The sudden disappearance of Americans Kyle Dempster and Scott Adamson in Pakistan's remote Karakoram range rocked the climbing community this past month. Scott Adamson, Thomas Huber, and Kyle Dempster in 2015, one year before the events of this story, in the Choktoi area; all looked forward to meeting there again in 2016. Photo: Thomas Huber Collection. The last time I saw Kyle was at the American Alpine Club Hall of Excellence Awards in Denver in spring of 2016. A lot of people—we women.
Kyle Dempster and Scott Adamson Missing on Pakistan's Ogre II
That's when two of my best friends from Utah, the leading alpinists Kyle Dempster and Scott Adamson, went missing on Ogre II in Pakistan. On August 21, Black Diamond Ambassador Kyle Dempster and his climbing partner Scott Adamson headed out of their basecamp on Pakistan's Choktoi Glacier. Their objective: the steep and imposing north face of Baintha Brakk II (6980m), also known at the Ogre II. Kyle Dempster (33) and Scott Adamson (34) were at home in wild and remote mountains. But their sense of passion and commitment spread beyond the bold routes they climbed to the people with whom they shared their lives. Author: Nikki Smith. Climb Year: 2016. Publication Year: 2017. It's been months since Kyle Dempster and Scott Adamson disappeared while attempting a new route on the Ogre II (Baintha Brakk II) in the Karakoram.
Buscan sin éxito a dos escaladores de Estados Unidos en Pakistán
On Sunday, August 21, American alpinists Kyle Dempster and Scott Adamson made a second attempt on the 1,400m North Face of Baintha Brakk II (Ogre 2, 6969m) off the Choktoi Glacier in Pakistan's Karakoram range. A helicopter search failed to find Kyle Dempster and Scott Adamson, missing for nine days on Ogre II in the Karakoram Associated Press Sat 3 Sep 2016 21.26 EDT The families of two renowned. Climbers Kyle Dempster, 33, and Scott Adamson, 34, were 12 hours late in returning from their scheduled five-day alpine climb in Pakistan. Back home, their family and friends started to. Scott Adamson and Kyle Dempster no longer walk among us in this life. They died in Pakistan some time in the last two weeks, attempting to climb one of the great mountaineering challenges of this generation, the north face of the Ogre II. The Ogres are formidable mountains, and even to gain entry to the 'easier' routes on that massif one.
You Meant to Come Home The Lives and Climbs of Hayden Kennedy, Scott
Utah mountain climbers Kyle Dempster and Scott Adamson went missing after they started their ascend to the 23,000-foot Ogre-II peak in northern Pakistan. SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — American mountain climbers Kyle Dempster and Scott Adamson earned reputations as two of the world's best by pushing limits and setting out to conquer icy, steep routes others couldn't scale. That fearlessness and passion led them to a treacherous mountain peak in a remote part of Pakistan this summer for their second attempt at making a climb never done before. They.
Since August 28, a search has been ongoing for Kyle Dempster (33) and Scott Adamson (34), two American alpinists missing on the Ogre II in Pakistan, last spotted partway up the North Face on August 22. A storm arrived on August 23. Kyle Dempster and Scott Adamson have been missing for a week after their latest attempt to climb the notoriously difficult 23,000ft peak
The Disappearance of Climbers Kyle Dempster and Scott Adamson Men's
Scott Adamson (left), Kyle Dempster (right). Photo: Courtesy Nathan Smith. On Monday, August 22 American alpinists Kyle Dempster and Scott Adamson went missing while attempting to climb Pakistan's Ogre II in the Karakoram. While Dempster and Adamson had global rescue, the $10,000 failed to cover all of the costs of porters for a visual inspection of the mountain and helicopters for an aerial. October 31, 2016October 24, 2023 On August 23, 2016, thick clouds of snow enveloped Kyle Dempster and Scott Adamson partway up their second attempt on the north face of the Ogre II, Baintha Brakk, a 6980-meter peak in Pakistan.