In just four minutes, you can see all the formidable majesty of Everest without actually climbing it yourself.
It is very rare and special to see footage captured from a drone that goes above the clouds and over the tallest mountains on Earth.
Pierre Carter, the 56-year-old South African who has made it his life’s mission to climb to the summit of the highest mountain on each continent and paraglide off it, recently ticked off Mount Everest.
Pierre Carter, the 56-year-old South African who has made it his life’s mission to climb to the summits of the highest mountain on each of the seven continents and paraglide off them, recently ticked off Mount Everest.
What was once an incredible feat of endurance tackled by a select few has turned into a bucket list tick and a massive ego boost.
’14 Peaks: Nothing is Impossible’ is a new biographical sports documentary, which journeys with Nims Purja and Project Possible… a seemingly impossible mission to summit 14 of the world’s 8000m plus peaks
‘Everest VR’ takes you to the top of Mount Everest and back, complete with some of the most incredible views you’ve ever seen.
As queues to get to the top of Everest continue to grow, sometimes with deadly consequences, adventurous mountaineers are looking for alternatives.
During the 2019 season, many climbers have died, and others have likened conditions to ‘The Lord of the Flies’. Perhaps John’s solution might help.
As hordes of climbers take on the world’s highest peak, basic human empathy appears to have gone out the window.
As more and more people tackle the world’s highest peak, some of whom are very inexperienced, the mountain claims more lives.
They’re finally doing something about the serious trash problem on Mount Everest, which includes an overwhelming amount of human excrement.
Fancy taking a look at some wedding photos that justify a 235-photo album on Facebook? Enter James Sissom and Ashley Schmieder.
Mount Everest isn’t the easiest peak to climb, yet it is many climbers’ most desirable for obvious reasons. If you plan to do it illegally then let this Jozi man’s experience be a warning.
Climbing Everest is no small feat, and those who reach the top usually return to great fanfare. Except when they’ve staged the whole thing.
The death toll from Nepal’s earthquake continues to rise, but one man who made it out alive was South African Rob Bentley. He managed to film some epic footage.
Ah, Planet Earth, for the most part you are doing alright. You give us beauty and most of us get to appreciate it. It really can be called ‘Earth Porn’.
If there’s one thing you can count on us humans to do it is trash just about any and every environment put in front of us. Oceans, tick. World’s highest mountain, tick.
You may never make it up the tallest mountain in the world, but at least you can see what one of natures finest has to offer. Using his Canon 5D Mark II, Elia Saikaly has managed to put together one of the most spectacular time lapses yet. Expect to see skies plastered with stars and goose bumps to […]
Yes, he BASE jumped off Mount Everest. This crazy Russian Valery Rozov has successfully completed the world’s highest BASE jump. Rozov juumped off the north face of Mount Everest.
A new app has been released, that lets you explore and adventure around the tallest mountain in the world – and all from the safety and warmth of your own home.
Everest isn’t the place we thought it was. There may be snow covering the fierce mountain – but underneath its deceiving white plumage, you will find the bodies of people that have “climbed” before you.
An incredible 3,8 billion pixel photo has gone viral this week. It features a shot of Mount Everest – composed out of 400 individual photographs, taken by filmmaker/five-time Everest climber David Breashears.
It’s Mount-Everest-climbing season, apparently – with the National Geographic team attempting to recreate the route used in the first American ascent of the mountain, the 1963 NG-sponsored American Mount Everest Expedition. The team is live-updating their progress online, with a live stream of photos, blog posts, and twitter updates. I think one of them’s using Instagram, too.
25-year-old South African serviceman, Private Jaco van Gass, lost his left arm to a rocket-propelled grenade in Afghanistan three years ago. Now he’s testing a prosthetic ice-axe – an invention of his own design – in preparation for an attempt at Mount Everest in May, alongside five other injured servicemen.