The Sherpas are amazing. This man is amazing for surviving but I admire the Sherpas who go up to save a "dead" man or the ones who had to be TOLD to leave the mountain the first time. Seem like very caring people
@@justinspate6775 because they were told to. They stayed and tried very hard to get him down safe. Would it mean they are better people if they had stayed there and most likely died sitting with an unconscious person who survived by miracle?
@@justinspate6775 different rules apply up there. Otherwise everyone dies. Human strength can barely lift its own body.. much less the dead weight of another climber for very long, if at all..
Wow! What an amazing documentary. Very moving and felt like forever watching the hell he is going through! It's a miracle he survived! I'm sure Lincoln now appreciates every second of his life. I'm going to make it to the Everest Base Camp only as I'm planning to trek. Thank you.
Altitude sickness is nothing to mess with! I haven't been to Everest but I live close to sea level and felt it rush me in Lake Tahoe, thought I'd pass out &/or throw up! Not fun!
I take diamox for intracranial hypertension (high pressure in the brain). Different causes similar results. It sucks. But my symptoms are somewhat predictable with high pressure weather symptoms. I cant imagine having the brain fog and cognitive deficits in the death zone. Its bad enough on the couch!!
Same with living near sea level and then being smacked with altitude sickness. My first time was hiking a volcano in Costa Rica; my legs simply stopped working. Then in Cuzco, Peru some years later, I felt drunk for days. (Not drinking any alcohol at all.) Trying to climb stairs was arduous -- time after time my foot crashed into the stairs, no quite enough lift. The minute I got on the plane with its pressurization, boom, head cleared!
Happened to me on Mt. Fuji on a group hike with colleagues. It’s more a hike than a climb. We didn’t stay overnight at the hut partway up, we just stopped a few minutes. Minutes later, pain shot through my body. The others told me it was altitude sickness and to go back down. I did immediately, and immediately felt better. Looking at these Everest stories 30 years later terrifies me about what could have happened had I pressed on. I’m from a US state on the Gulf Coast where some places are below sea level, and although I had been living in Japan I had no idea about altitude sickness.
He visto este sufrido documental dos veces y es impresionante. Scherpas: personas increíbles con un temple insólito.una voraz energía y sabiduría para manejar la situación que era mortal, admirables y profundo respeto hacia ellos.felicitaciones un rescate emocionante bendiciones para ellos que han hecho posible lo imposible Imperdible documental un gran abrazo desde mi país.Chile 🇨🇱
It’s a lot easier to contact his teammate, rather than the Sherpa. Good luck trying to telephone or email a person living in a village in the Himalayas
Make no mistake, this gentleman "self rescued". He moved, hauled himself and followed instructions and encouragement.....and at least got himself to a more survivable altitude. Carrying someone out of the Death Zone is not possible. The rule of thumb is, if they will not respond and work hard to survive, leave them behind. Everyone is completely exausted and getting low on oxygen. Rescuing non responsive climbers is not possible. Descent has to occur before sunset or survival rate decreases for everyone.
The heroes are always the Sherpas. Risking their poor lives to save arrogant, affluent adventurers. It’s disgusting. The Sherpas are the real climbers, with real expertise & experience & with true inner power. Show us a video of an ALL SHERPA TEAM of climbers. Then we’ll know the REAL challenge of Everest. And it will be nothing like the drama of these rich expeditions payers who probably couldn’t get to Base Camp without expensive equipment … & the help of the Sherpas.
@@tamararutland-mills9530 Yes. Each Sherpa is permitted 2 expeditions per year, paying up to $6k per expedition. $6K is 5 times the average annual income in Nepal. But not “rich” by western standards. Also more than 1/3 of deaths on Everest are Sherpas. (No sick pay, no accident insurance, no retirement - day labor) poor education for their kids.) Even $12 K per year may be great in Nepal; but it’s below the poverty line in the US. The expedition companies hiring Sherpas are getting rich. & most climbers are wealthy or they couldn’t afford the time off, travel, gear & $50 - $60 K to the expedition companies. My perspective. Others are free to disagree.
Came to realize several things while watching this: There’s prob been more people left on that mountain that weren’t dead yet….but they couldn’t get down by themselves. You better trust who you’re climbing with or they could kill you & say you died. It would be such a weird feeling to be told someone you love is dead and then you get a phone call from them.
@@dondamon4669Doing their job or not, they still saved his life. We hear from firefighters, policemen, etc all the time when they save people. Don’t be dense.
Increible la capacidad de supervivencia.tanto sufrimiento.los scherpas personas increíbles. lograron lo imposible .hubieron momentos dramaticos e inexplicables.sin ellos el no estaría con vida.felicitaciones documental impresionante.un abrazo.
What about the part where Lincoln, while he’s absailing, swings into Dorje Sherpa crampons-first and badly damages D’s leg?! The situation was so so so bad for all of them 😭
There’s enough to survive in this life that takes fierce will and determination & everything we’ve got without trying to climb Mt Everest. People who do this kind of thrill seeking are hard for me to understand. Anything that is dangerous just does not look like fun to me. It just goes to show that the most brilliant minds are lacking in common sense.
I usually have great sympathy for the people who survive these situations in these videos, especially when the events were beyond their control. Frankly, I have no sympathy for this guy or anyone who fails Everest (or K2 or the others) Everest’s danger and the egotism of climbing it is so well known it’s common knowledge. I mean I know of it and I’ve never mountain climbed once. You couldn’t do it at 30yo but you think 50yo will work out? Ego is not your amigo. You have to pay sherpas to haul YOUR stuff up the mountain and then when you need rescue you put THEIR lives on the line. Everest deaths are at the top of the list of “play stupid games, win stupid prizes” Glad he’s ok tho.
I have been living in Hindu-Kush mountains valley which is located in north of Afghanistan with the altitude of 3900m above sea level. I wish one day i could get to K2,Although I use to this altitude but such altitude like Everest and K2 are a nightmare. The only thing which will kill mountaineers is the lack of oxygen that’s it, all the weaknesses comes from that.
Let’s hear about the super huge gift of thanks the Sherpas received. Really he took his gloves off during the night and he still has anything for fingers, now? (Not Beck Weathers.). Super fortunate man, but that he “knew” he would reach the summit, was doom for me to hear… from anyone. Recurring theme and stories with this attitude in Mountain Climbing goals. Lesson here needs perpetual retelling. Incredible overnight survival… just how with only basic clothing? Maybe he had much better clothing than this documentary showed. But that would be about hypothermia. Dehydration and afflicted brain and breathing 28k air, I cannot see how overnight survival possible
Seems like the sherpas did everything they could to help Lincoln without killing themselves. Everest is a CRUEL place, but the sherpas did nothing wrong
@@jzj6476lógico ,ellos hicieron lo que pudieron, pero llega un momento en que deben tomar una decisión.corre peligro a esas alturas su propia vida, admiro la valentía de los scherpas. realmente no se como lo lograron.un cordial saludo.
I pray the Sherpas have been told, if a person is down leave them with all belongings..just in case . I bet many have come to and died for lack of there pack. More important to leave it than return it to the family.
i drove to work oone morning for an hour and a half in a a truck with a broken heater in essentially my underwear in what had to be at least -40c, coldest id ever been, i cant imagine waiting out in these conditions
They would rather just shoot each other. lots of those people have never even seen the ocean and you think they have what it takes to make it to mountaineering in a foreign country?
You're literally in the Jetstream of sorts but it is cruising altitude of a 747 which is pressurized and feed oxygen...so being up tht high "naked" so to speak is a mother I AM SURE. BLESS YOU ALL AND THOSE THAT FOLLOW. IN Jesus name Amen!
I hope Mr. & Mrs. Hall were more than just grateful, but also meaningfully compensated the Sherpa's that risked their own lives to rescue him. Lincoln never mentions it, but I also hope he recognizes and is grateful to GOD that he made it back home!
50 isn’t that old an 80 year old made it up Everest anything is possible. At 42 I don’t feel any different physically than 25 rly not that I’ve ever wanted to climb Everest happy to watch others do it on TH-cam in bed lol
Couldn't they just build some type of lodge or shelter for the climbers who can't make it going down? As there are shelters on many mountains. I have wondered a lot of times about this. It might offer some type of safety
So can you see the earths curve up there or not? Everyone who climbs it suggests you can, but the math says you can't, is it a trick of the eye? Whats the deal? Is the math wrong?
Who else watches these videos every night before bed? Edit: I've now watched all of them 🤣
Or right before a nap. See ya in 2 hours!
I am totally addicted!!!
Just started tonight ❤
I watched this videos while working 😅
Meeee😂😂I’m all snuggly watching in my warm bed
Once every year i watch these old clips about the k2 and everest. Just to remind me never to climb a big moutain.
Your life story will be very depressing
@@dondamon4669fr
🥲
Dude your definitely going to do it, my advise don't wait when your 50 and fragile
😂
The Sherpas are amazing. This man is amazing for surviving but I admire the Sherpas who go up to save a "dead" man or the ones who had to be TOLD to leave the mountain the first time. Seem like very caring people
They are the real deal.
Yea the ones that left the dude for dead , amazing 🤔
@@justinspate6775 because they were told to. They stayed and tried very hard to get him down safe. Would it mean they are better people if they had stayed there and most likely died sitting with an unconscious person who survived by miracle?
@@justinspate6775 different rules apply up there. Otherwise everyone dies. Human strength can barely lift its own body.. much less the dead weight of another climber for very long, if at all..
The sherpas get paid loads of money and the atmosphere doesn't affect them so its an easy job
TOTAL LOVE AND RESPECT
FOR THE MIGHTY SHERPAS
THANK YOU FROM MARSHFIELD MASSACHUSETTS
USA❤️❤️❤️
WE LOVE YOU!!!!!
AMEN❤
I don't understand why so many people attempt such endeavors, Please don't risk your life for such things, Your family will forever be thankful.
Yeah, but…it’s good content
They should risk if they wish.
Follow your own mind, our species didn't evolve from just sitting up a tree all day because it's safer.
What if they want to die?
Lincoln Hall was an experienced high altitude climber
@@msmo2060 what happened to Lincoln Hall? did it end well
Watching this in my warm cozy bed.
Wow! What an amazing documentary. Very moving and felt like forever watching the hell he is going through! It's a miracle he survived! I'm sure Lincoln now appreciates every second of his life. I'm going to make it to the Everest Base Camp only as I'm planning to trek. Thank you.
Altitude sickness is nothing to mess with!
I haven't been to Everest but I live close to sea level and felt it rush me in Lake Tahoe, thought I'd pass out &/or throw up!
Not fun!
Wu-Tang Clan ain't nothing to FK with. 😂 (google it)
I take diamox for intracranial hypertension (high pressure in the brain). Different causes similar results. It sucks. But my symptoms are somewhat predictable with high pressure weather symptoms. I cant imagine having the brain fog and cognitive deficits in the death zone. Its bad enough on the couch!!
Same with living near sea level and then being smacked with altitude sickness. My first time was hiking a volcano in Costa Rica; my legs simply stopped working. Then in Cuzco, Peru some years later, I felt drunk for days. (Not drinking any alcohol at all.) Trying to climb stairs was arduous -- time after time my foot crashed into the stairs, no quite enough lift. The minute I got on the plane with its pressurization, boom, head cleared!
I experienced altitude sickness once in Colorado.
I had one alcoholic drink and was deathly ill for 2+ days.
Hasn't happened before or since.
Happened to me on Mt. Fuji on a group hike with colleagues. It’s more a hike than a climb. We didn’t stay overnight at the hut partway up, we just stopped a few minutes. Minutes later, pain shot through my body. The others told me it was altitude sickness and to go back down. I did immediately, and immediately felt better. Looking at these Everest stories 30 years later terrifies me about what could have happened had I pressed on. I’m from a US state on the Gulf Coast where some places are below sea level, and although I had been living in Japan I had no idea about altitude sickness.
Before attempting Everest and K2 watch as many videos as you can and make wise decision
Are you going up either?
@@ant7699 Just simple English.
@@bonifaceontiri1186 Sure. You sounded like you might have had experience though, that's all. Would you do it?
He visto este sufrido documental dos veces y es impresionante.
Scherpas: personas increíbles con un temple insólito.una voraz energía y sabiduría para manejar la situación que era mortal, admirables y profundo respeto hacia ellos.felicitaciones un rescate emocionante bendiciones para ellos que han hecho posible lo imposible
Imperdible documental
un gran abrazo desde mi país.Chile 🇨🇱
I need more episodes because I'm addicted
I am so glad he lived! It’s the power of love.
Imagine passing out! Getting striped of everything, and then wake up and along wow
Another impossible story is Beck Weathers from the 1996 Everest tragedy. Truly amazing how he managed to survive.
They took the interview of his friend who did nothing except sitting down below but ignored the sherpas who were with him the whole time
It’s a lot easier to contact his teammate, rather than the Sherpa. Good luck trying to telephone or email a person living in a village in the Himalayas
@@bradpanter6559 sherp village is no that big, its just ignorance
The Sherpas…..Power!
Make no mistake, this gentleman "self rescued". He moved, hauled himself and followed instructions and encouragement.....and at least got himself to a more survivable altitude.
Carrying someone out of the Death Zone is not possible. The rule of thumb is, if they will not respond and work hard to survive, leave them behind. Everyone is completely exausted and getting low on oxygen. Rescuing non responsive climbers is not possible.
Descent has to occur before sunset or survival rate decreases for everyone.
The heroes are always the Sherpas. Risking their poor lives to save arrogant, affluent adventurers. It’s disgusting. The Sherpas are the real climbers, with real expertise & experience & with true inner power.
Show us a video of an ALL SHERPA TEAM of climbers. Then we’ll know the REAL challenge of Everest. And it will be nothing like the drama of these rich expeditions payers who probably couldn’t get to Base Camp without expensive equipment … & the help of the Sherpas.
Oh, they are getting pretty rich off the back of fools like this, don’t you worry.
@@tamararutland-mills9530 Yes. Each Sherpa is permitted 2 expeditions per year, paying up to $6k per expedition. $6K is 5 times the average annual income in Nepal. But not “rich” by western standards. Also more than 1/3 of deaths on Everest are Sherpas. (No sick pay, no accident insurance, no retirement - day labor) poor education for their kids.)
Even $12 K per year may be great in Nepal; but it’s below the poverty line in the US.
The expedition companies hiring Sherpas are getting rich. & most climbers are wealthy or they couldn’t afford the time off, travel, gear & $50 - $60 K to the expedition companies.
My perspective. Others are free to disagree.
They forgot a sled would get him down with little effort.
@@danchasteen7629 I didn’t say Sherpas & climbers are ignorant or stupid. Nor did I say ANYTHING on Everest requires “little effort.” ???
@@jeanhelms2621also they support 20 people per Sherpa!!
At some point, we all realize that some life goals will be left unaccomplished. The best thing to do for all concerned is to accept and let it be.
Came to realize several things while watching this:
There’s prob been more people left on that mountain that weren’t dead yet….but they couldn’t get down by themselves.
You better trust who you’re climbing with or they could kill you & say you died.
It would be such a weird feeling to be told someone you love is dead and then you get a phone call from them.
Still no voice of sherpa we’re heard in entire video who saved his life while risking their lives .crazy Aussie
They are just doing there jobs! We don't hear from the people in the helicopters do we so why would we hear from sherpas who get paid lots of money
@@dondamon4669Doing their job or not, they still saved his life. We hear from firefighters, policemen, etc all the time when they save people. Don’t be dense.
I'd say very very lucky only lost tips of fingers.. people have been in lesser situation and come back with much worse..
People shouldn't be going where there is no oxygen!
You do it everytime you get on a jet
This is crazy how this happened him.....poor guy
He's crazy. Shit happened.
It wasn't his time to die, God kept him alive until His time.❤
Increible la capacidad de supervivencia.tanto sufrimiento.los scherpas personas increíbles. lograron lo imposible .hubieron momentos dramaticos e inexplicables.sin ellos el no estaría con vida.felicitaciones documental impresionante.un abrazo.
He went up on free will, don't feel sorry for this crazy people going up there poluting the mountain
You’ve got that right! ❤
Dude got lucky. Those Sherpa risked EVERYTHING for him. I wonder if they have been compensated appropriately.
What about the part where Lincoln, while he’s absailing, swings into Dorje Sherpa crampons-first and badly damages D’s leg?!
The situation was so so so bad for all of them 😭
There’s enough to survive in this life that takes fierce will and determination & everything we’ve got without trying to climb Mt Everest. People who do this kind of thrill seeking are hard for me to understand. Anything that is dangerous just does not look like fun to me. It just goes to show that the most brilliant minds are lacking in common sense.
i love when cinema companies show the Khumbu Icefalls (immediately after base camp, 5500m) while talking about the death zone which is at 8000m
A professionally well made vid. A standout gem! More pls
He almost “ever-rested”
Pointless ventures 🥴
It's the fierce and determination and will to live that helps you survive 💖
Well, we have enough to survive in this life without trying to climb Mt Everest.
@@tamararutland-mills9530 also true!
14:27
Just the sight of that is a huge NOPE from me!
Same.. the way down is harder then the way up.
Same here. I'll just see the videos in the safety of my recliner lol.
I usually have great sympathy for the people who survive these situations in these videos, especially when the events were beyond their control. Frankly, I have no sympathy for this guy or anyone who fails Everest (or K2 or the others)
Everest’s danger and the egotism of climbing it is so well known it’s common knowledge. I mean I know of it and I’ve never mountain climbed once.
You couldn’t do it at 30yo but you think 50yo will work out?
Ego is not your amigo.
You have to pay sherpas to haul YOUR stuff up the mountain and then when you need rescue you put THEIR lives on the line.
Everest deaths are at the top of the list of “play stupid games, win stupid prizes”
Glad he’s ok tho.
38:07 damn that must of been some magical chocolate, pulled him right back to life lol
These ones aren't as surprising to me as they are intentionally climbing a life threatening mountain
Spirit of adventure
I have been living in Hindu-Kush mountains valley which is located in north of Afghanistan with the altitude of 3900m above sea level. I wish one day i could get to K2,Although I use to this altitude but such altitude like Everest and K2 are a nightmare. The only thing which will kill mountaineers is the lack of oxygen that’s it, all the weaknesses comes from that.
Lincoln Hall 1955 - 2012
Let’s hear about the super huge gift of thanks the Sherpas received.
Really he took his gloves off during the night and he still has anything for fingers, now? (Not Beck Weathers.). Super fortunate man, but that he “knew” he would reach the summit, was doom for me to hear… from anyone. Recurring theme and stories with this attitude in Mountain Climbing goals. Lesson here needs perpetual retelling.
Incredible overnight survival… just how with only basic clothing? Maybe he had much better clothing than this documentary showed. But that would be about hypothermia. Dehydration and afflicted brain and breathing 28k air, I cannot see how overnight survival possible
Why are they showing footage of the second step then the icefall? Two completely separate routes in separate countries.
I can't believe that they left alone on the mountan to Die!!!! Very very CRUEL.
Seems like the sherpas did everything they could to help Lincoln without killing themselves. Everest is a CRUEL place, but the sherpas did nothing wrong
I would've left his ass. Me living isn't cruel.
I would've left his ass, if it meant me SERVIVING
@@jzj6476lógico ,ellos hicieron lo que pudieron, pero llega un momento en que deben tomar una decisión.corre peligro a esas alturas su propia vida, admiro la valentía de los scherpas. realmente no se como lo lograron.un cordial saludo.
The Sherpas are amazing. why they agree to go in mountains together with limited brain western people.
Sherpas like umm actually I’m gonna need the “successful pay”…
Lonely death on the mountain, yet he doesn't die 😂
That's why it's called..
I shouldn't be alive.
I get sickness when I climb a tree 🌲
@@gugulethuprecious6932
All it takes is 3 steps up a ladder and I'm done!
Vertigo and shakey.
Nope! No heights for me!
@@sweetmissypetuniawilson9206 ooooh l understand you
The camera person always lives 😊
I heard he died a few years afterwards from cancer from being exposed to something at his work. I know the word just can't spell it.
Mesothelioma 😬
That’s so sad. At least he got a few more years with his family.
What about glory for the sherpas?
I pray the Sherpas have been told, if a person is down leave them with all belongings..just in case . I bet many have come to and died for lack of there pack. More important to leave it than return it to the family.
i drove to work oone morning for an hour and a half in a a truck with a broken heater in essentially my underwear in what had to be at least -40c, coldest id ever been, i cant imagine waiting out in these conditions
This was very painful to watch.
I don't understand how anyone can survive up there overnight in them temperatures
I've watched all , I'm now like a roach I can survive anything....IM ROACHMAN!
The more the merrier,how many African Americans do y'all think died climbing an actual mountain?🤔 None
It's a Detroit thang 313
They would rather just shoot each other. lots of those people have never even seen the ocean and you think they have what it takes to make it to mountaineering in a foreign country?
What a miracle🤍👍🏼
The climb doesn't seem very steep as imagined...😏
Its the highest mountain on earth..how do you not imagine? The peak is where airplanes cruise at!?!
Huge respect to u sir u have the balls ur a man love from India
going unconscious is a bad idea on everest...what was he thinking
You're literally in the Jetstream of sorts but it is cruising altitude of a 747 which is pressurized and feed oxygen...so being up tht high "naked" so to speak is a mother I AM SURE. BLESS YOU ALL AND THOSE THAT FOLLOW. IN Jesus name Amen!
No sympathy here for these ego maniacs
exactly my sentiments especially when you have a family!
You brought out a good point. I think a lot of them are narcissists. Ego maniacs.
Guyz in this comment section really have dark humor 😬
This dude was a big liability to the Sherpas. He woke up and decided to just stay there.
They took his gear. The swelling in his brain and lack of oxygen lead to bad decisions.
Mike wanted Lincoln dead!!
To marry Lincoln's wife? Oh, that would be a good mystery.
I hope Mr. & Mrs. Hall were more than just grateful, but also meaningfully compensated the Sherpa's that risked their own lives to rescue him. Lincoln never mentions it, but I also hope he recognizes and is grateful to GOD that he made it back home!
jeanhelmes2621 i agree with you!!!
Did I hear those guys been named sharp ass🤔
Really drawn out…. Boring
😮😮😮 Wowsers!
Wow 😮 I thought I had heard all the stories. This one is definitely the second worst survival story I have ever heard.
The sherpas 🙏🏾
50 isn’t that old an 80 year old made it up Everest anything is possible. At 42 I don’t feel any different physically than 25 rly not that I’ve ever wanted to climb Everest happy to watch others do it on TH-cam in bed lol
Watched this before a few times. On here.
Couldn’t he just slide down to the bottom of the mountain
You must be a Trump supporter.
@@bobabooey4537 you not being able to tell he was joking confirms you are a democrat🤡
@@bobabooey4537
You must have your blinders on.
Poor thing.
Now THAT would be a GREAT episode 😂
😂😂😂
32.31 time his fingers 😢
I dont understand.. why didnt they send a helicopter… that friend is such a douche
Air to thin, literally impossible for a helicopter to reach that altitude.
This is pure stupidity and a waste of life.
Left for dead on Everest….but alive
Selfish man .....
Well.. since he lives I don't want to watch it now 🤣
Dont watch this show..the title tells you they live..geesh😂
He did die of cancer in 2012 so you can watch it. Happy for him that he really did live life though. RIP
Good one. Rock on, the survivors!
how come that happened when he had oxygen with him up there?
Couldn't they just build some type of lodge or shelter for the climbers who can't make it going down? As there are shelters on many mountains. I have wondered a lot of times about this. It might offer some type of safety
The sherpas are the real hero I wish I'm a sherpa too
New show title: "People That Make Horribly Stupid Choices and Then Believe They Died But Didn't Due to Divine Intervention." Lame 👎👎
Curvature of the earth, BS
This is nothing more than a propaganda video.
High risk with high reward.
WHAT A DAMN TRAVESTY‼️ THE CAMERA MAN JUST SAT THEIR THE ENTIRE TIME AND DID NOTHING THE HELP THE POOR OLD" CHAP OUT ‼️ YA✔️... Read more
So can you see the earths curve up there or not? Everyone who climbs it suggests you can, but the math says you can't, is it a trick of the eye? Whats the deal? Is the math wrong?
Just 1 thing. Too many effen ads!
The sherpas remind me of Oompa Loompas
Not cool
Stupid going up there being 50 and putting sherpas life in danger
Åwåñg kådi kåri dåri yåk kåri då
Åwåñg kådi kåri dåri yåk kåri då
Åwåñg kådi kåri dåri yåk kåri då re (Repeat 2 Times)
Dear lord. The flat earthers in the comments. 🤦🏻♀️
ANOTHER stupid EGOTRIP 🙄& polluter 🤬of Mt Everest .
Kudos 👏 to the sherpas 🩵🩵who risk their lives for these selfish people.
Jesus is great
Selfish.
Ålåñå då Islåñds
Ålbåñiå då ßåñiå
Åñdørrå då Đørrå
Årmeñiå då Måñiå
Åustriå då Støriå
Åzerå då ßåijåñ
Yøu ßelårus då rus då rus då rus då rus då rus
No one cares 🤡
Wait a minute, some have sent up balloons higher than mt Everest and no curvature of the earth, it’s all flat
😂
It's not flat, but definitely you can not see curvature of the earth from 8850 meters.
I'm reading this book right now! God Bless you Lincoln I'm so glad you made it through your ordeal on Everest! 🙏🏔️🗻
Dying on the highest mountain in the world means yoUll be HIGH FOREVER!