This Article is From May 22, 2014

Nepal Opens Up 104 New Himalayan Peaks for Climbing

Nepal Opens Up 104 New Himalayan Peaks for Climbing

File Photo of the Himalayan Mountain Range

Katmandu, Nepal: Nepal has opened 104 more mountain peaks for climbers, including two named after the conquerors of Mount Everest, hoping more foreign climbers come to the Himalayan country, a tourism official said Thursday.

Tourism Ministry official Maddhu Sudan Burlakoti said the peaks opened by the government include 7,681-meter (25,200-foot) high Hillary and 7,916-meter (25,970-foot) Tenzing.

New Zealander Edmund Hillary and his Sherpa guide Tenzing Norgay became the first people to climb Everest on May 29, 1953. Next week marks the 61st anniversary of the conquest.

Climbers would have the opportunity to conquer these new peaks that have never been climbed before.

Hundreds of climbers come every year to scale the Himalayan peaks in Nepal, which has eight of the 14 tallest peaks in the world.

Last month an avalanche swept the slopes of Mount Everest killing 16 Nepalese Sherpa guides in the mountain's worst climbing disaster. Everest's climbing season was cancelled. Climbers were forced to return from Everest without an attempt to scale the 8,850-meter (29,035-foot) world's highest mountain because many Sherpa guides refused to climb after the deaths.

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