courtesy BLESMA
Ex-soldier turned mountaineer Hari Budha Magar has his eyes on an Everest record: to become the first double above knee amputee to climb the world's highest mountain. From the first couple to get married on top of the world's highest mountain, to the first person to paraglide from the summit, we take a look at Everest's fearless record breakers.
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1922: First attempts -- George Mallory and Edward Felix Norton took part in the first attempt to summit Everest. In 1922 they got as far as 27,300 feet, on the northeast ridge of Everest, but failed to reach the summit. That same year, seven Sherpas were killed when they were caught in an avalanche.
1924: First attempts -- Mallory returned to Everest in June 1924 with climbing partner Andrew Irvine. This is the last photo of the two before they disappeared on the mountain. Mallory's body was found 75 years later, showing signs of a fatal fall.
George W. Hales/Hulton Archive/Getty Images
1953: First summit -- Tenzing Norgay (C), better known as Sherpa Tensing, and Edmund Hillary (R) were the first to complete a successful ascent to the top of the world in May 1953.
Henry S. Hall, Jr. American Alpine Club Library, Barry Corbet Personal Papers and Films/AP
1963: First Americans to reach the top -- Members of a U.S. expedition team and Sherpas, led by Jim Whittaker, reached the top of Mount Everest in May 1963, becoming the first Americans to do so.
Paula Bronstein/Getty Images North America/Getty Images
1975: First woman to summit -- Japanese climber Junko Tabei was the first woman to reach Everest's summit in 1975. She climbed all Seven Summits during her lifetime, before passing away in 2016, aged 77.
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1980: First solo ascent -- Reinhold Messner holds the record for the first solo ascent in 1980. He was also the first to make the climb without supplemental oxygen two years earlier.
Lexington Herald-Leader/AP
1998: First American woman to summit without bottled oxygen -- Francys Distefano-Arsentiev was the first American woman to reach Everest's summit without bottled oxygen in May 1998. However, she and her husband, Sergei Arsentiev, died after becoming separated while attempting to descend in the dark. A climbing party found her barely conscious, but there was nothing they could do to save her. Her husband's body was found years later.
JAY DIRECTO/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
2001: First blind person to summit -- American mountaineer Erik Weihenmayer holds the record for being the first blind man to reach the summit of Mount Everest, accomplishing the feat in 2001. He has made it to the top of the highest mountains in all seven continents.
DEVENDRA M SINGH/AFP/Getty Images
2005: First couple to get married on the summit -- Pemba Dorje Sherpa and Moni Mulepati were the first people to get married on Everest's summit, in March 2005.
Sandra Mu/Getty Images AsiaPac/Getty Images
2006: First double amputee to conquer Everest -- Mark Inglis from New Zealand became the first double-amputee to conquer the world's highest mountain in 2006. But his achievement was also met with controversy. On the way to the summit, Inglis' team found British climber David Sharp near death in a cave 300 meters below the summit. They tried to help but Inglis said they could do little for Sharp and they carried on to the summit. Sharp died on the mountain.
courtesy Team Jordan Romero
2010: Youngest man to reach the summit -- Aged just 13, Jordan Romero braved Everest in May 2010, becoming the youngest person to reach its summit.
PRAKASH MATHEMA/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
2012: Oldest woman to summit -- Japanese mountaineer Tamae Watanabe became the oldest woman to conquer Mount Everest at age 73 in May 2012, breaking her own 10-year record.
/MIURA DOLPHINS Co., Ltd/AP
2013: Oldest man to summit Everest -- Yuichiro Miura reached the summit of Everest at the age of 80, in May 2013, making him the oldest person to achieve this feat.
AFP/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
2013: First female amputee to summit -- Indian mountaineer Arunima Sinha, who had her leg amputated below the left knee after she was thrown from a moving train, became the first female amputee to conquer Everest in May 2013.
Andhra Pradesh Information Center/AP
2014: Youngest woman to reach the summit -- The daughter of Indian farmers, 13-year-old Malavath Poorna (L) became the youngest girl to climb Everest in 2014.
BIJU BORO/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
2017: First woman to climb Everest twice in 5 days -- Indian mountaineer Anshu Jamsenpa successfully ascended Mount Everest twice in five days in 2017, making her the first woman to do so.
PRAKASH MATHEMA/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
2018: Most summits by a woman --- Nepalese climber Lhakpa Sherpa broke her own world record for most successful climbs of Everest for a woman, after conquering the mountain for the ninth time in 2018.
PRAKASH MATHEMA/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
2018: First double amputee to summit from Nepalese side -- Chinese double amputee climber Xia Boyu, who lost both of his legs during first attempt to climb Everest, finally reached the summit of the world's highest peak in May 2018. He became the first double amputee to summit from the Nepalese side, and the second double amputee to make it to the top.
PRAKASH MATHEMA/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
2019: Most summits by a man -- Kami Rita Sherpa, a Nepali mountaineer, broke his own world record for the most Everest summits in May by reaching the world's highest peak for the 24th time.
CNN  — 

Hari Budha Magar is laughing. He does that a lot. The ex-soldier turned mountaineer was being reminded that even at the top of the world in the freezing cold, there’s no danger of him getting frostbitten toes. Because he doesn’t have any.

Magar, a double above the knee amputee, is sitting in a southwest London charity office with his fundraising adviser hatching a plan to climb Mount Everest next spring. It won’t be the first time he’s tried to make the world-first ascent. As Magar puts it, he has climbed more than one Everest just to get to this point. But 2020 might finally be the year that he realizes his dream.

‘What about me climbing that mountain?’

Hari Budha Magar
Magar (second left) with his family as a child in Nepal. As a boy he lived in Mirul, Ropla district, later joining the British military aged 19.

Magar grew up in a village in western Nepal, far from Everest. He would walk to school barefoot, and read about Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay’s first summit in 1953 in his textbooks.

“I used to think ‘What about me climbing that mountain?’” he recalls. Everest was for the privileged, however, and he was not.

He joined the military aged 19 and passed the rigorous selection process for the elite Royal Gurkha Rifles, part of a brigade composed of Nepalese soldiers which has served in the British Army for over 200 years. Magar served across five continents in roles including sniper, covert surveillance and team medic. Then in 2010 an improvised explosive device detonated when he was on patrol in Afghanistan. “My life changed like that,” he says, snapping his fingers.

Hari Budha Magar
As a soldier Magar traveled to five continents (pictured: supporting SAS selection in Brunei in 2008).

He was rescued by American soldiers and underwent two operations at Bagram Air Base before being flown to the UK for further treatment. Four years after sustaining his injuries, he was discharged from the military with the rank of corporal. He was 35.

“After my injury I just didn’t know where to start life,” he says. “To be honest I struggled, because I couldn’t go to the toilet myself, I couldn’t eat (by) myself or wash myself initially.”

Magar built himself back up “one step at a time,” regaining his independence. He took up sports – lots of them – as part of his rehabilitation. In 2011 on a ski trip in the German and Austrian Alps he turned to his instructors and broached the idea of climbing mountains. They said they would help.

courtesy HST Adventure
Magar rock climbing during his expedition in 2017 in which he climbed Mera Peak (6,476 meters).

He traveled to Nepal with an able-bodied fellow Ghurka and montaineer, Krishna, and climbed to 4,700 meters. “Yeah, this is possible,” Magar thought, and the idea of Everest came into focus. Ahead of a summit attempt, Magar and a team climbed Mera Peak in Nepal in 2017, reaching 6,476 meters. But before he could take on Everest, in January 2018 the Nepalese government banned amputees and blind people from obtaining climbing permits, as part of new guidelines implemented in a bid to reduce accidents and climbing-related deaths.

The ban was appealed, and Nepal’s Supreme Court overturned the government’s decision in March 2018. Magar’s climbing window had passed however, meaning it was back to the drawing board for him and his team.

Now, nearly two years later, plans are ramping up once more.

‘It is better to die than be a coward’

courtesy HST Adventure
In 2017 Magar summited Mera Peak in Nepal as part of his Everest training. He plans to climb to 7,000 meters ahead of his Everest attempt in 2020.

Magar wouldn’t be the first double amputee to summit the world’s highest mountain – New Zealander Mark Inglis claimed that record in 2006. Double amputee Xia Boyu from China also scaled Everest in May 2018 (his fifth attempt) As Inglis and Xia are both below knee amputees, Magar would become the first double above knee amputee to attempt the climb.

“Above knee and below knee is a huge difference,” he explains. “Having a knee is so advantageous. You can lift your leg up and down. But (without a knee) you’re like a penguin.”

Today he’s wearing prostheses which replicate the length of a lower leg, with a foot and a hinge acting as a knee. But when he’s climbing he wears “stubbies,” a foreshortened prosthetic with plates at the base – plates that can be customized to feature crampons.

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Inglis incurred frostbite and impact damage on his stumps during his climb, requiring surgery. He has been advising Magar on how to avoid injury, with possible technology including carbon fibre sockets with heating and insulation options. “Stump frostbite is a real challenge for Hari,” he explained via email. “I was in -50 (Celsius) knee-deep powder near the summit – that will equate to waist deep for Hari.”

“Every little thing helps above 8,000m,” Inglis adds, “the line between a good idea, a great idea, a bad idea and a life-saving idea is very fine.”

Even with innovations, there’s no getting around the sheer effort of the climb. In August Magar scaled Mont Blanc with amputee Justin Davis as part of his training. On summit day he toiled for 23 hours, he says, “crawling pretty much 90-95%.”

HST Adventures
Ladder training in Nepal. Magar says the climb team is exploring climbing from the Tibetan side of the mountain where there are fewer crevasses to cross.

Magar says his movement is three times slower on his stubbies than an able-bodied person, meaning he and his group will spend a lot of time on Everest, requiring more supplies. “I’ve got a great team,” he says, and is under no illusion just how much he will rely on them.

His core team includes a Marine Corps Captain, Krishna and a Nepalese mountaineer with five Everest summits to his name. Plans are in place for eight high altitude Sherpas including a rescue team, six Sherpa porters and, pending confirmation, a physiotherapist, prosthetist and doctor.

An attempt on this scale comes with a hefty price tag: approximately $400,000 estimates Magar’s adviser John Simpson, founder and president of the On Course Foundation, a golf charity that provides career opportunities for wounded and sick military personnel and veterans. Simpson believes crowdfunding is the way forward and Magar has set a fundraising deadline of Christmas.

PHILIP COBURN/AFP/AFP via Getty Images
Magar with fellow Gurkha and double amputee Vinod Budhathoki and Prince Harry in 2017 at an event celebrating 200 years of UK-Nepalese relations. When the prince was in Afghanistan in 2007-2008 he served alongside Gurkhas.

In the meantime, the former Gurkha says he just needs to keep on keeping on. “Train hard, fight easy” is the military mindset Magar says he is putting into action.

More ominously he also invokes the Gurkha motto, “It is better to die than be a coward.” As a father to three young children, it begs the question why he would take such a risk.

“Initially my wife said, ‘Stay at home and look after your children … they have gone through a lot,’” he says. “But this is what I want to do.” He’s clear-eyed about the dangers of the climb and says he is “completely prepared” should the worst happen.

“Lots of people say that I’m doing (this) for myself,” he says. “To be honest, this is my second life and I want to make my life as meaningful as possible before I die.”

“In Nepali we say that being disabled is ‘like a burden of the earth’ – that’s the mentality,” he explains. Magar hopes that with the summit attempt he can raise awareness of just what is possible for a disabled person in the country of his birth, and hopefully inspire others further afield.

“This is much bigger than just me,” he adds. “I think one person can make a huge impact in the world. I believe that.”

Correction: The story has been updated to correct the Gurkha motto.