Ray Genet
Ray Genet (July 27, 1931 – October 2, 1979), often referred to by the nickname Pirate, was a Swiss-born American mountaineer. He was the first guide on North America's highest mountain, Alaska's Denali (Mount McKinley). Genet is the grandfather of actress Q'Orianka Kilcher.
Career
Genet's association with Denali began in 1967, when, although he had no previous mountaineering experience, he participated in the first successful winter expedition to Denali's summit, led by Gregg Blomberg. The expedition is described in Minus 148 Degrees: The First Winter Ascent of Mount McKinley (1970) by Art Davidson.[1]
Death
Genet died on October 2, 1979 while descending Mount Everest with his fellow climber Hannelore Schmatz, succumbing to hypothermia in the night. Exhausted from the climb, they had stopped to bivouac at 28,000 feet (8,500 m) as the night approached, despite their Sherpa guides urging them not to stop.
The two Sherpa guides, Sungdare Sherpa and Ang Jangbo, stayed with them in their bivouac but Genet did not survive until morning.[2] The group was running low on bottled oxygen, and Schmatz died trying to get down to South Col with Sungdare later that day.[2][3]
References
Citations
- Davidson 1999.
- Marshall, Roger (May 1986). "The King of Everest". Backpacker. p. 26.
- An Account of the 1979 Swabian Everest Expedition by Nick Banks in "The New Zealand Alpine Journal, 1980, Volume 33 pp102-104.
Bibliography
- Davidson, Art (1999). Minus 148 Degrees: The First Winter Ascent of Mount McKinley. Mountaineers Books. ISBN 9780898866872.
- (in Polish) Radosław Nawrot (2015-02-17). "35 lat temu Polacy jako pierwsi zdobyli zimą Mount Everest" [35 years ago Poles made the first winter ascent of Mount Everest]. Gazeta Wyborcza. ISSN 0860-908X. Retrieved 2015-02-26.