this happens at an assembly and all the littluns scream “I WANNA GO HOME”
five nights in 5,000 different positions
tsunashizu i think i never shared here
some doodles of these two :’)
The Roy Siblings + Triangle Composition Shots
this guy is the best ni no kuni character and im tired of pretending he's not
Hopes Dim for Three Climbers Missing in Winter K2 Attempt
Reaching the peak in the harshest of seasons is considered one of the greatest challenges in mountaineering.
The Concordia camping site in front of the K2 summit, center, in the Karakoram range in Pakistan. Credit...Amelie Herenstein/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
— By Zia ur-Rehman and Sameer Yasir | February 8, 2021 | The New York Times
KARACHI, Pakistan — Some climbers call it “the savage mountain.” K2 stands as the world’s second-tallest summit, after Mount Everest, and some climbers consider it even more perilous. Only last month did one group become the first to successfully scale it during winter, braving dangerously thin air and temperatures that can plunge past minus 70 degrees Fahrenheit.
On Monday, rescuers and mountaineers underscored the dangers of climbing K2 in winter after the authorities in Pakistan said that three climbers had been missing since Friday and that hopes of finding them alive were evaporating. The missing climbers were Muhammad Ali Sadpara, a 45-year-old from Pakistan; John Snorri, 47, from Iceland; and Juan Pablo Mohr, a 33-year-old Chilean.
The authorities said that they would continue the search on Tuesday after halting operations briefly on Monday because of poor visibility. But officials and some family members expressed little hope that the three would be found alive.
“There is no hope for anyone to survive at 8,000 meters after three days,” said Sajid Ali Sadpara, the son of Mr. Sadpara. The younger Mr. Sadpara had been part of the expedition but aborted his ascent at an altitude of 8,200 meters after his oxygen pipe started leaking. “Now the search operation should continue to recover the bodies,” he added.
The trio was making its second attempt to scale the summit since December. The three were last seen on Friday, around noon, at a narrow couloir called Bottleneck, the precipitous climb just 300 meters from the peak of K2.
Muhammad Ali Sadpara, left, the Pakistani mountaineer, in 2018.
Muhammad Ali Sadpara, left, the Pakistani mountaineer, in 2018.Credit...Alpine Club of Pakistan, via Associated Press
K2, in the Karakoram range in northern Pakistan, near the border with China, is 8,611 meters — that’s more than five miles — above sea level. For decades, climbers from across the world have regarded scaling K2 from November to the end of February as one of the most daunting challenges in mountaineering.
Many who have tried have lost their lives. In 2008, 11 lives were lost, while 13 climbers died over a two-week span in 1986, one of the worst disasters in mountaineering history. Mountaineering experts say climbers face a lack of oxygen, snow blindness and frostbite.
This winter has been especially deadly. Last month, two climbers died after either falling down a crevasse while descending or trying to scale nearby peaks in preparation for K2.
A 42-year-old Bulgarian alpinist, Atanas Skatov, was found dead on Friday by a Pakistani Army helicopter on K2 after reportedly falling at about 7,400 meters.
In January, a Spanish climber, Sergi Mingote, fell to his death while descending the mountain. Alex Goldfarb, a Russian-American professor from Harvard University, also lost his life in the same month on a nearby mountain during an acclimatizing mission.
Still, climbers continue their attempts. Last month, a Nepali mountain-climbing team become the first to reach the peak of K2 during winter.
K2: The Killer Summit
K2, at 8,611 metres above sea level, is the second highest mountain in the world, after Mount Everest at 8,848 metres. It is located on the China–Pakistan border between Baltistan in the Gilgit-Baltistan region of northern Pakistan, and Dafdar Township in Taxkorgan Tajik Autonomous County of Xinjiang, China.
In August 2008, 25 climbers from several international expeditions converged on high camp of K2, the final stop before the summit of the most dangerous mountain on earth. Just 48 hours later, 11 had been killed or simply vanished, making it the deadliest day in mountaineering history.
In a century of assaults on K2, only about 300 people have ever seen the view from the planet's second highest peak. More than a quarter of those who made it didn't live long enough to share the glory.