Climbers rescued after three days on mountain
A British climber who went missing in the Himalayas expressed her relief after enduring two days in “brutal” conditions that threatened her life.
Fay Manners, originally from Bedfordshire, and her climbing partner, Michelle Dvorak from the United States, found themselves stranded on Chaukhamba mountain in northern India when the rope transporting their food, tent, and climbing gear snapped, leaving them without supplies.
The pair managed to send an emergency message from over 20,000 feet (6,096 meters), but search and rescue teams initially struggled to locate them.
Speaking to the BBC, Ms. Manners described how the two were “terrified” as they attempted to descend on their own before being rescued.
Ms. Manners, an accomplished alpinist who specializes in challenging climbs, now resides in Chamonix, France.
After a loose rock severed the rope carrying their bags, Ms. Manners experienced a sense of “despair.” She recalled, “I watched the bag tumble down the mountain and immediately understood the consequences of what was to come.”
“We had none of our safety equipment left. No tent. No stove to melt snow for water. No warm clothes for the evening. Our ice axes and crampons for retreat back to basecamp.
“No head torch for moving at night.”
The pair were able to send a text message to emergency services, prompting a search and rescue.
The women took cover on a ledge as it started snowing, sharing the only sleeping bag they had.
“I felt hypothermic, constantly shaking and with the lack of food my body was running out of energy to keep warm,” Ms Manners said.
The next morning a helicopter came to find the pair, but could not locate them – meaning they faced another 24 hours on the mountain.
“They did try to rescue us but the conditions were brutal for the company to operate in. Bad weather, fog, high altitude and they couldn’t find us as the face was so vast,” she explained.
After managing to abseil down the mountain face to some melting ice, the two women managed to catch some water in their bottles.
Ms Manners said they “barely survived” the storm that afternoon and the second night in the cold with no food and only a little water.
“The helicopter flew past again, couldn’t see us. We were destroyed,” she said.
“We knew we had to try to go down ourselves as the helicopter wasn’t going to help us.”
On that second morning, they began to cautiously abseil down the rock spur, aware their weak condition could lead to mistakes.
At that point they spotted a team of French climbers coming towards them – rescuers who had heard about their situation from mutual friends.
They shared their equipment, food and sleeping bags with the women and contacted the helicopter with an exact location for rescue.
Ms Manners said: “I cried with relief knowing we might survive.
“They supported us to get across the steep glacier that would have been impossible without our equipment crampons and ice axes.
“We would have either frozen to death or attempted to cross the steep glaciers without the right equipment and slipped to our peril.
“Or maybe, maybe the helicopter would finally have found us?”