Extreme adventurist Yûichirô Miura's 1970 attempt to ski down a portion near the summit of the world's highest mountain, Everest, is presented. While he could simulate certain conditions in preparation on other mountains, he and his team could only visually inspect that segment of the mountain from a distance, it with pitches as steep as forty-five degrees which would propel him to speeds he would have never experienced on skis before, ninety percent ice to ten percent snow, and visible rock outcrops, the bottom of which was just above a deep crevasse. As such, this will be a one only attempt if that. The expedition required the human resources of over one hundred people in the actual expedition up the mountain, with only a handful with Miura at the summit if they make it that far. The team not only has the issues surrounding Miura's ski, but the many regular issues of climbing Everest itself. The moving picture footage is largely accompanied by recitations from Miura's written diary that he kept on the expedition.—Huggo
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Aug 19, 2023 at 03:00 AM