Anni Penttilä | |
Birth Date: | 22 April 1993 |
Birth Place: | Mikkeli, Finland |
Known For: | Summited 4 eight-thousanders, youngest Finnish woman to have summitted Everest |
Occupation: | Mountaineer, entrepreneur, tour guide |
Anni Katri Penttilä (born 22 April 1993, Mikkeli, Finland) is a Finnish mountaineer from Helsinki, who in civilian life works as a digital marketing entrepreneur and a tour guide in Tanzania and Nepal.[1] [2] [3] [4]
Penttilä became interested in mountain hiking and climbing at the age of 16 in 2009, when she read an article about the Annapurna Circuit hiking trail in National Geographic. She was able to hike there in 2013. “The place was just as wonderful as I had imagined. We were at an altitude of 5.5 kilometers, with snow-covered mountains all around. I was immediately hooked.” “I was 19 years old when I set myself the goal of climbing Everest before I turn 30,” she told Retki magazine later. After an eight-year project, she reached the summit at the age of 27 as part of the Altitude Junkies group led by Phil Crampton.[5] After conquering Everest, she is the 19th Finn and the youngest Finnish woman to have summitted that mountain.[6]
By the end of 2024, Penttilä has managed to climb four eight-thousanders in Nepal. Her goal is to climb all 14 eight-thousanders in the future. In the summer of 2025, she plans to climb K2 in Pakistan, i.e. Godwin Austen (8 611 m), and the nearby Broad Peak (8 051 m), both of which are located in the Karakorum Range. She also has the goal of conquering the so-called seven summits as the first Finnish woman. So far, the only Finn known to have achieved this feat is Atte Miettinen.[7]
While preparing for her climbs, Penttilä has also experienced adversity. She broke her humerus in a gym accident in March 2017. Almost at the same time, her knee required surgery. After that, Penttilä had to move around in a wheelchair, and she wondered if the dream of conquering Everest should be abandoned. However, some six months later she managed to conquer Kilimanjaro. While in the mountains, she has managed to avoid problems, apart from occasional symptoms of mountain sickness.[8]
Penttilä has told about her experiences in the mountains as follows:[9]
Anni Penttilä — eight-thousanders | |||||||||
width=30 style=background:#BED9F6 | No. | width=140 style=background:#BED9F6 | Date | width=220 style=background:#BED9F6 | Mountain | width=120 style=background:#BED9F6 | Height | width=120 style=background:#BED9F6 | References |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | 24 May 2021 | Mount Everest, Nepal | 8 848 metres | [10] [11] | |||||
2. | 21 September 2023 | Manaslu, Nepal | 8 163 metres | [12] | |||||
3. | 20 May 2024 | Lhotse, Nepal | 8 516 metres | [13] [14] | |||||
4. | 6 October 2024 | Cho Oyu, Nepal | 8 188 metres | [15] |
Anni Penttilä — other summits | |||||||||
width=120 style=background:#BED9F6 | Year | width=220 style=background:#BED9F6 | Mountain | width=120 style=background:#BED9F6 | Height | width=120 style=background:#BED9F6 | Continent | width=120 style=background:#BED9F6 | References |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2014 | 6 189 metres | ||||||||
2017 | 5 895 metres | ||||||||
2018 | 4 392 metres | ||||||||
2018 | 2 157 metres | ||||||||
2018 | 2 208 metres | ||||||||
2018 | Mera Peak, Nepal | 6 476 metres | Asia | ||||||
2018 | Baruntse, Nepal | 7 162 metres | Asia | ||||||
2019 | Lobuche East, Nepal | 6 119 metres | Asia | ||||||
2020 | Kilimanjaro, Tanzania | 5 895 metres | Africa | ||||||
2021 | Ama Dablam, Nepal | 6 812 metres | Asia | ||||||
2022 | Kilimanjaro, Tanzania | 5 895 metres | Africa | ||||||
2024 | Lobuche East, Nepal | 6 119 metres | Asia |
Penttilä graduated from the Aalto University in 2017 with a Master of Science degree in Economics and Business Administration. She wrote her master’s thesis on trust in mountain climbing expeditions and how it reflects in the business world.[16] She has said that it was not difficult to find people to interview for her research.