First ascent of Aconcagua: a story of self-inflicted altitude sickness

Looking up the Gran Acarreo from camp at Nido de Condores. Those summit rocks look close, but in fact they're 1000m above.

When the Swiss guide Matthias Zurbriggen stood on the highest point in South America in 1897, as far as anyone knew it was the highest place man had ever been, but he stood there alone. His expedition leader Edward Fitzgerald had been left behind with altitude sickness at 6000m. Continue reading →
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Published on February 27, 2013 08:04
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