Mt. Everest Safety Rescue Package
Starting @
USD 1243
Climbing in Nepal is not only about strength and stamina. The highest mountains here, Everest, Lhotse, Manaslu, Makalu, Dhaulagiri, and Annapurna, test judgment, patience, and preparation. Success depends as much on discipline as it does on fitness. Here’s a practical checklist of safety tips for anyone heading onto Nepal’s highest peaks.
Ascend gradually, even if your body feels strong.
Follow climb high, sleep low.
Build in rest days above 4,500 m.
Watch for AMS, HAPE, or HACE symptoms. Act early—don’t push through.
Train your body for endurance with back-to-back climbing days.
Strengthen legs and lungs with weighted climbs, stair sessions, and recovery routines.
Build a climbing résumé, climb several smaller peaks first (6,000 m and 7,000 m) to understand how your body performs at altitude.
Gain exposure to technical climbing skills: fixed lines, crampon work on blue ice, abseils, and crevasse rescue.
Don’t rely only on guides; know the techniques yourself.
Having a Wilderness First Aid certification is an added advantage
3. Invest in the Right Gear and Clothing
Above 7,000 m, only double boots or high-altitude boots provide the insulation and protection you need; anything less risks frostbite.
Bring a full layering system: thermal base layers, mid-layer insulation, a reliable down suit, and waterproof shells to handle storms.
Hands and head need equal attention, carry tested gloves, mitts, and liners, plus a balaclava, buff, and a high-altitude face mask or goggles.
Don’t ignore technical gear: check your crampons, ascenders, harnesses, and carabiners before you leave base camp. A faulty kit at altitude can cost a life.
Move efficiently on fixed lines.
Practice abseils and changeovers in gloves at night.
Know crevasse rescue basics, don’t rely only on Sherpa support.
Study forecasts daily with your team.
Be ready to hold for days in base camp.
Summit windows are short; don’t chase dates, chase conditions.
6. Stick to Turnaround Times
Agree on a fixed cutoff hour before summit day.
Respect it even if you’re just “minutes away.”
Exhaustion at midnight is how rescues become recoveries.
Helicopters can’t always reach high camps.
Weather or terrain can hold rescues for hours or days.
Teams must be ready to stabilise an injured climber and descend.
Radio devices must be charged and tested daily.
Fix call times with your base camp or LO.
Don’t climb without a clear comms plan.
9. Waste and Compliance Matter
Carry waste bags above base camp.
Manage fuel and stoves safely in tents.
Follow rules for garbage deposits to avoid fines and penalties.
Even the best climbers cannot control altitude sickness, avalanches, or weather. This is where ASC360’s safety cover becomes essential:
Cashless helicopter evacuation and hospitalisation.
Ground rescue support when flights can’t reach.
Oxygen therapy and medical backup at camps.
Trip interruption cover for weather delays or cancellations.
24×7 operations desk in Nepal to coordinate guides, liaison officers, and hospitals.
Nepal’s highest peaks demand humility. They reward preparation and punish shortcuts. Think of safety as a rope: every element, fitness, experience, technical skills, gear, weather sense, evacuation planning, and insurance is a strand. Together, they hold. Leave one out, and the rope weakens. With discipline, the right systems, and ASC360’s cover in place, climbers give themselves the one thing that matters most in the Himalaya: the chance to come home safe.
Starting @
USD 1243Starting @
USD 185Starting @
USD 953