bit reluctant to have to follow orders, and from the two most expensive trips on the mountain, but I certainly did not feel like going for the summit with forty-odd people, most of whom would probably be very slow and hard to overtake.
However, it is highly unlikely that Rob and Scott knew, at this point in time, that a storm was expected to hit on 11 May, as they were only receiving five- or six-day forecasts.
5 May
The Imax team left Base Camp to move up to Camp 2.
6 May
Rob’s and Scott’s teams moved up from Base Camp to Camp 2, where the Imax team were spending a second night. While here, their respective Base Camps will have radioed them with the updated forecasts, both of which now covered up until at least the 11th. These will have showed the wind increasing steadily over the 9th and 10th, and a storm hitting on the 11th.
At this time, either Rob or Scott could have easily radioed their Base Camp and had a message passed to our team, advising us to wait because they had information that suggested an incoming storm. They did not. This may have been because at this point we could have easily rearranged our schedule and moved our summit attempt forward one day, to 10 May. This opportunity would have lain open to us until the afternoon of 7 May.
7 May
The Imax team headed up to Camp 3 in readiness for their summit bid on the 9th. Rob and Scott spent a second night in Camp 2.
8 May
At Camp 3, David Breashears and Ed Viesturs got up in the morning to see the wind blowing high on the South East Ridge. Their observations supported the information in the forecasts: that the weather was deteriorating. Perhaps it began to happen more quickly than they had hoped. Their instincts told them the weather was not settled enough. They were utilising the forecasts more wisely, by adding into the equation their observations of the weather conditions they could see around them. They decided to head down and wait.
The Imax team coming down passed Rob’s and Scott’s teams, who’d made an early start from Camp 2 to move up to Camp 3. They explained to Rob, Scott and some of their guides that they didn’t like the look of the weather higher up. These were the same conditions that Rob and Scott could see, yet these two leaders chose not to revise their plans and carried on up, appearing to be totally reliant on their interpretation of the forecast, one which suggested to them that the storm would hit on the 11th, after they had summited on the 10th. It seemed to be utilised by them as a method of confirmation for the date they’d chosen. In some blinkered fashion, it reaffirmed their belief in 10 May being a fortuitous day.
The question has to be asked: if Rob and Scott had not held the forecast would they have continued up? Or would they have used the experience they’d gathered over many years and followed the Imax team back down?
While this was happening, our team was climbing up from Base Camp to Camp 2. This positioned us one day behind Rob and Scott for our summit bid on 11 May.
Henry had also moved up to Camp 2, although he was not feeling well and spent much of his time in his tent wrapped up in bed. He’d brought with him a radio to oversee our attempt.
9 May
On the morning of 9 May, we left Camp 2 to climb up to Camp 3.
At the same time, Rob’s and Scott’s teams left Camp 3 for the South Col, where they arrived several hours later. During the course of the afternoon, wind speeds at this higher elevation picked up to in excess of 60 mph.
Rob’s and Scott’s teams, along with Makalu Gau and three Sherpas from the Taiwanese team, left the South Col shortly before midnight to begin their summit attempt. There was a lull in the weather.
10 May
We delayed our scheduled early departure from Camp 3 until after the midday radio call, to see if the weather improved; it did not. Two hours prior to this, Michael Groom had suggested to Rob that they turn back because of increasing wind speeds, but they continued up. They were at the South Summit, at 28,700 feet.
Some or all of the Danes from Mal Duff’s team had already started to move up to Camp 3 for their summit bid on 12 May. However, on hearing the strength of the winds high up, they quickly decided to abandon any idea of an attempt and descended to Camp 2 to wait for better conditions.
We arrived on the South Col during the early evening – in my case at around 6.30 p.m., much later than was normal. Anatoli, who had arrived back onto the South Col at 5 p.m. from his successful summit attempt, saw one of our Sherpas but no climbers.
The storm that had begun higher up during the course of the afternoon now detonated into full force as it descended onto the South Col: a deadly combination of gale-force winds and blizzard conditions.
Unbeknown to us, Rob Hall, Doug Hansen and Andy Harris were battling to survive near the South Summit, Scott Fischer and Makalu Gau were near collapse 1,200 feet above the South Col, and a group of seven clients, two guides and two Sherpas had formed a huddle little more than 150 yards from our tent after becoming hopelessly lost in the blizzard. There were rescue attempts made through the night, but through a twist of fate none were made by our team.
Michael Groom, who would become part of the huddle, had got his radio to work around mid evening, and Stuart Hutchison answered. It was Stuart who went out into the storm, time and time again, to try to guide them in.
Stuart was sharing a tent with Jon Krakauer that night. Unlike Jon, he’d not summited but had turned around two hours earlier at 11.30 a.m. from 28,000 feet. Rob had told him that the summit was still three hours away, a conservative estimate that put the top well beyond the 1 p.m. cut-off time he’d set in his mind.
In his book
Sheer Will
, Michael describes how, in the early hours of 11 May and close to complete exhaustion, he and a few who could still walk eventually managed to find Camp 4 on the South Col:
There was a long moment of disbelief on both sides as I crouched outside the door belonging to Stuart and Jon. Did they know who the ice-crusted apparition was? Or was I the one that was dreaming? I am not sure if I spilled out the speech that I had so carefully rehearsed in my mind during those crazy hours wandering around the Col. If I did say something, it probably sounded like a drunken slur. Whatever I said, I hoped it gave some accurate directions to help find Beck, Yasuko and the others.
I was convinced that as a result of whatever conversations took place between us, rescuers would be rounded up to help me get Beck and Yasuko back into camp.
This conversation was confirmed by Hutchison, who is quoted as saying about Michael Groom:
He was able to communicate clearly, but it required an agonal effort, like a dying man’s last words. ‘You have to get some Sherpas. Send them out for Beck and Yasuko.’ And then he pointed toward the Kangshung side of the Col.
Only moments after raising this alarm, Michael found himself outside another of the tents. ‘I yelled for help and Frank [Fischbeck] responded from inside the tent . . . Frank operated with the efficiency of a battlefield medic and pulled me inside the tent. It was at that point I gave up trying.’
Reflecting on these events, Michael wrote:
It is my understanding that after alerting Stuart he set out alone to find Beck and Yasuko but once again, like so many times before, he found himself in danger of becoming hopelessly lost in blizzard conditions . . .
I found out these rescue attempts were being made when I regained some degree of consciousness, and I was crushed by a heavy weight of guilt as I lay incapacitated in my tent. No amount of persuasion or money had made Stuart, Ang Dorje or Lhakpa Chhiri [the two Sherpas who’d headed back up on the morning of 11 May in an attempt to rescue Rob Hall] do what they were doing, it was their nature to do so.
Anatoli also went out into the storm several times and successfully rescued some of the stricken climbers. He had been alerted as to where survivors lay by Neal Beidleman, who had staggered into camp with Michael Groom. Unfortunately, Anatoli and Stuart did not know of each other’s efforts and so remained uncoordinated.
11 May
Our early-morning radio call and the subsequent check around the other tents on the South Col led to confusion as to who, if anyone, was missing. I spoke with Henry on the radio and was asked to bring our youngest team member, Mark Pfetzer and his designated Sherpa, Jabion, down from the South Col. All three of us departed within the hour. Accounts say that the camp on the South Col was devastated and in tatters. This is not true. Unaware of the disaster at the time, I took several photographs before I left. One photograph is of the tents on the South Col, another is of Mark, while the penultimate one captures the South Summit with the wind blasting off it. In the very last frame there is a Himalayan chough rising up over the lip of the Lhotse Face and onto the South Col, like a harbinger of death. Had the camp been devastated, that in itself would have raised the alarm, but outwardly it looked intact.
On our arrival at Camp 2, we were told that everyone had been asked to observe a 24-hour blackout on news getting out, until relatives of those injured or killed had been informed. Families of climbers who had escaped uninjured were also contacted. Catherine received a phone call from Henry’s partner Peta, who was in Edinburgh. She was informed that news would soon be breaking of a huge accident on Everest but that I was safe. Catherine knew before Reuters. Nowadays, I don’t think this would be achievable.
Michael Jörgensen, Neil Laughton and Brigitte Muir from our team had remained on the South Col to ponder their options. Their thoughts were to wait and see if the weather cleared for a possible attempt the next night: not an option that I thought was either safe or wise. Once it became apparent to them that casualties and deaths had occurred, they changed their plans immediately and stayed on the South Col to help in whatever way they could. They descended to Camp 2 the following day: 12 May.
The sequence of events has been reasonably well documented concerning the rescues over the 11th and 12th. Some accounts, however, leave the impression that only one or two teams helped in the overall rescue. This is not the case. Ours, like most others, joined in these efforts, although these appear to have received little mention in certain narratives. We did our part, as did nearly everybody else.
Looking back, the summit days chosen versus forecasted conditions speak for themselves.
Team
Summit day chosen
ECMWF archive weather forecast data
Imax
9 May
Wind speeds steadily increasing after the 8th
Rob Hall and Scott Fischer
10 May
Wind speeds increasing
Henry Todd
11th May
Wind speeds 120 kph, blizzard conditions
Danes (from Mal Duff’s team)
12th May
Wind speeds forecast to drop dramatically
The Wind of Change
Our first summer in France had ended and autumn was upon us. I was working on the manor. I’d thrown myself into the important work that needed to be carried out before the onset of winter; roof repairs had been top of the list.
Perched some fifty feet up, I leant against the hefty chimneystack that rose from the two broad medieval fireplaces far below. Around my waist was the climbing harness that I had worn throughout my Everest years: my protector, a silent witness to events that continued to concern me. Now it secured me via two karabiners and a strap to the rope that I had tied around the base of the brick chimney.
It was late September and the oak trees were beginning to shed their leaves. Red squirrels scurried through branches collecting acorns and hazelnuts to bury for the winter months ahead. From my unrivalled vantage point, deer and hares could be seen breaking cover across open fields cleared by the farmers working around the clock to gather in this year’s crops. A fresh autumn wind was blowing through the air.
Sitting astride the central ridge, my thoughts wandered way beyond my lofty bounds and the distant hills afire with golds and reds to times past. I was reminded of my adolescent escapades when I had sat on top of my parents’ three-storey Edwardian house, coughing my way through a cigarette: a time when advertising companies portrayed images of exhilarating sports and tobacco in the same picture. Now, nearly 40 years later, I was straddling a French manor house. Much had changed in the intervening period of my personal time/distance continuum. The ludicrous risk-taking of my youth had moved to one where I took control of dangers based on previous experience – as indicated by the climbing harness fastened around my waist. My adolescent desire to see how far I could push the edge, and the actions I had undertaken without any thought as to how they might affect others, had long since been curbed. I had come to understand that the combination of how we accept responsibility for our own actions, and the willingness to offer assistance to those to whom we have no real connection, defines who we are.

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