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Climbing The Seven Summits

Climbing the Seven Summits is a huge commitment that requires large amounts of dedication, training, time, and money. It requires that you make climbing a priority and, often, put it above other financial, time, or familial commitments. Even if climbers dedicates themselves fully to the goal of the Seven Summits and climb full-time, it will still mean a commitment of at least a year, more often several years or even decades.

Disclaimer: Climbing is dangerous. It is every individual�s duty to climb safely and responsibly. There are hazards that climbers face while in the mountains that can�t be avoided. Each climber needs to prepare themselves with the knowledge and experience to to climb safely before venturing in to the mountain environment. This site only serves as a resource and does not substitute for proper training and experience. Those new to climbing should hire an experienced guide service before attempting to climb any of the Seven Summits. Defining the Seven Summits

While reading further in this book, you will undoubtedly notice that there are indeed eight mountains covered rather than seven, which will seem strange for a book titled Climbing the Seven Summits. Here is some background on the Seven Summits project that hopefully will clarify upfront why this is.

The idea of the Seven Summits was conceived mostly independently by several people at roughly the same time: the mid-1980s. Although Americans Dick Bass and Frank Wells, Canadian Pat Morrow, and Italian Reinhold Messner were probably not the first to think of the concept, they were some of the first to complete the feat, making them influential players in the history of the Seven Summits. Most notably, Bass and Morrow were competing against each other to complete the journey first. Bass ended up doing so first with a summit of Mount Kosciuskzo on mainland Australia as part of his circuit. Morrow, in his well-publicized journey to climb the Seven Summits, decided to climb a more challenging peak called Puncak Jaya, or Carstensz Pyramid, as part of his Seven Summits and finished not long after Bass. Morrow had decided that Carstensz laid claim to the highest point on the Australian continent by using a different definition that included the continental shelf and Irian Jaya, in Indonesia 60-plus miles (more than 96 km) off the north coast of Australia.

Overwhelmingly the climbing community accepted Bass�s version of the Seven Summits when he completed his climbs, but a divide was created when Morrow chose another peak. This divide was broadened when Messner, the most influential climber of his day, decided to complete his Seven Summits circuit by including Carstensz Pyramid as well, before other influential climbers went with Kosciuszko. To this day, climbers have differing opinions of which peak is the true Seventh Summit and climb the peak that best suits their definition, or climb them both to �cover their bases.� Because there are two main versions of the Seven Summits, I include both peaks in this guide to allow readers to decide which peak they will include.

For more information about this topic please visit the following: Suunto Ambit, GPS watch and Garmin Edge 510

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