Nepalese adventure operating company
Seven Summit Treks is a commercial adventure operator established in 2010 based in Kathmandu , Nepal . They specialize in expedition climbing trips to the eight-thousanders of Nepal , China , and Pakistan .[ 6] The company was established by four Sherpa brothers,[ 7] Mingma Sherpa , Chhang Dawa Sherpa , Tashi Lakpa Sherpa and Pasang Phurba Sherpa. Mingma and Chhang Dawa are the first siblings and first South Asians to have climbed all 8000ers .
In 2018 Seven Summit Treks guided two climbers up Mount Everest without permits. As a result Seven Summit Treks was fined $44,000 USD. The two climbers were investigated for climbing Everest without a permit.[ 8]
Lit up tents of Seven Summit Treks seen at Everest base camp
In 2019, Seven Summit Treks was recognized as the largest royalty/taxpayer firm of Nepal, having organised the highest number of climbing expeditions in the Nepal Himalayas.[ 9] Seven Summit Treks gained popularity from managing logistics for a number of pioneers and veteran climbers like Alex Txikon and Carlos Soria Fontán .[ 10]
Associated climbers
Notable expeditions
K2 Winter Expedition 2020/21: 10 climbers from an international expedition made the first winter summit on 16 January 2021.[ 25]
Nanga Parbat Expedition 2023: 29 climbers, the biggest team in history, climbed Nanga Parbat in the summer of 2023.[ 26]
Shisha Pangma Expedition 2024: 29 climbers successfully reached the summit of Shisha Pangma; 12 of these were climbing their 14th 8000er.[ 27]
References
^ https://www.taan.org.np/members/1107
^ https://www.sevensummittreks.com/who-we-are.html
^ https://www.taan.org.np/members/1107
^ https://www.guinnessworldrecords.com/records/partners/consultants/thaneswar-guragai
^ https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/nepali-sherpa-sets-everest-record-27th-ascent-rcna84812
^ "First siblings to climb all 8,000ers" . Guinness World Records .
^ "As Strong as a Mountain" . smartfamily.com.np .
^ "Company Fined $44,000 for Illegal Everest Climb" . Gripped, The Climbing Magazine . Retrieved 30 December 2024 .
^ "Govt honours Seven Summit Treks as largest taxpayer trekking firm" . The Himalayan Times . 27 September 2019.
^ "Octogenarian Carlos Soria leaves for Dhaulagiri; Sanu Sherpa to complete all 14 peaks" . The Himalayan Times . 16 September 2019.
^ "Seven Summit Treks: Kami Rita Sherpa" . Seven Summit Treks . Retrieved 1 August 2023 .
^ "Most climbs over 8,000 metres" . Guinness Book of Records . 23 May 2023. Retrieved 1 August 2023 .
^ "Sanu Sherpa becomes third Nepali to complete 14 peaks as Sergi Mingote scales 7 mountains in 444 days" . 3 October 2019.
^ "Youngest person to climb Everest and K2" . Guinness World Records .
^ "Fastest time to climb Everest three times from the south side" . Guinness World Records .
^ "All Nepalese team become first to summit K2 in winter" . www.thebmc.co.uk .
^ "Norway's Kristin Harila becomes fastest woman to climb all eight-thousanders" . kathmandupost.com . Retrieved 18 July 2023 .
^ "Kristin Harila, Tenjen Sherpa scale 9 peaks in 45 days, to complete all 14 in 3 months" . The Himalayan Times . 10 June 2023. Retrieved 18 July 2023 .
^ Sharma, Gopal (10 June 2023). "Norwegian climber hopes to become world's fastest to all 14 tallest peaks" . Reuters . Retrieved 18 July 2023 .
^ "Tenjin Sherpa Climbs K2 - Guides 14 8000ers in 92 Days" . Gripped Magazine . 27 July 2023. Retrieved 4 August 2023 .
^ Sharma, Gopal (27 July 2023). "Norwegian woman, Nepali sherpa become world's fastest to climb all 14 tallest peaks" . Reuters . Retrieved 4 August 2023 .
^ "Allie Pepper scales Mt Annapurna without O2" . thehimalayantimes.com . Retrieved 14 November 2024 .
^ "Nepal mountaineering season 2022: Summary of events and incidents from mid-March to early May - OnlineKhabar English News" . 10 May 2022. Retrieved 14 November 2024 .
^ "Lucia Janičová: Slovenka, ktorá ako prvá zdolala Everest | Aktuality.sk" . website (in Slovak). Retrieved 14 November 2024 .
^ "Nepali climbers make history with winter summit of K2 mountain" . 16 January 2021 – via www.bbc.com.
^ "Nanga Parbat records over 60 summits including 29 from SST" . The Himalayan Times . 5 July 2023. Retrieved 18 July 2023 .
^ https://thehimalayantimes.com/nepal/seven-summit-treks-announce-100-summit-success-on-shisha-pangma