The strange life and death of Kim Chang-ho

On 20 May 2013, Kim Chang-ho reached the summit of Everest, becoming the 5th Korean to climb all fourteen of the world’s 8,000m peaks, and the first to climb them all without supplementary oxygen.

He was only the 31st person to climb all the 8,000ers, and there are still just 40. Far more have died trying. Of the 40 to succeed, only 19 have done so without supplementary oxygen. Kim achieved the feat in the shortest time (7 years 10 months, beating the Pole Jerzy Kukuczka’s record of 7 years 11 months by a whisker).

Kim Chang-ho was one of only a handful of people to climb all of the world's 8,000m peaks (Photo: EPA)
Kim Chang-ho was one of only a handful of people to climb all of the world’s 8,000m peaks (Photo: EPA)

Yet he was hardly known in the West until he came to the world’s attention for a reason no one would wish for. If his life reads like a fairytale, his death earlier this month on a mountain called Gurja Himal in Nepal, is more like a mystery that will keep detectives puzzling for some time to come.

Kim was an accomplished technical climber, who won a Piolet d’Or (the Oscar of the climbing world) in 2012 for his ascent of 7,092m Himjung in Nepal. In 2017 he received an ‘honorable mention’ (the equivalent of an Oscar nomination) for another Piolet d’Or for climbing a new route on 7,455m Gangapurna.

More intriguing than this (if you’re not a technical climber) was his ascent of Everest in 2013, the fourteenth and last of his 8,000m peaks. Kim was keen to ascend it in an ‘eco-friendly’ way, by starting at sea level and going all the way to the summit without the use of motorised transport. This had been done a couple times before. In 1990 the Australian Tim Macartney-Snape started from Gangar Sagar on the coast of Bengal, India, and walked all the way to Nepal, before climbing Everest by its standard route. In 1996 Goran Kropp cycled from Sweden (a six-month bike ride across Central Asia) and also climbed the mountain by its standard route.

Not to be outdone, Kim thought of a fresh angle on the sea-to-summit approach. Starting from Sagar Island near Kolkata, he kayaked 156km up the River Ganges, cycled 893km through northern India to Tumlingtar in Nepal, then walked the last 162km to base camp, before climbing Everest by its normal route.

This achievement has a special significance for me – I care less about new, difficult routes than I do about the spirit of adventure that took Kim on a longer journey across unfamiliar country. I completed a sea-to-summit challenge of my own last year, which involved cycling, walking and climbing (I’m currently writing a book about it). I found the cycling harder than the climbing, and can’t imagine how tired I would have been had I paddled upstream too.

Dhaulagiri from Poon Hill. Gurja Himal is the mountain on the extreme left of the photo (Photo: Manish Dangol / Wikimedia Commons)
Dhaulagiri from Poon Hill. Gurja Himal is the mountain on the extreme left of the photo (Photo: Manish Dangol / Wikimedia Commons)

Gurja Himal (7,193m) is a relatively innocuous peak in the Dhaulagiri massif, linked to Dhaulagiri VI (7,268m) by an adjoining ridge. Indeed, it’s so innocuous that it’s not even dignified with the name Dhaulagiri VII, VIII or even IX. Most visitors to Nepal haven’t heard of it, though many have seen it without realising it’s there from the famous viewpoint of Poon Hill in the Annapurna region.

It was first climbed by its west ridge by a Japanese team in 1969. Only 30 people have ever climbed it, and none since 1996. Kim set out to climb it this autumn season by a new route on the south face, which he hoped to name Korean Way: One Korea – Unification of North and South Korea (presumably he still did, though it’s a bit of a mouthful).

When I first heard from the BBC that all nine members of the expedition (five Korean and four Nepali) had died in a storm on Mount Gurja, my first reaction was that if an act of nature had wiped out their entire camp, then it was more likely to have been an avalanche than a storm.

The Himalayan Times reported that it had been a massive landslide, but this theory was quashed when the Annapurna Post published a bewildering 12-minute video of the helicopter rescue flight on YouTube.

The expedition operator raised the alarm after the climbers had been out of contact for 24 hours, and a helicopter was sent. The rescuers found sleeping bags (and presumably their occupants, though thankfully the video left these details to the imagination) dispersed hundreds of metres apart across a grassy mountainside. Some lay in a boulder-strewn riverbed, while others lay on grassland.

Watch on YouTube

There was not a snowflake in sight, just grass and isolated boulders, though runnels of ice lay in grooves much higher up.

The camp wasn’t buried at all, so how had it happened? The speculation started. Was it a tornado that had lifted them up, tossed them around, then flung them miles apart? Perhaps their entire camp had slid over the edge of a cliff. But how?

One of the most plausible explanations was that a serac (large chunk of ice) had collapsed, and this had caused a huge burst of wind to engulf their camp.

I witnessed the devastating result of one of these events when I trekked the Langtang Valley last year. The village of Langtang was completely destroyed by an avalanche-cum-landslide in the immediate aftermath of the 2015 Nepal earthquake. The landslide was so vast that a massive backdraught of wind shot down the valley, razing forests to the ground. When we trekked along the valley in 2017 we could see entire hillsides covered in fallen trees. Had such a backdraught swept across the Korean camp, then this might explain how the remains ended up where they were.

It’s likely we will never know for sure. The history of mountaineering is full of tragedies that are unexplained, often when there are no survivors to tell the tale.

But hopefully a time will come when Kim remains a legend not for his bizarre death, but his extraordinary life. I hope some day someone will write about his adventures and translate them into English, opening them up to new readers, and providing him with the posthumous worldwide recognition that he deserves.

My thoughts are with the families of all nine climbers who died in this freak accident on Gurja Himal. The mountains will always be dangerous in unexpected ways.

To receive email notifications of my blog posts about mountains and occasional info about new releases, join my mailing list and get a free ebook.
Note: I get a very small referral fee if you buy a book after clicking on an Amazon link.

7 thoughts on “The strange life and death of Kim Chang-ho

  • October 24, 2018 at 7:32 pm
    Permalink

    I believe more in your tornado theory. A sérac or avalanche would most likely cause a blast of wind in a single direction. From the footage on the video they seem to be all over the place.

    What bad luck and what a tragedy!

    Condolences to all the families.

  • October 25, 2018 at 4:49 am
    Permalink

    Very very sad, to the left of the knoll, the brownish ruts and pancaked earth look like the result of a flash flood over vegetation -which could have swept the camp in a sudden torrent from the icy regions above -possibly from fast moving depression carrying warm moisture.. This was a very common way for pioneers in America to die crossing the Rockies and Sierra Nevada ranges. The tornado theory is interesting, and tornados are pretty common in Nepal but can a tornado get enough heat at 10,000 ft, in a narrow, steep canyon at night ? Sounds unusual, but I’d love to hear more on it.

  • October 25, 2018 at 3:14 pm
    Permalink

    This article reminds me of a book I am currently reading – Dead Mountain: The Untold True Story Of The Dyatlov Pass Incident – about a group of Russian hikers that were killed in the North Ural mountains. I haven’t finished reading it yet but there are similarities to this accident on Gurja.

  • October 25, 2018 at 8:35 pm
    Permalink

    Thank you for enlightening us about Kim Chang-ho’s incredible achievements, and explaining the theories about the Gurja incident. Such a puzzling and tragic end for this badass adventurer I might never have heard about.

  • October 26, 2018 at 12:37 am
    Permalink

    High Altitude tornadoes can certainly occur, and here are examples:

    https://www.ustornadoes.com/2013/03/14/tornadoes-dont-happen-in-mountains-or-do-they-debunking-the-myth/
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teton%E2%80%93Yellowstone_tornado
    https://www.pri.org/stories/2012-07-31/2nd-highest-altitude-tornado-record-us-captured-photo-video

    Note the violence of the Teton tornado. The Mt. Evans tornado is above the altitude that the climbers were in Nepal.

    Given the right conditions, I suspect we can see this type of activity much higher. I have flown sailplanes for years in the Tahoe and White Mountains area in California and Nevada, and we can hit radical lift from thermals up to 18,000 ft. I have seen dust devils rise from the ground to 15,000 feet over the Nevada desert.

    So if this was a weather phenomenon, it was a freak one for sure, but nothing that cannot happen. As for the sudden torrent theory, while possible, it would be hard for it to carry the bodies up to the hill on the opposite side as am pretty sure I saw. We see these also in the Sierra Nevada in the Spring, and the damage is far more devastating than what I am seeing in the video.

    An autopsy report (I’m an MD) would tell us much. If they did not drown, and have multiple bone fractures, a tornado would seem the most likely culprit.

  • October 26, 2018 at 1:09 am
    Permalink

    It was so sad reading about Kim Chang-ho. Thank you for letting us know the events of his last adventure.

  • November 3, 2018 at 8:53 pm
    Permalink

    Thank you for writing this post and sharing Kim Chang-ho’s legacy, Mark. I thought you might like to know that I’ve linked to your post from my own blog.

Leave a reply

Your email address will not be published, but it will be stored. Please see the privacy statement for more information. Required fields are marked *

Lively discussion is welcome, but if you think your comment might offend, please read the commenting guidelines before posting.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.