Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jun 19
Climber Reaches Kilimanjaro's 5,895m Summit on Hands, Raising $500,000 for East Africa Water
Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jun 19

Climber Reaches Kilimanjaro's 5,895m Summit on Hands, Raising $500,000 for East Africa Water

3 articles · Updated · The Guardian · Jun 19

Summary

  • A climber born with sacral agenesis completed a six-day ascent of Mount Kilimanjaro, reaching the 5,895-meter summit largely on his hands during a fundraiser for clean-water projects in East Africa.
  • The effort began after a nonprofit founder challenged him to attempt the mountain, and he turned it into a campaign targeting $500,000, spending a year training and raising money before traveling to Tanzania in 2012.
  • Day one forced a change in plan when his wheelchair proved unusable on the terrain, leaving him to do about 80% of that stage on his hands as dust, steep inclines and altitude slowed the team.
  • Porters later carried him through the most dangerous sections, including part of the 4 a.m. summit push, before he walked the final stretch by hand and said the climb taught him the importance of asking for help.
  • The ascent later shaped his career as a speaker and disability advocate; now 45, he says he is unlikely to climb another mountain and has drawn on the experience in his book, 'Breaking Free.'

Insights

What unique logistical and medical plans were essential for a hand-powered ascent of Kilimanjaro?
How does Spencer West's new book redefine the 'mountains' we all must climb in our lives?
Do stories of 'superhuman' disabled athletes distract from the reality of systemic ableism?