Ain’t no mountain high enough, not even Everest, for the people of the Nepalese village of Phortse
- In high-altitude Nepal, one Sherpa village has more Everest summiteers than anywhere else on Earth. Why?
The village of Phortse, in Nepal’s Khumbu Valley, is perched high on a plateau, surrounded by lush green slopes and snow-covered mountains. In a narrow lane at an elevation of 3,800 metres (12,500 feet), two unassuming young men in their early 20s are spinning yarn on their balcony.
Later, in my guest house, I ask our host, Panuru Sherpa, serving us tea, whether he has summited Sagarmatha and he replies nonchalantly that he has indeed – “13 times”.
In a nearby house live a father, son and daughter who in the spring of 2021 reached the peak of Sagarmatha together, a first, and a Guinness World Record.
“When we summited Everest together as a family, there was no plan,” says the daughter, 21-year-old Pasang Kanchi Sherpa, “but when we set the record I felt encouraged to pursue my dream of mountaineering in future.”