Article from http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/World-News/British-Man-Swims-Under-Mount-Everest-Summit-Lewis-Gordon-Pugh-Swam-Across-Pumori-Lake-In-Speedos/Article/201005415636900
By David Williams, Sky News Online , 2:59pm UK, Sunday May 23, 2010
A British endurance swimmer has summoned the peak of his powers to become the first person to swim under the summit of Mount Everest.
By David Williams, Sky News Online , 2:59pm UK, Sunday May 23, 2010
A British endurance swimmer has summoned the peak of his powers to become the first person to swim under the summit of Mount Everest.
Lewis Gordon Pugh battled freezing waters wearing only a pair of Speedos, a cap and goggles to cross the 1km glacial lake next to the Khumbu Glacier.
He came close to drowning during test swims for the event amid bouts of altitude sickness on the Pumori Lake, which sits 17,000ft above sea level.
But an adapted approach saw him through to complete the swim in a time of 22 mins and 51 secs.
He had battled ice-cold water before, swimming "with speed and aggression" in Antarctica and across the North Pole.
The 40-year-old earned the nickname the 'Human Polar Bear' for his aptitude in arctic conditions.
He set off for the Everest summit on May 5, almost nine months after announcing the project.
But he quickly learned he needed to take a different tact in the 2C Pumori waters, which he had scrambled over rocks and boulders to access.
"You can't use the same tactics," he explained. "Because of the altitude you need to swim very slowly and deliberately.
"Swimming 20 metres at full speed in the test swim, I felt I was going to drown."
He adopted breast-stroke to help his breathing and concentrated all his energies on controlling his speed.
Going too fast could have pushed him into hyperventilation - too slowly and he would have died of hypothermia.
"I was gasping for air and if I had swum any faster I would have gone under," he recounted.
"I was deeply concerned that I wouldn't make 1km and I'm delighted that I've finally achieved it."
The environmental campaigner undertook the challenge to raise awareness of the melting glaciers in the Himalayas and the impact of declining water supplies in the region.
"I have seen glaciers in the Arctic, the Alps, Central Africa, Antarctica and the Himalayas - and it's the same story everywhere," he said.
"Most glaciers are melting away. The glaciers in the Himalayas are not just ice. They are a lifeline - they provide water to approximately two billion people."
Pugh's heroics come as a 22-year-old British woman became the country's youngest female to reach summit of Everest.
Bonita Norris achieved the feat two years after she "woke up with a crazy idea" to climb the world's highest mountain.
A few days later, a 13-year-old American boy phoned home from Everest's top spot after he became the youngest person to reach the summit.
He came close to drowning during test swims for the event amid bouts of altitude sickness on the Pumori Lake, which sits 17,000ft above sea level.
But an adapted approach saw him through to complete the swim in a time of 22 mins and 51 secs.
He had battled ice-cold water before, swimming "with speed and aggression" in Antarctica and across the North Pole.
The 40-year-old earned the nickname the 'Human Polar Bear' for his aptitude in arctic conditions.
He set off for the Everest summit on May 5, almost nine months after announcing the project.
But he quickly learned he needed to take a different tact in the 2C Pumori waters, which he had scrambled over rocks and boulders to access.
"You can't use the same tactics," he explained. "Because of the altitude you need to swim very slowly and deliberately.
"Swimming 20 metres at full speed in the test swim, I felt I was going to drown."
He adopted breast-stroke to help his breathing and concentrated all his energies on controlling his speed.
Going too fast could have pushed him into hyperventilation - too slowly and he would have died of hypothermia.
"I was gasping for air and if I had swum any faster I would have gone under," he recounted.
"I was deeply concerned that I wouldn't make 1km and I'm delighted that I've finally achieved it."
The environmental campaigner undertook the challenge to raise awareness of the melting glaciers in the Himalayas and the impact of declining water supplies in the region.
"I have seen glaciers in the Arctic, the Alps, Central Africa, Antarctica and the Himalayas - and it's the same story everywhere," he said.
"Most glaciers are melting away. The glaciers in the Himalayas are not just ice. They are a lifeline - they provide water to approximately two billion people."
Pugh's heroics come as a 22-year-old British woman became the country's youngest female to reach summit of Everest.
Bonita Norris achieved the feat two years after she "woke up with a crazy idea" to climb the world's highest mountain.
A few days later, a 13-year-old American boy phoned home from Everest's top spot after he became the youngest person to reach the summit.
Pugh celebrates after his death-defying feat.
His wrapped-up supporters help him out of the icy water.
Pugh hopes to draw attention to the melting sea ice.
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