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Hilaree Nelson

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Hilaree Nelson
Born(1972-12-13)December 13, 1972
DiedSeptember 26, 2022(2022-09-26) (aged 49)
NationalityAmerican
OccupationSki mountaineer

Hilaree Nelson (December 13, 1972 - September 26, 2022) was an American ski mountaineer and the first female to summit two 8000-meter peaks (Everest and Lhotse) in one 24 hour push on May 25, 2012.[1][2] On September 30, 2018, Nelson and partner Jim Morrison made the first ski descent of the "Dream Line", the Lhotse Couloir from the summit.[3][4][5] Lhotse is the 4th-tallest mountain in the world and shares a saddle with Mount Everest.

Nelson was named one of "The Most 25 Adventurous Women of the Past 25 Years" by Men's Journal,[6] as well as being named as one of National Geographic's 2018 Adventurers of the Year.[7]

Career

Nelson grew up in Seattle, started skiing at age 3, skied at Stevens Pass, is a mother of two, and now resides in Telluride, Colorado and serves as the current The North Face Global Athletic Team Captain.[8][9][10][11] She was a team member on the 2012 Montana State University Everest Education Expedition.[12] Nelson is a National Geographic Explorers grant recipient, has been a member of over 40 expeditions, and has first ski descents on Baffin and South Georgia Islands, Argentina, Kamchatka, Russia, the Tetons, and more. In addition, her writing has been featured in such publications as National Geographic Adventure, The Ski Journal, Outside Journal, and more.[13]

Notable accomplishments

  • First ski descent of the Dream Line (from summit), Lhotse Couloir, Nepal, 2018[3][4][5]
  • First ski descent of Papursa Peak, India, 2017[14]
  • First female descent of Makalu La Couloir, Nepal, 2015[3]
  • First to ski all five "Holy Peaks", Mongolian Altai[15][6]
  • First female to climb Everest and Lhotse in 24 hours, Nepal, May 25, 2012[1]
  • Skied from the summit of Cho Oyu, Tibet, September 22, 2005[6][16]
  • Skied from the summit of Denali, Messner Couloir, USA, June 16, 2011[17]
  • First female descent of Bubble Fun Couloir, Tetons, USA[17]
  • European Women's Extreme Skiing Champion, 1996[6]

Advocacy

  • Part of the "She Moves Mountains" campaign between The North Face and Girl Scouts of the USA which endeavors to inspire, prepare, and mobilize the next generation of female explorers[18][19]

Death

On September 26, 2022, Nelson fell into a crevasse while skiing with her partner, Jim Morrison, down from the summit of Mount Manaslu in Nepal.[20][21][22] Initial rescue efforts were hampered by bad weather but on September 28 her body was located on the south face of Mount Manaslu and was carried down to the base camp by rescuers.[23][24]

Filmography

  • Lhotse
  • Down to Nothing
  • The Denali Experiment (2011, 15 min, directed by Jimmy Chin and Renan Ozturk)
  • K2: The Impossible Descent (2020, 65 min)

Accolades

  • Named one of "The Most 25 Adventurous Women of the Past 25 Years" by Men’s Journal.[6]
  • Named one of National Geographic's 2018 Adventurers of the Year[7]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Klingsporn, Katie (June 14, 2012) On top of the world, and then back again; Telluride athlete Hilaree O'Neill summits Everest Lhotse in 24 hours Telluride Daily Planet
  2. ^ Crylen, Mary (11 May 2019) Ski mountaineer Hilaree Nelson at National Geographic Live Chicago Stage Standard
  3. ^ a b c Quarrier, Sadie (October 12, 2018) Interview: First ski descent of the world's fourth tallest peak nationalgeographic.com
  4. ^ a b Brown, Julie How Hilaree Nelson and Jim Morrison Skied Lhotse outsideonline.com
  5. ^ a b Chris Ballard (February 6, 2020). "Love and Lhotse". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved September 27, 2022.
  6. ^ a b c d e Potts, Mary Anne The 25 most adventurous women of the past 25 years Men's Journal
  7. ^ a b National Geographic’s 2018 Adventurers of the Year nationalgeographic.com
  8. ^ The North Face Athlete profile thenorthface.com
  9. ^ Black Diamond Equipment Athlete profile blackdiamondequipment.com
  10. ^ Mitka, Nate (July 17, 2018) Hilaree Nelson Replaces Conrad Anker as TNF Team Captain gearjunkie.com
  11. ^ Beekman, Kimberley Breaking through: A six-part series profiling athletes reaching the next level in their sport: Hilaree Nelson tetongravity.com
  12. ^ MSU Everest Education Expedition team members montana.edu
  13. ^ About Hilaree Nelson adventuremedicalkits.com
  14. ^ Bisharat, Andrew (2018) This Ski Mountaineer Found Redemption on India's Peak of Evil
  15. ^ Olson, Emily (November 27, 2017)Above the clouds and beyond the brink with adventurer Hilaree O'Neill thesixfifty.com
  16. ^ Cho Oyu Autumn 2005 Ascents himalayandatabase.com
  17. ^ a b Brown, Julie (February 16, 2018) The mountains are calling, and Hilaree O'Neill must go
  18. ^ Hilaree Moves Mountains thenorthface.com
  19. ^ Hinton, Graham (February 7, 2019)Where Gillette got it wrong, The North Face gets it right with its "She Moves Mountains" campaign creativemovement.co
  20. ^ Binaj Gurubacharya (September 27, 2022). "Famed American ski mountaineer missing in Nepal mountain". ABC News. Associated Press. Retrieved September 27, 2022.
  21. ^ Max Matza (September 26, 2022). "Hilaree Nelson: US mountaineer missing after 'skiing into crevasse'". BBC. Retrieved September 27, 2022.
  22. ^ Frederick Dreier (September 26, 2022). "Hilaree Nelson Is Missing on Manaslu After a Deadly Day on the Mountain". Outside Online. Retrieved September 27, 2022.
  23. ^ "Missing ski mountaineer Hilaree Nelson found dead". The Himalayan Times. September 28, 2022. Retrieved September 28, 2022.
  24. ^ Andrew Thorpe (September 28, 2022). "American mountaineer Hilaree Nelson found dead after fall from Nepal's Mount Manaslu". abc.net.au. Retrieved September 28, 2022.