Green Boots
One of the most well known of all the climbers who perished while attempting to scale Everest is Tsewang Paljor, better known by his nickname, “Green Boots.” While three of the members of a six-man Indo-Tibetan team decided to turn back, Paljor and two other members, Tsewang Samanla and Dorje Morup, made the fateful decision to carry on. It was a decision which cost all three men their lives. Paljor’s body and his recognisable green boots are passed by every climber who takes the North East route to the summit of Mount Everest.
The 2015 movie “Everest” tells the tragic story of how eight climbers died when a violent storm hit during their final ascent to the summit, capturing them in a powerful blizzard. In the movie, Jake Gyllenhaal plays Scott Fischer who was one of the eight people who died that day. The movie features a scene where Fischer’s friend Anatoli Boukreev, after realising that it is too late to save his friend, covers Scott’s face with his backpack before turning away.
The harsh reality of the “Death Zone,” which is the zone above 26, 247 feet, is that at this extreme altitude there is not enough oxygen in the air for humans to breathe. Without supplemental oxygen, you will eventually suffocate to death. This is why so many bodies remain on Mount Everest. It is too dangerous to attempt a descent while simultaneously transporting a body at extreme altitude.
Even in cases where the person is still alive, climbers have had to weigh up the risk of trying to save someone’s life with endangering their own. A particularly sad case with tragic consequences occurred in May in 1998. Francys Arsentiev had just become the first American woman to summit Mount Everest without supplementary oxygen. While she and her husband, Sergei, were descending following this momentous achievement, they became separated. When Sergei arrived back into camp on May 23rd, he realised that Francys had not made it down.
Although exhausted, Sergei decided to try and rescue her. During his ascent, he met an Uzbek team of climbers who had found Francys in difficulty. The Uzbek team had tried in vain to rescue Francys, abandoning their own summit attempt in the process, but had to give up when their oxygen ran out. The men had no choice but to abandon Francys to save their own lives. Sergei continued his ascent to try and save his wife’s life.
The following morning, a team of climbers including, Ian Woodall and Cathy O’Dowd, discovered Francys, who amazingly was still alive, but was slipping in and out of consciousness. O’Dowd and Woodall spent nearly an hour with Francys in temperatures as low as minus 30 degrees Celcius. “Don’t leave me,” Francys pleaded, but O’Dowd and Woodall realised that she was beyond rescuing and had to make the heart-wrenching decision to leave her behind. O’Dowd recalls the experience in her book, Just for the love of it: “I had never encountered anything like this. I had passed bodies, I had friends not come back, but I had never watched anyone die. Nor had I had to decide to leave them.”
As was the case with Paljor (Green Boots), Francys Arsentiev’s body remained right next to the North Col route for years, being passed by hundreds of climbers going to and from the summit. In 2007, Ian Woodall returned to move Francys body away from the North Col route and out of sight. He brought with him a note from her family which he put it in her pocket before covering her body with the American flag.