in Her Own Words | Kristin Harila's CHILLING Encounter on K2

IN DEPTH conversation with world record holder Kristen Harila about the final climb - K2 in Pakistan - thus completing the ascent of all 14 8000 meter peaks in 92 days.
CHAPTER MARKERS:
00:00 - Kristin Harila and Lama Sherpa complete all 14 8000 meter peaks in 92 days
00:43 - Muhammed Hassan tragedy
1:19 - Thom reflects on his own experience encountering people who are dying
3:19 - our sponsor Musa Masala
4:49 - Kristin Harila on safety, not worried about reaching the summit
6:27 - concerns of rockfall
7:26 - cameraman turns around at Camp 3 & strength of Sherpa team
9:01 - encountering Muhammed Hassan in the Bottleneck
12:37 - avalanche above, team decides to split up
13:27 - difficulty of reaching summit and news of Hassan
15:02 - seeing Hassan on descent
18:54 - describes Hassan hanging on the trail & difficulty of a rescue
20:48 - Thom’s personal thoughts
On July 27th, over 150 people were moving up from Camp 3 for a summit push on K2, the Savage Mountain. It was now or never for a once in a lifetime chance to summit At 215am at 8200 meters, an inexperienced member of the rope fixing team, 27 year old Pakistani porter Muhammed Hassan, married and father of three, with no high altitude experience or proper equipment, took a 5 meter fall, landing upside down below the fixed lines.
Tenjen Lama Sherpa and Kristin Harila stopped immediately to render aid to Hassan, as more than 100 climbers approached below them. Here is Kristin's story about what happened next.
The sponsor of this video is Musa Masala. Musa Masala is creating an adventurous outdoor community focused on safe, healthy and culturally aware wilderness activities while prioritizing projects for healthcare and education in Nepal.
Check out more about Musa Masala here:
musamasala.com
Kristin Harila's website:
kristinharila.com
Previous Everest Mystery stories on the K2 2023 season and tragedy:
About K2: Clients Won't Save You (And They're All Clients)
• K2's Dark Secret: You'...
K2's Dark Truth: Have Mountaineers Lost Their Soul?
• K2's Dark Truth: Have ...
-------------------
Please join our Patreon:
/ thehappinessquotient
Please consider becoming a Channel Member for access to perks and to become part of a growing community:
/ @everestmystery
DISCLAIMER:
Thank you for watching this video! We want to clarify that some of the footage used in this content is intended for educational purposes, providing commentary and analysis on the subject matter. We respect copyright holders and have made efforts to attribute the sources wherever possible. Our goal is to enhance the educational value of our content, fostering understanding and critical thinking.
If you have any concerns regarding the use of this footage, please contact us directly. We are committed to addressing any issues promptly. Thank you for your understanding.
Sincerely,
Everest Mystery

Пікірлер: 153

  • @MysteryClown
    @MysteryClown4 ай бұрын

    I'm from Norway, and OBoy she got a lot of crap in the media and in the Social Media after that summit trip. I know she took it very heavily, but she did what she could have done. It's all those journalists who don't know a shit about what they're writing, If somebody writing an article about death on K2, they should know what you're talking about. Shame on them Im sorry to Hear that you've had a similar experience in the media, where people jump to conclusions without Do any research befor posting a story. And tanks for making this story about Kristin

  • @EverestMystery

    @EverestMystery

    3 ай бұрын

    Thanks so much for watching and for taking the time to share your thoughts. Kristin deserves more than she received....I can empathize with her predicament, and am still amazed at her physical abilities to have completed all 14 8000m peaks in 92 days. Incredible. I appreciate your thoughts and glad you took the time to comment.

  • @Vourn-75

    @Vourn-75

    Ай бұрын

    And it's sad that most of those journalists don't even step a foot on any of those summits

  • @M_Rasmussen58
    @M_Rasmussen584 ай бұрын

    Excellent interview! So important to hear the truth on how this situation unfolded and what the decisions made by her and her team were based upon. Very important for the truth to be told, especially when you have cowards sitting in their homes gaining enjoyment from attacking those involved in this horrible incident.

  • @rickquist3992
    @rickquist3992Ай бұрын

    Mad respect for Kristin.

  • @lady2550
    @lady25508 ай бұрын

    I don't understand why people feel like other climbers MUST be responsible for each other. Sure its nice to have someone there in a pinch however not at the cost of their own lives. I feel that climbers know the risks and take them willingly. Maybe this will set as a reminder to others that experience is a must and even still does not guarantee success summit and back down. Thank you for sharing your own experience and hers.

  • @EverestMystery

    @EverestMystery

    8 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much....I truly appreciate the thoughts and the insight. Your first sentence is something to really consider and have a conversation about, especially when it comes to things that happen above 8000 meters in the Death Zone.

  • @tkatrich3

    @tkatrich3

    8 ай бұрын

    I assume they've never climbed a mountain and don't realise it's hard enough to keep yourself alive let alone someone who often by the death stories either A. Should 100% not be up there due to not being equipped or have enough training. B. Has been caught up in ego and is insisting on going up in bad conditions.

  • @tomk3732

    @tomk3732

    7 ай бұрын

    In this case they did not rescue the guy - despite as per her claim there was like 100 of them b/c they would have endangered summit for the said 100 people. That was the main reason. I am experienced mountaineer. Real one. Messner said what she is doing is not mountaineering and I agree. We need new sports category - say sports mountaineering.

  • @oyajiblues

    @oyajiblues

    Ай бұрын

    I agree with you, but keep in mind it is people who don’t stop because they appear to e putting more importance on summiting than a human life. ere is no blame for not saving someone from a situation they created for themselves.

  • @aquariusthompson8212

    @aquariusthompson8212

    Ай бұрын

    @@tomk3732 not their responsibility to rescue

  • @msbeecee1
    @msbeecee1Ай бұрын

    Thabk u for giving her a platform to tell.her story in full context

  • @robertg.arbuckle6838
    @robertg.arbuckle68388 ай бұрын

    My comments have my name on them. And I subscribe. I think this is The channel for the truth. Thank you so much!!

  • @EverestMystery

    @EverestMystery

    8 ай бұрын

    It's great having you here, thank you my friend!

  • @cameltrophy3
    @cameltrophy38 ай бұрын

    The bottleneck is easily one of the most dangerous places on Earth. There is a huge cliff face made of ice seracs leaning over the precipice of a sheer snow-covered cliff of slick granite. He did not have proper equipment or experience. I blame him, and his employer for allowing it to happen. Harila helped as she should have. She did as much as could be expected. At these altitudes you cannot just hang out. The bottleneck is so dangerous you don't want to be there long and they hung out trying to save him, when there was no saving him. He should never have been past Basecamp.

  • @EverestMystery

    @EverestMystery

    8 ай бұрын

    I agree completely. Thank you for watching! More coming soon with Kristin, too

  • @NavigatorMother

    @NavigatorMother

    8 ай бұрын

    She's right when she says "... It was all about me. It was a tragic accident (but it was made all about me)." It was about inexperience, and the bottleneck. And if those people wanting to comment need it to be about them, then it's about the worst of human nature brought out by social media, (and I should speak for myself as well) people speaking about things they don't know enough about, and potentially and unnecessarily ruining someone's spirit in the process.

  • @carl8568

    @carl8568

    8 ай бұрын

    I don't think he'd literally even been past basecamp, before that climb. It's insane he was allowed up there, and with no down suit or O2.

  • @dana102083

    @dana102083

    8 ай бұрын

    @NavigatorMother so agree with you!! I don't think she deserves this at all. People don't understand the bottleneck neck and what K2 is.. everest is a breeze in comparison..uncliping and recliping over a hundred people isn't worth her life..people are daft. They can say what they want about climbing tourism but it pays people and he shouldn't have been up there. RiP but people need to fight for better regulation of porters, sherpa and climbers in general.

  • @NavigatorMother

    @NavigatorMother

    8 ай бұрын

    @@dana102083 🙏🏻🕊🌎🌻

  • @user-pv6xo1ti4c
    @user-pv6xo1ti4c3 ай бұрын

    I think Kristin Harila adequately answered why she was celebrating on the summit. She, Tenjen Lama Sherpa, Gabriel, etc. did offer aid to Muhammad Assan. It appears that she thought other climbers were going to conduct a rescue, but did not. There did seem to be a lack of a larger rescue effort started by his team and employer. It is a tragedy, and a larger rescue effort should have been started sooner. Maybe Kristin should have tried to turn the many climbers around. I would have thought she was a hero for trying to coordinate such a difficult rescue whether it was successful or not. Although, if other people died during the rescue effort, people might have blamed her for that. It is very impressive that Kristin and Tenjen Lama Sherpa summited the fourteen 8000 peaks in such a short time. I would have definitely considered her a hero if she had coordinated a successful rescue effort. She did not cause the accident, but she might have had the management skills to coordinate a rescue with the help of other climbers more skilled in rescues. Was a successful rescue possible? Likely as possible as climbing 14 peaks in 3 months. There would have been a great amount of risk. I do think she thought that other people would continue the rescue effort.

  • @EverestMystery

    @EverestMystery

    3 ай бұрын

    Thank you for the thoughtful comment. Many have been very harsh and judgmental of Kristin. I am grateful that she took the time to speak about this with me, and I'm more than satisfied there's nothing more they could do. Thanks for watching and for taking the time to share your insights. If you're interested, here is a video of her talking about her friendship to Lama, which I think is very touching: kzread.info/dash/bejne/e5mKltqFZKy0lcY.html

  • @wolfpecker5710

    @wolfpecker5710

    5 күн бұрын

    Did you watch the interview? It would have only been possible if he would have been able to walk, but he was far passed that state. They have tried to perform rescues through the bottle neck at K2 before and it resulted in the deaths of several of the people attempting the rescue. It’s not like Everest where you have a lot of space to work with, you would have to somehow carry someone on a ledge that’s a couple feet wide at most and less than a foot in others, all at an altitude that is above 8,000 meters(death zone). Also, I don’t think you understand what you are saying when you say “coordinate a turn around and she would have been a hero”. It would be impossible to coordinate 100+ people to turn around on a cliff ledge that small at 8,000+ meters up. It likely would have resulted in several more deaths, at which point people would blame her for causing more deaths while trying to be a hero. Her and her team did literally everything they could, but fact of the matter is he never should have been on the mountain in the first place. He had never climbed and 8,000 meter climb and he was doing it without oxygen and without a down-suit. The people on his team (a different team than Kristen’s) told him that he needed to go down, but he insisted because he wanted to summit.

  • @josaphine9422
    @josaphine94228 ай бұрын

    It is just commendable to even try and stop to help somone at that alltitude where those guys could have lost their own life. For ignorant people it is easy to just type sitting on ghe comfort of their couch and blame someone who is at 8000+ and on K2. It is really shame how people cannot digest her success and were so busy comparing her to nirmal purja and calling her out on social media. What she and lama did was incredible and nothing can take that away from them. She showed incredible strength and determination. ❤

  • @Weonlyknewoneway

    @Weonlyknewoneway

    8 ай бұрын

    Npcs being npcs

  • @Weonlyknewoneway

    @Weonlyknewoneway

    7 ай бұрын

    @@tomk3732 Harila is a legend and deserves her glory for her achievements.. two years in a row she climbed these 8000m mountains ... all but one twice! All the npcs throwing salt on her wounds are despicable in my opinion . Trying to tear down someones epic achievement because someone died on the expedition on k2 is absolutely ignorant. Cant wrap my head around how people that dont know absolutely anything about high altitude mountaineering continue to call out harila and make her achievement as if its meaninglessness... Everyone on those mountains know the danger involved. End of story. No one goes to K2 and doesnt know its the most dangerous mountain in the world! !

  • @tomk3732

    @tomk3732

    7 ай бұрын

    @@Weonlyknewoneway I am a high altitude mountaineer and have gone above 8000m. My opinion is shared by other mountaineers - such as Messner. It is not just her stepping over a guy - its also her luck of style and attempts to still call this mountaineering. It should be in its own class of "sports mountaineering". I mean for God's sake, I know its a different challenge for everyone - but getting pulled up on short rope or using unlimited oxygen is a bit much.

  • @Weonlyknewoneway

    @Weonlyknewoneway

    7 ай бұрын

    @@tomk3732 listen . She wasn't being short roped . We're not talking about Sandy Pittman on everest. Kristin is an animal a real high altitude mountaineer . She climbed the 14 peaks twice ! (Minus one the first time) Have you climbed K2 twice?! Have you climbed Annapurna twice ??? Wtf are you talking about man?! Who made you judge and jury? If it was you up there I know for a fact you wouldn't have done anything!! So cut out the disrespectful insult spewing . It's not becoming of a high altitude mountaineer. Sounds so cringe to see your messages throwing dirt on her name when you don't even have story straight. Come on dude..

  • @tomk3732

    @tomk3732

    7 ай бұрын

    @@Weonlyknewoneway I have an eye witness statement from a women that was climbing in front of her (Dorota) about the short roping and switching Sherpa every hour or so. It was on Annapurna or Nanaga Parbat. If it was me up there I would not have used any Sherpa or oxygen. And yes I climb above 8000 without any support or oxygen. I do not throw dirt at her. She already has plenty on herself. I am simply stating the facts. I am also exposing total BS. Sure, with the level of support she had I would not mind to do the 14 - and I would challenge myself to do under 90 days to beat her record. You got spare half a million? I would not call it mountaineering through but "sports mountaineering" and I would like a to be included in a new category. You obviously do not climb high - if you did you would know her achievement is more in line with running multiple marathons back to back then the actual mountaineering - thus new designation I propose.

  • @schwabra
    @schwabra8 ай бұрын

    Mountaineering is forging a path to a goal while facing our ideals in extreme situations. Each encounter can show us our peaks as well as our most primal survival instincts. As the first Everest Mystery demonstrates, going farther always has risks. I would never want my choices to push myself to cause another to be put in danger. These incidents should motivate us to make these occurrences fewer and farther between each while also giving a greater appreciation for all who struggle to meet us on our own journeys. I salute the spirit which drove Muhammed Hassan to risk himself to provide for his family. I hope that others facing the same will accomplish their goals without needing to make the same sacrifice. I will always be humbled by porters' devotion and strength. May their memories serve to elevate all who strive to touch the top of our dreams. Kristen Harila, what an accomplishment! Thank you for this interview as well. Thom, thank you as well.

  • @EverestMystery

    @EverestMystery

    7 ай бұрын

    Thank you for watching and for sharing your thoughts. I totally agree with you. I also want to thank you for supporting the channel!

  • @kamakaziozzie3038
    @kamakaziozzie303818 күн бұрын

    wasn’t aware of this story. Thank you for sharing it in such a thoughtful way. ✌️

  • @dana102083
    @dana1020838 ай бұрын

    It was great to hear her side of things, congratulations on your record! 🎉 beinf in the death zone at the bottleneck on K2, I dont blame her one bit to keep going at that point.

  • @EverestMystery

    @EverestMystery

    8 ай бұрын

    Thank you for watching, and for visiting the channel!

  • @deeplorable8988

    @deeplorable8988

    8 ай бұрын

    She celebrated on the summit and below without a word about the dying porter. She's no hero, but a narcissist who uses lowly paid sherpas to gain unearned glory. This is the modern society we live in.

  • @dana102083

    @dana102083

    8 ай бұрын

    @@deeplorable8988 she should celebrate her feat. She achieved it. She could do nothing for that man. What would you want her to do? Please tell me, because from my understanding it was up, or risk her life crossing g paths of a hundred people in or just under bottleneck. Why aren't you chasticizing any of the other people on the mountain? We live in a narcissistic world, so why blame her when she could do nothing..

  • @oswaldcobblepot502

    @oswaldcobblepot502

    8 ай бұрын

    God will test you. For instance, will you sacrifice your climbing record to save a dying man? And he places the timing of the test JUST AS you are about to obtain your achievement after working so long and hard for it. Will you sacrifice it all right at the very end for the sake of doing what's right?

  • @dana102083

    @dana102083

    6 ай бұрын

    @@oswaldcobblepot502 I'm disabled and not a climber. I'm a registered nurse and trust me when I say I'd do anything to help another person EXCEPT put myself in harms way. You stated something incorrect-- there is no savi g if he cannot walk himself out, which he couldn't. You need to be realistic about what can actually happen. If I were there I'd have to keep moving regardless of direction after a certain point. It is the death zone and is bottle neck and I will die if i get cold and cognitivelyimpaored from.altitidue sickness. This isn't some easy location or safe. It's too easy to say what to do when many won't even do it at sea level..what about that? Nothing could be done. Many people may already have some altitude sickness, it's a mental impairment. What exactly do you think should have been done for the man? And please explain how much space that requires and how much oxygen they had to take that much time. But they're in the bottleneck in death zone and how many people are linednup? Over 100? How safe is it to cross and unclip that many people in a bad area.. I am tested everyday with life and we all.make decisions but it won't change the fact that man shouldn't have been there and he died from altitude related sickness and succuming to it and not able to walk himself out of danger. Rest his soul.

  • @mfreund15448
    @mfreund15448Ай бұрын

    It sounds like her and her team were well prepared and he was not.That is not her fault.

  • @EverestMystery

    @EverestMystery

    Ай бұрын

    Yes....absolutely. Thank you for watching!

  • @BoboEverest
    @BoboEverestАй бұрын

    Its very hard and impossible to save someone's life out there. Doing so you put others lives at risk. Dren Mandic unclipped to pass Cecilie Skog and fall down in 2008. In a process of lowering his body one more man lost his life. That's what Kristin talking and happened in 2008. Blame is on people who send poor man without down suit and O2 up there.

  • @briAction
    @briAction8 ай бұрын

    The snow line is so crisp. Great shots! Thanks for the recon! 😁

  • @deniseelsworth7816
    @deniseelsworth78163 ай бұрын

    Very interesting to hear her speaking herself.

  • @EverestMystery

    @EverestMystery

    3 ай бұрын

    She is very articulate and really a kind, sensitive person....it was really cool having her on the channel to talk about her experience

  • @zooperdooper4223
    @zooperdooper42238 ай бұрын

    I think that there is no way that he should have been up there. Who was his employer? Who actually hired this man and thought it was okay for him to not only go up into the death zone with zero climbing experience but to go with ,what sounds to me like, zero equipment AKA life support. Shouldn't they be responsible for what happened to Hassan? It really pisses me off that these cowboy companies can get away with human sacrifice for the almighty dollar and then other climbers that never evn knew he existed up to that point are villified for not saving him. RIP Hassan. Anyway great interview. Thank you for the Vid.

  • @EverestMystery

    @EverestMystery

    8 ай бұрын

    Great questions....I did two previous videos on this topic, one of which discusses sanctions against the company that hired Mr. Hassan. You might enjoy it. Here it is: "About K2: Clients Won't Save You (And They're All Clients)": kzread.info/dash/bejne/nJyam8WshpWYlpc.html Thanks so much for watching!

  • @OriginalSlash63
    @OriginalSlash63Ай бұрын

    one of the most frustrating things i encounter, whilst watching the many mountaineering videos , is the lack of empathy and understanding of ALOT of the viewers. I have watched (consumed) hundreds of videos on Everest ,K2 , Cho Oyu , Manaslu ...et al. I KNOW (from informed research not experience) that saving another person at high altitude is near impossible given PERFECT conditions let alone topographical constraints, Weather conditions and the victims ability to perambulate in any manner to assist in their own rescue. And yet , the mountaineering elite (whose summit palmares include Mont Couch and Col du Bed!) way into the conversation with bile churning regularity claiming "they should have saved them by ...(insert the appropriate superhuman effort here)!" If you have ever tried to carry a grown man at sea level you would know how ridiculous these comments are . On a human level , no one WANTS another human to die (and most assuredly not in close proximity with an overwhelming sense of helplessness)! Not withstanding the very human aspect of someone dying (literally) in your arms or nearby , the physical act of saving someone at high altitude (bringing them down the mountain) is well beyond one individual and requires a very strong team (and even then its extremely difficult if not near impossible). If you must comment about the senseless loss of life , do so from a position of knowledge and understanding of the difficulties that were present. No one pillarises firemen for NOT running into a burning building to save someone who may already be dead! Have some compassion for an individual (or group) who have to deal with the awful grief and guilt that a mountain tragedy like this creates for the rest of their lives. I applaud Kristin for surviving the unnecessary backlash from this experience , and I am in awe of her achievement , that has been largely overlooked . Thank You for channel, the content is always balanced and well researched .

  • @carlswenson5403
    @carlswenson54038 ай бұрын

    Great Mountaineering content. Id love to hear what Ed Viesturs or maybe Messner has to say about this incident. People on solid ground at sea level know jack shit about the serac and the bottleneck. I mean, its basically the size of a stadium, and chunks the size of apartment buildings peel away from it at random

  • @EverestMystery

    @EverestMystery

    8 ай бұрын

    Good call, it really would be good to hear their take on it. I'm always endeavoring to hear from other greats on the channel. Thank you for your thoughts and for watching!

  • @carlswenson5403

    @carlswenson5403

    8 ай бұрын

    @@EverestMystery You make good content, Its refreshing to see quality stuff from a person whos actually been there (or at least on an 8km peak, I don't know if you've been up the Abruzzi). I'm by no means an elite alpinist, but I am an accomplished amateur, and my exposure to huge features was on the west butt of Denali. There is no way the average person can fully appreciate the scale of these things or the difficulty of existence in that place without actually being on a big mountain. Makes me wonder what the public thought of Alister Crowley. I'm not surprised at the public reaction to this story, but lets face it, it's just another in the long line of stories twisted by the press. Thankfully those who are educated and experienced in these things understand and people like yourself are publishing content with 100% transparency.

  • @einarpost

    @einarpost

    8 ай бұрын

    Messner has been interviewed about it. I hate to put words in his mouth, but it was in german and mine is not good… I think he said something like : sucks to get in trouble on the bottleneck and the the commercialization of 8000’ers with the different teams/expeditions has created a situation were no-one wants or even is able coordinate a rescue.

  • @paxundpeace9970

    @paxundpeace9970

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@einarpostabout that what he said but it is difficult because conditions and route are not the same anymore

  • @tomk3732

    @tomk3732

    7 ай бұрын

    At least Messner said this is not real mountaineering and is disgusting. I am sure Ed if he had voiced an opinion he would have agreed.

  • @lady2550
    @lady25508 ай бұрын

    Wow the description is very explanatory. I cannot wait to hear her story

  • @cypriano8763
    @cypriano87632 ай бұрын

    you take your life into your own hands when you go out there. its no ones responsability to take care of you if something goes wrong. if they can great but not if it means everyone dies.

  • @Mila_Brearey
    @Mila_Brearey8 ай бұрын

    Very thoughtful and informative interview. We will never know if Hassan insisted on climbing ... however, in view of his lack of less-than adequate equipment, not to mention his improper harness position, I feel quite confident in stating that his EMPLOYER placed profit over Hassan's wellbeing and, ultimately his life - which also could have resulted in the loss of life of any rescuers ... especially in the Bottleneck of K2. Hypothermia, exhaustion & HAMS.

  • @EverestMystery

    @EverestMystery

    8 ай бұрын

    Thanks for your thoughts....and for watching. I agree with you

  • @ModernVintage31
    @ModernVintage318 ай бұрын

    I posited the following question in the comments to a different creator’s video about this situation: If your adult kid was also there in the bottleneck, would you want or expect them to make heroic efforts to save Mr. Hassan, knowing it would very dramatically increase the odds of your kid dying in the attempt? That video had thousands of comments from people screeching that Kristin (and others but mostly her) should have magically passed the man down the mountain like a coconut down a conga line. Yet only a couple people bothered to engage with my question in an honest, meaningful way. Generally the responses were of the “well MY KID wouldn’t have been there anyway!”. Completely ignoring the question. Congrats to Ms. Harila, Lama Sherpa and team.

  • @EverestMystery

    @EverestMystery

    8 ай бұрын

    Great question....thank you. I'm sorry that you were pummeled in the comments on the other channel. I'd be curious to know where that video is. I know of another channel that often attacks people of differing opinions. People who do that are no friend of this channel...and, between you and me and anyone who reads this comment, people who troll and are unkind are blocked immediately. As you may have ventured from this video and another video that I did with a noted high altitude journalist discussing the many gray areas of this story, as well as the absolute uncertainty and almost impossibility of saving Mr. Hassan's life at that location, I think it close to absurd that people would condemn all the climbers in the bottleneck for not doing everything in their power to do something differently. It would likely have led to more loss of life. Here is the video, called "About K2: Clients Won't Save You (And They're All Clients": kzread.info/dash/bejne/nJyam8WshpWYlpc.html Most people, and I say this respectfully, have absolutely zero knowledge of what it's like to function at that altitude, let alone perform immense physical tasks, on extreme high-angled locations, under massive walls of ice, amidst avalanche like conditions. I have witnessed deaths at that altitude and also have seen some miracles. My gut tells me that Mr. Hassan fell because he was nearing some point of no return. He was unresponsive for much of the time he was dangling below the route. That Lama Sherpa - with Kristin Harila there - went to such great lengths was an heroic effort, which added comfort and an element of humanity to the person laying there on his back, Mr. Hassan. It's a difficult story to hear.... However, to judge those up there when we know nothing of what it was like, is wrong.

  • @basquat76

    @basquat76

    8 ай бұрын

    Well people can lie to question but it does say a lot about you. You brought up a kid and not even yourself. So we know where you stand on it. No way am i risking myself to help a fellow human being. You belong on a deserted island. That is the proper society for you.

  • @tomk3732

    @tomk3732

    7 ай бұрын

    Yes of course. If I was there and someone got hurt I would try to help even if it meant I may die. I am ... a mountaineer. I would be very, very unhappy if my adult son or daughter stepped over someone dying - however, I understand they are part of new mountaineering that I call "sports mountaineering" which does not have the same social norms as regular mountaineering. I did participate in high altitude rescue. I was close to two others. They had 100 people going, weather window was small, there could be no future windows or new window would be say a 10 days away. People have to go to their jobs. Etc. almost no one would have attempted another summit Almost no one! So millions of USD would be in danger. That was the main reason. She states bottleneck is only 10 min. So people behind her could step back - 10 min is nothing! Then they could have in maybe 30min removed the guy from the bottleneck and the 100 would pass. But the 100 are selfish pigs and that 1h is way too much for them - what if it was 1.5??? Also multiple teams would need to give up their Sherpa - who would have pulled Mrs. Harila up the mountain ;) As she states the rescue team would need extra oxygen - who would sacrifice one of their bottles and risk their summit?

  • @aquariusthompson8212

    @aquariusthompson8212

    Ай бұрын

    Yeah of course ppl going to lie and say they're risk their like to save someone in the mountain...capping

  • @Scottyboyhvacdude
    @Scottyboyhvacdude4 күн бұрын

    Its very simple, when embarking on a climb like this each individual is responsible for his or her own safety. Other climbers owe you nothing, thats the situation you chose to put yourself in. This women and her team did all the could have and probably more than they should have.

  • @toshiyaar7885
    @toshiyaar78857 ай бұрын

    Even tho I'm no mountaineer, it was clear to me that there were so many dangerous variables, given the awkward position Hassan had landed, that would have made it impossible for rescue.

  • @EverestMystery

    @EverestMystery

    7 ай бұрын

    I believe you are correct, thanks for watching

  • @Vourn-75
    @Vourn-75Ай бұрын

    Many would jump into conclusion and judge even they themselves never climb any of those above 8000 metres peaks. When you decide to climb and even working as sherpa and guide, you know the risks and you have to embrace the consequences. Why blame Kristin? So, if you don't know anything about it and not even there to see and first hand experience the incident and merely watching the video and news, just don't comment.

  • @teijaflink2226

    @teijaflink2226

    21 күн бұрын

    I feel specially if it's a woman who achieves something amazing.

  • @zuzuspetals9281
    @zuzuspetals928119 күн бұрын

    Personal Responsibility. As soon as a person decides to do any type of extreme sport or activity, they know that they may be seriously hurt or killed. They can choose to not participate. Life is a risk. Others have to choose whether the risk to save you makes reasonable sense to them. Simple.

  • @georgemartin1498
    @georgemartin149826 күн бұрын

    Very good, thank you! I know that people pursue such goals on an entirely individual basis and I am a regular practioner. But, ultimately, IMO, 1. if you don’t “know “ and are prepared to do it on your own (in the absence of partner or Sherpa support) you shouldn’t attempt and 2: you have to accept the consequences. Now going back to 1.: People do these things for reasons beyond the athletic, of personal/emotional connection which is to be human and admirable, but for safety/survival reasons please read 1.

  • @ktevans881
    @ktevans8818 ай бұрын

    💙

  • @srstrand01
    @srstrand018 ай бұрын

    All that said: The the record was secured!!

  • @EverestMystery

    @EverestMystery

    8 ай бұрын

    Kristin and Lama nailed the record with almost three months to spare

  • @spazmonkey3815
    @spazmonkey38159 күн бұрын

    When it's a matter of life or death, many times the choice is your own life or death. The task of mountain climbing at these heights is so dangerous that your death is always a brief moment or decision away and the choice of living instead of dying may mean someone else has to die. When you are literally hanging by your fingertips there are no more fingertips to spare.

  • @oyajiblues
    @oyajibluesАй бұрын

    calls me heartless, but we are all our own keepers. If you decide to climb everest it is you and only you to blame if you die. Additionally, although I might have the conscience to stop and try and help. However, you declined to attempt this and I don’t feel anyone else is responsible to “save you”. If someone cant go on and climber step over them I see nothing wrong with that. If some do want to stop and help someone in death zone that decision may cost them their lives. I think i would clear before climbing to those I am with that i am not a hero or a savior, I hold each climber to their fate. If people who have no business attempting the climb and they fail and die. Well, end of story. I would accept without judgement if I was left.

  • @sergejmaher144
    @sergejmaher1448 ай бұрын

    Good video !!

  • @EverestMystery

    @EverestMystery

    8 ай бұрын

    Thank you! I appreciate that you took the time to watch

  • @sergejmaher144

    @sergejmaher144

    8 ай бұрын

    @@EverestMystery very interesting topic, i couldnt believe how people piled on kristin

  • @Weonlyknewoneway
    @Weonlyknewoneway8 ай бұрын

    Harila is a legend and deserves her glory for her achievements.. two years in a row she climbed these 8000m mountains ... all but one twice! All the npcs throwing salt on her wounds are despicable in my opinion . Trying to tear down someones epic achievement because someone died on the expedition on k2 is absolutely ignorant. Cant wrap my head around how people that dont know absolutely anything about high altitude mountaineering continue to call out harila and make her achievement as if its meaninglessness... Everyone on those mountains know the danger involved. End of story. No one goes to K2 and doesnt know its the most dangerous mountain in the world! !

  • @lifesahobby
    @lifesahobby8 ай бұрын

    Well done

  • @EverestMystery

    @EverestMystery

    8 ай бұрын

    Thank you! Always good to hear from you @lifesahobby and thanks for your support

  • @lifesahobby

    @lifesahobby

    8 ай бұрын

    @@EverestMystery I am looking forward to most .. woman landing on the moon . They are ready now . Just watching this interview and listening to the technical aspects of the climbing says so much for how far women have come in the past 40 years . I personally cannot wait for them to step foot on the moon . I hope they handle it with the same gusto as this lady . I know they will , setbacks and all and safely

  • @LinusWilson
    @LinusWilson8 ай бұрын

    It was a deadly spot. The poor guy should not have been there. If anybody is to blame its his employer not climbers on other teams.

  • @EverestMystery

    @EverestMystery

    8 ай бұрын

    Yes, I agree. Thank you for watching

  • @bykamalalane
    @bykamalalaneАй бұрын

    Kristin sounds amazing. But Lama Sherpa died shortly after this interview? That sucks.

  • @EverestMystery

    @EverestMystery

    Ай бұрын

    Yes, very sad. Here is a clip of Kristin talking about Lama before he passed: kzread.info/dash/bejne/e5mKltqFZKy0lcY.html

  • @aliceinoregonland3942
    @aliceinoregonland394227 күн бұрын

    I am not a climber, and this is just my opinion! It may seem harsh, but when you climb these extreme heights, you do so at your own risk! Climbers know they can die climbing these mountains! I do not believe anyone should be tasked with a rescue at these extreme heights, in these extreme conditions! I also do not believe a family should be able to sue because they have a loved one that did not make it down!. I do believe, however, that if a group of climbers are assigned Sherpas, I would hope the Sherpas would do what they can to help someone who is in trouble! But again, you climb at your own risk and you risk death if you take unnecessary risks or are not capable of the climb due to health reasons or inexperience!

  • @NavigatorMother
    @NavigatorMother8 ай бұрын

    It sounds like Kristin did put her life at risk ironically, for hours and for more than one person. Just not the way people picture and demand that she put her life at risk, as in some improbable Disney extreme action film. Too bad for them.

  • @deeplorable8988

    @deeplorable8988

    8 ай бұрын

    No, people don't want that, they just didn't want her celebrating and partying without a word about the man. A dead man.

  • @EverestMystery

    @EverestMystery

    8 ай бұрын

    She didn't party and celebrate. One must listen to the interview before assuming what they hear in other reports is true.

  • @deeplorable8988

    @deeplorable8988

    8 ай бұрын

    @@EverestMystery There's video evidence of at least some of her celebrations. When she reached the summit they filmed themselves talking about their achievements. Never one word from her about the dying man lying down the mountain. Never a word in her celebration below. You might think this is normal, I don't.

  • @paxundpeace9970

    @paxundpeace9970

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@deeplorable8988This is not something you talk about maybe they did on the ascent. What they do back at base camp doesn't mater either.

  • @sephgeodynamics9246
    @sephgeodynamics92468 ай бұрын

    The most incredible part is to get the money to do this. Real climbers have something fascinating about them (e.g., Alex Honnold) , but luxury climbers are honestly quite boring. I just hope the Sherpas can enjoy their family for more than a few years.

  • @EverestMystery

    @EverestMystery

    8 ай бұрын

    Alex Honnold is, yes, a real climber....but lives in the 1%. He is loaded, being paid to do what he does. Many of these climbers save for years to have the money and freedom to depart for months at a time in order to go after a dream. Some borrow money, put a second mortgage on their home.

  • @paxundpeace9970

    @paxundpeace9970

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@EverestMysterywe have different kinds of climbers Alex is a rock climber and not a high altitude mountaineer climbing in snow and ice at 8000m altitude

  • @sergejmaher144
    @sergejmaher1448 ай бұрын

    Organisations are to blame not kristin

  • @aljanecko
    @aljanecko8 ай бұрын

    I think it’s just a tragic accident, he shouldn’t have been up there, nobody could have saved him.

  • @EverestMystery

    @EverestMystery

    8 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much, really pleased that you took the time to watch!

  • @aljanecko

    @aljanecko

    8 ай бұрын

    She is a amazing person!

  • @nc5337
    @nc53374 күн бұрын

    Could there be some jealousy involved? It’s so sad that her incredible achievement has a pall cast on it-by both the tragedy and by the scapegoating.

  • @melloone611
    @melloone6118 ай бұрын

    Kristen said it best. A tragic accident by a climber who shouldn’t been there in the 1st place.

  • @EverestMystery

    @EverestMystery

    8 ай бұрын

    Thanks for watching !

  • @6SpeedVert
    @6SpeedVert5 күн бұрын

    Isnt it normal and an accepted risk in climbing that you may not get help in the death zones? How is this anyone's fault at all?

  • @user-mr5tl4fg7d
    @user-mr5tl4fg7d8 ай бұрын

    The shitstorm going down on Kristin Harila shows examplary how men keep the hall of fame reserved for themselves.

  • @EverestMystery

    @EverestMystery

    8 ай бұрын

    In my yet to be released segment of my conversation with Kristin we talk about just that. Thank you for watching

  • @The-Wa.Wa-Girls

    @The-Wa.Wa-Girls

    Ай бұрын

    💯

  • @spannymakronkeep8673

    @spannymakronkeep8673

    16 күн бұрын

    100 percent

  • @humushumus2219

    @humushumus2219

    16 күн бұрын

    Complete nonsense. Although this insident may not be as described by some; Kristin stepping over dying people. Maybe she did nothing wrong. Getting sponsorship for a project like this for a woman is a far-FAR lower hanging fruit then what it would be for a equally competent man. Also this record is largely a logistical achievement relying massively on paperwork and politics. I could not have done it. Like I said given the circumstanses, neither could a man equally competent as Harila. Time to start living in the real world.

  • @davidrennie8197
    @davidrennie81978 ай бұрын

    I suspect some of the negative comments were because of her gender

  • @EverestMystery

    @EverestMystery

    8 ай бұрын

    For sure....

  • @theworldisavampire3346
    @theworldisavampire33462 ай бұрын

    People are particularly catty when it comes to female athlete climbers. Why is that? Should she have died also? If your not familiar with the bottleneck, watch one of the documentaries. Its heinous.

  • @sergejmaher144
    @sergejmaher1448 ай бұрын

    Hassan fell on the worst spot in the world, so sad. He was forced into it by his situation too

  • @EverestMystery

    @EverestMystery

    8 ай бұрын

    Agreed! Thank you for watching

  • @MaineUSA
    @MaineUSA29 күн бұрын

    No shade but is it possible if someone could walk past a dying person, could they lie about the story? IDK I wasn't there but there are stories out there.

  • @averagejoegrows
    @averagejoegrows2 ай бұрын

    they need to hold her accountabl

  • @EverestMystery

    @EverestMystery

    2 ай бұрын

    Kristin's role on K2 that day had zero impact on the gentleman having lived or died.

  • @aquariusthompson8212

    @aquariusthompson8212

    Ай бұрын

    Accountable for what?

  • @andreasandremyrvold
    @andreasandremyrvold8 ай бұрын

    When you are this high up you are on your own. If rescuing other people are impossible or staking your own life, you should save yourself. Or just not risk your own life in the first place. Darwin said it first, and many military generals and explorers died that way. Live by the sword, die by the sword. And that also goes by Kristin Harila, maybe she just got lucky.

  • @EverestMystery

    @EverestMystery

    8 ай бұрын

    Thank you for your thoughts....much appreciated!

  • @asopopilosopo4158
    @asopopilosopo415819 күн бұрын

    All for nothing

  • @tomk3732
    @tomk37327 ай бұрын

    When I have my meeting with public I do what Messner did - condemn in public with live meeting people like Kristin Harila - I will point out this is not classical mountaineering but sports mountaineering. What these sports mountaineer are doing is disgusting. 5:25 she is plainly lying. If she was not concerned with the summit why did she go for the summit? Also if there were supposedly so many weather windows why everyone goes on the same day ;) Also her saying 5h to the top of K2 implies mega use of oxygen. Again, for someone that does not climb her explanation may make sense, but not to me whom is a climber. For example, the BS of him not having oxygen yet being in the lead and keeping pace + people saying his oxygen mask was broken. There is no way, unless you are like Ueli Steck or similar to keep up without oxygen with people on oxygen. No way. He had two piece down suit -standard. A down suit that is a knock off costs like $200 USD. Its not a big deal! And you use it a little. If she wanted to smear the guy she should have said he had improper boots - these are harder to borrow / buy. Also yes, she would say no to her Sherpa to come without oxygen as he would have had hard time keeping her pace and there would not be a chance of him short rope pulling her up. Bunch of excuses - I have zero respect for her - but not her team. She did not tell them to save him. They were only doing what they were told.

  • @aquariusthompson8212

    @aquariusthompson8212

    Ай бұрын

    Comment dumb asf

  • @user-os4vd1kw6p
    @user-os4vd1kw6p6 ай бұрын

    Sounds exactly like you chose to leave him and try for the summit.

  • @aquariusthompson8212

    @aquariusthompson8212

    Ай бұрын

    Sound like you already had your mind made up and disregarded everything she said

  • @spannymakronkeep8673
    @spannymakronkeep867316 күн бұрын

    Basic misogyny.

  • @EverestMystery

    @EverestMystery

    16 күн бұрын

    She was indeed put under extremely unfair scrutiny....

  • @stevenicholson7488
    @stevenicholson74888 ай бұрын

    Great content man! People do not understand that serac falls kill you instantly.

  • @EverestMystery

    @EverestMystery

    8 ай бұрын

    Even a chunk of ice the size of a football can kill you.... Hey, thank you for watching!

  • @bosrules1
    @bosrules1Ай бұрын

    When someone is on the verge of dying regardless of who is in the right or wrong it should be game over. If this person wasn't qualified then he shouldn't have been there, I get that but he was, he got past all of them, no one stopped it from happening. The whole team should have turned back out of respect and a slim chance of saving him. To go forward was selfish in my opinion.

  • @aquariusthompson8212

    @aquariusthompson8212

    Ай бұрын

    Expecting a team of non medical people to save someone on a mountain and endanger themselves.... is selfish