June 20 West Buttress Expedition – Meet the Team!

We would like to welcome the June 20 West Buttress team! We’re so excited to be along for the ride and don’t take lightly that touching the pearly white slopes of Denali is a life goal for many after several months of training and years spent on mountains locally and around the world. The team will be attempting the classic West Buttress route, the more common route attempted on Denali, which ascends over 13,000 feet from Basecamp on the South East Fork of the Kahiltna Glacier to the astounding 20,310 foot (6,190 meter) summit!

Majestic Denali rises a full 18,000 feet (5,486 meters) above its surrounding landscape. Thats 5,000 feet MORE than the elevation relief of Mt Everest! Due to its location so close to the Arctic Circle, conditions can often be very winter like well into the summer months. Around the Summer Solstice, the Alaska Range experiences over 20 hours of daylight, and even in the depths of night the sun never truly sets, making headlamps unnecessary and eye masks essential. The West Buttress will lead the team through heavily glaciated terrain from Basecamp on the Kahiltna Glacier at 7,200′, to Camp One at 7,800′, Camp Two at 11,200′, Camp Three at 14,200′, High Camp at 17,200′, to–conditions permitting–the 20,310′ summit.

This team consists of:

  • Andrew Rice is joining us from the United States
  • Nick Hateley hails from the United Kingdom
  • Joachim Eckoff comes from Austria
  • Paul Anderson is going from the United Kingdom
  • Aaron Anderson also hails from the United Kingdom
  • Peter Lethbridge will be coming over from New Zealand

This crew will be lead by lead guide Jason Denley, assisted by Harrison Lewis and Max Strotbeck.

Throughout the team’s expedition, please keep in mind the adage of “no news is good news” in terms of the updates from the field. There are some days when certain circumstances, like poor satellite phone reception (this happens frequently at Camp 2 at 11,200′, as it is situated in a high-alpine basin with massive peaks on all sides), fatigue from a particularly long day, no change in their situation due to weather, etc., will prevent teams from calling in an update. Friends and family are encouraged to leave comments for their loved ones on this expedition, but keep in mind that they will not be able to see posts or comments until they return to Talkeetna after the end of their expedition, once they leave the glacier.

Denali Fun Fact: Over 1,100 climbers have registered to climb Denali this year, 2022. Roughly 35,000 people have attempted Denali since its first successful summit in 1913. So these folks are adding themselves to the 0.0002% of the population of the world that has attempted this mountain! The summit rate of Denali is about 60%, thats roughly 0.0001% of people on earth who have stood on the tallest point in North America. 🙂

Best of luck crew!

-The Mountain Trip Team

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