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High achiever: Nepalese mountaineer Kami Rita scales Everest for record 23rd time

Kami Rita Sherpa sitting in his rented room on the outskirts of Kathmandu in March 2018 before his 22nd ascent.

Kami Rita Sherpa sitting in his rented room on the outskirts of Kathmandu in March 2018 before his 22nd ascent. Photo: AFP/Getty

Sherpa climber Kami Rita has scaled Mount Everest for a 23rd time, breaking his record for the most successful ascents of the world’s highest peak.

Rita reached the summit with other climbers on Wednesday morning and all of them were reported to be safe, said Gyanendra Shrestha, a Nepalese government official at the mountain’s base camp.

Rita’s two closest peers have climbed the 8850-metre peak 21 times each, but both have retired from mountain climbing.

“It is my profession, but at the same time I am setting new world record for Nepal too,” Rita told The Associated Press last month before heading to the mountain.

Rita, 49, first scaled Everest in 1994 and has been making the trip nearly every year since, one of many Sherpa guides whose expertise and skills are vital to the safety and success of the hundreds of climbers who head to Nepal each year seeking to stand on top of the world.

His father was among the first Sherpa guides employed to help climbers reach the summit, and Rita followed in his footsteps and then some.

In addition to his nearly two dozen summits of Everest, Rita has scaled several other peaks that are among the world’s highest, including K-2, Cho-Oyu, Manaslu and Lhotse.

Rita was at Everest’s base camp in 2015 when an avalanche swept through, killing 19 people.

After that tragedy, he came under intense family pressure to quit mountaineering altogether, but in the end decided against it.

“I know Mount Everest very well, having climbed it 22 times, but at the same time I know I may or may not come back,” he told AP last month.

“I am like a soldier who leaves behind their wives, children and family to battle for the pride of the country.”

Mountaineers Lhakpa Sherpa and Kami Rita Sherpa pose in front of Tenzing Norgay and Edmund Hillary statues for International Everest Day in May 2018. Photo: AFP/Getty

Rita has been an advocate for other Sherpa guides, who he said do not get the recognition they are due.

He said that before climbers reach the summit to take their photographs announcing their success, there are months of hard work done by Sherpas.

The Sherpas are the ones who take care of setting up the camps, carrying the loads on their backs, cooking food and carrying oxygen tanks.

Perhaps most important, it is Sherpas who each year fix ropes and ladders over crevasses and icefalls that make things safer for the hundreds of climbers who will follow them.

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