Anybody see the editorial cartoon in the DomPost today? LOL!
Anybody see the editorial cartoon in the DomPost today? LOL!
what a fucking outstanding couple of paragraphs, imho summing the issue up perfectly.Originally Posted by Paul in NZ
like inglis just said on the news - 'must be a quiet news week huh?'
at 18,000 ft Time of usefull Consciousness is 15- 30 mins
at 25,000ft Time of usefull Consciousness is 3-5 mins
at 35,000ft Time of usefull Consciousness is 45-60 secs
how high is everest, 30,000 ft?
Originally Posted by Lou Girardin
i think his ego is a bit overblown.. hes lost both legs and now the tips of some fingers and he still goes on..pretty soon , he's going to be a disembodied head in a bag, being carried up mountains by the Sherpas
but to let another human being in obvious stress die alone is just .... well... he's going to whatever hell he believes in.. i hope that man's frozen face never leaves him in peace... $$$ shouldnt matter at that altitude..
I would have helped to the best of my ability. Helped save a kids life once and put me nuts on the chopping block to do it and took a few risks as well. Paid off and the kid lived and I remember the feeling that I had was, whilst I didn't want to be stupid and really do myself some harm, I felt I was dutybound as a fellow human being to give it a good shot and that meant managing my risks.
If you love it, let it go. If it comes back to you, you've just high-sided!
مافي مشكلة
Oh for FUCKS SAKE! This is driving me nuts!!! What all of you bloody arm chair mountaineering experts are forgetting, is what his JOB was before he lost his legs on Mount Cook. He was a member of the MOUNT COOK MOUNTAIN RESCUE TEAM. Ingils has said that the guy was beyond saving. 40 other people decided the same thing. The mans own family believe that Ingils and the 40 other people on the mountain on that day did the right thing. I suggest you all get down of your completely uniformed moral high ground and just accept that he couldn't be saved.
My daughter telling me like it is:"There is an old man in your face daddy!"
I despise the knee-jerk attitude of the media. I don't know Inglis but he deserves open admiration for summiting Everest. Krakauers "Into Thin Air", Dickenson's "The Death Zone" and Boukreev's "The Climb" all explain in pitiless detail what it is like for a human being above 8000 meters.
This is called the Death Zone for good reason because physiologically the brain and body are dying. There just isn't enough oxygen up there. The brain becomes sluggish and unresponsive. Pulmonary and cerebral oedema are likely to occur at any time.
Climbers report phantom companions to whom they speak. Nothing is quite real. Take a breath, take a step.
And Everest is the grandaddy of them all. Plenty of climbers get to the South Summit and no further.
Inglis was the least able to render assistance of all the other climbers. So it is sickening that he is picked on.
What I get from the pro side of this discussion is:
If you are in a dangerous environment and come across a fellow traveller,who has succumbed to the elements.It is ok to continue to your goal,into greater danger,and leave the unfortunate to die alone.
No need to stop and provide company.
Let someone else make the decision,and take the responsibility.
Sounds like a good kiwi bloke.
There was an excerpt from a Mountaineering magazine on Inglis' rescue.
back when he lost his legs.
One of the rescue team was asked about risking their lives to save another.
He said, "it was hard and risky, but we know Inglis would do the same for us".
It sounds like the antis in this debate have never seen someone die.
Speed doesn't kill people.
Stupidity kills people.
now you just KNOW that's not true, Lou.
and i can tell you now, it wasn't by slowly and quietly freezing to death.
although i have had to defrost a few. and they were 'only' on ruapehu.
Spare us the "summiting", it's not a bloody verb.Originally Posted by Winston001
He reached/climbedto/ascended to the summit.
Speed doesn't kill people.
Stupidity kills people.
There will be the odd exception, they're just misguided.Originally Posted by marty
Speed doesn't kill people.
Stupidity kills people.
Now now Lou, English is a living language as you well know. Climbers regularly talk and write about "summiting". Google it if you aren't convinced.Originally Posted by Lou Girardin
Nouns become verbs, verbs become nouns, nouns become adjectives, etc. Run was originally a verb, dating back to about the year 800, but in the 15th century people started using it as a noun, as in to go for a run. Some grammarians decry functional shifts as improper English, but it is a natural process. (source http://www.wordorigins.org/Methods.htm )
But anyway, Inglis situation wasn't a sea-level decision to walk past a sick man. Help and oxygen were in fact given. No-one stayed with him to die. Inexplicable down here but at 28,000 feet, you can't muck around. I have no doubt that if the guy had any realistic prospect of living then he'd have been helped.
It won't be living for long.Originally Posted by Winston001
What do oxygen starved morons know about English anyway?
They probably couldn't spell morals.
Speed doesn't kill people.
Stupidity kills people.
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