Imja Tse Explained

Imja Tse
Other Name:Island Peak
Elevation M:6165
Elevation Ref:[1]
Range:Khumbu Himal
Listing:Mountains of Nepal
Country:Nepal
Region:Khumbu
District:Solukhumbu
Part Type:Protected area
Part:Sagarmatha National Park
Map:Nepal
Label Position:left
Coordinates:27.9208°N 86.9352°W
First Ascent:1956 by Hans-Rudolf Von Gunten and 2 unknown Sherpas
Easiest Route:North Ridge PD+
glacier/scrambling/ice climbing
Fetchwikidata:ALL

Imja Tse, better known as Island Peak, is a mountain in Sagarmatha National Park in the Himalayas of eastern Nepal. The peak was named Island Peak in 1953 by members of the British Mount Everest expedition because it appears as an island in a sea of ice when viewed from Dingboche.[2] The peak was later renamed in 1983 to Imja Tse but Island Peak remains the popular choice.[3] The peak is actually an extension of the ridge coming down off the south end of Lhotse Shar.

The southwest summit of Imja Tse was first climbed in 1953 as part of a training exercise by a British expedition that went on to summit Mount Everest. The team that climbed Imja Tse comprised Tenzing Norgay, Charles Evans, Alfred Gregory, Charles Wylie and seven other Sherpas. The main summit was first climbed in 1956 by Hans-Rudolf Von Gunten and two unknown Sherpas, members of a Swiss team that went on to make the second ascent of Everest and the first ascent of Lhotse.[4] [5]

Climbing route

To climb Island Peak, one has the option of starting from a base camp at 5087m (16,690feet) called Pareshaya Gyab and starting the climb between 2 and 3 A.M. Another popular option is to ascend to High Camp at around 5600m (18,400feet) to reduce the amount of effort and time needed for summit day. However, an adequate water supply and concerns about sleeping at a higher altitude may dictate starting from base camp. Base camp to high camp is basically a hike but just above high camp, some rocky steps require moderate scrambling up through a broad open gully. At the top of the gully, glacier travel begins and proceeds up a steep snow and ice slope. From here, fixed ropes may be set up by the guides for the strenuous ascent of nearly 100m (300feet) to the summit ridge. The climb to the summit is somewhat difficult due to steep climbing. On top, while Mount Everest is a mere ten kilometres away to the north, the view is blocked by the massive wall of Lhotse, towering 2300-2NaN-2 above the summit.

Headwall crevasse

A substantial crevasse along most of the headwall leading to the summit ridge has sometimes caused teams to turn back. In April 2009, the Nepal Mountaineering Association tasked the Nepal Mountaineering Instructors' Association with installing stairs (ladders) at the crevasse.[6] As of the 2016 fall climbing season, a 5-metre high fixed aluminum ladder is being used to cross the crevasse.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: NMA Expedition Peaks . nepalmountaineering.org . 8 May 2023 . 6 March 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230306172225/https://nepalmountaineering.org/nma-peaks .
  2. Himalayan Journal . 1954 . Everest, 1953 . 18 . Wylie, Charles . 13 July 2018 .
  3. Web site: Imja Tse. Nepal Mountaineering Association. 23 May 2009.
  4. Book: O'Connor, Bill. The Trekking Peaks of Nepal. The Crowood Press. 1989. 74.
  5. Web site: Himalayan Database The Expedition Archives of Elizabeth Hawley . 13 July 2018 .
  6. Web site: Newsletter of the Nepal Mountaineering Association . Nepal Mountaineering Association . 29 October 2016 . 2016-10-29 . https://web.archive.org/web/20161029174606/http://www.nepalmountaineering.org/nl.php?year=2009&month=April . dead .