Andrzej Bargiel has done what no one else has managed before, skiing all the way down Nanga Parbat, one of the deadliest mountains on the planet. The Polish mountaineer pulled off the historic descent without using any supplemental oxygen, cementing his place among the greats of extreme mountaineering.
1 hour Ago By Kamil Wrona
The 38-year-old reached the summit of the 8,126-meter peak in Pakistan on Wednesday before beginning his ski descent. Nanga Parbat has earned the grim nickname "Killer Mountain" thanks to its brutal terrain and constant threat of avalanches, making Bargiel's achievement all the more remarkable.
A Dangerous Route, Carefully Planned
Bargiel chose the mountain's western Diamir face for his descent, adding yet another landmark moment to an already impressive career. Just last September, he made headlines by becoming the first person ever to ski down Mount Everest without bottled oxygen. Now, with Nanga Parbat behind him, he has also become the first climber to summit and ski every one of Pakistan's five 8,000-meter peaks, all without supplemental oxygen support.
Plenty of skilled ski mountaineers had tried to take on Nanga Parbat before Bargiel, but none succeeded in skiing the whole way down. Most were forced to stop partway, having to rappel or find ways around treacherous bottlenecks and dangerous icefalls scattered across the mountain. Bargiel took a different approach, reportedly spending days mapping out a route that let him ski continuously from summit to base, without needing to break stride for the mountain's trickiest sections.
A Mountain Tied to Tragedy and Heroism
Nanga Parbat ranks as the ninth-highest mountain in the world and is one of just 14 peaks on Earth that soar above 8,000 meters. For Polish climbers, though, this mountain carries a weight that goes beyond statistics. It holds deep significance in the country's mountaineering history, shaped by both tragedy and extraordinary courage.
Back in 2018, Polish climber Tomasz Mackiewicz lost his life on Nanga Parbat's unforgiving slopes. His climbing partner at the time, French mountaineer Élisabeth Revol, survived only because of a daring nighttime rescue mission carried out by fellow Polish climbers Adam Bielecki and Denis Urubko. That harrowing rescue remains one of the most talked-about chapters in the mountain's history, and it's part of why Bargiel's successful descent feels like such a meaningful moment for Polish mountaineering as a whole.
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