AP/ May 22, 2010, 9:31 AM

13-Year-Old Reaches Top of Mt. Everest

A 13-year-old American boy became the youngest climber to reach the top of Mount Everest on Saturday, surpassing the previous record set by a 16-year-old Nepalese.

Jordan Romero called his mother by satellite phone from the summit of the world's highest mountain, 29,035 feet above sea level.

He is now one climb away from his quest to conquer the highest peaks on all seven continents.

"He says, 'Mom, I'm calling you from the top of the world,'" Leigh Anne Drake told The Associated Press from California, where she had watched her son's progress on a GPS tracker online.

"There were lots of tears and 'I love you! I love you!'" Drake said. "I just told him to get his butt back home."

The teenager with long curly hair - who climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in Africa when he was 9 years old - says he was inspired by a painting in his school hallway of the seven continents' highest summits.

"Every step I take is finally toward the biggest goal of my life, to stand on top of the world," Jordan said earlier on his blog.

The former record for the youngest climber to scale Everest had been held by Temba Tsheri of Nepal. He reached the peak at age 16.

Also Saturday, officials said a Nepalese Sherpa who lives in the Salt Lake City suburb of Draper broke his own world record by climbing Everest for the 20th time. Apa, who goes by one name, went up with fellow climbers on a mission also to collect garbage, a growing environmental problem on the mountain.

Mountaineering Department official Tilak Pandey said several climbers took advantage of Saturday's clear weather to reach the summit.

Jordan's climbing team reached the peak hours earlier than expected.

"The first thing, they all hugged each other and said, 'I love you, I can't believe we're finally here' and started crying," said Rob Bailey, the team's spokesman, by phone from the United States.

Jordan, from Big Bear, California, was climbing Everest with his father, his father's girlfriend and three Sherpa guides. He left for the peak from the base camp on the Chinese side.

Everest was his first challenge above 26,240 feet.

Unlike neighboring Nepal, the other approach to Everest, China has no age limit for climbers. Jordan registered with Chinese officials in April, said Zhang Mingxing, secretary general of China Tibet Mountaineering Association.

No interview with Jordan would be possible until he returns to advance base camp, which could take a couple of days, Bailey said. Climbers stay overnight at three or four camps before the summit, depending on their route and pace.

Jordan carried a number of good luck charms, including a pair of kangaroo testicles given to him by a friend who has cancer.

"That's the one that probably meant the most," Bailey said.

At the summit, Jordan left behind his lucky rabbit's foot and planted some seeds that a Buddhist monk at a local monastery had given him for luck on his journey, Bailey said. Then he took the satellite phone and called his mom.

Jordan continues the recent trend of young adventurers. Earlier this month, 16-year-old Australian Jessica Watson became the youngest person to sail around the globe solo, nonstop and unassisted. Thousands lined Sydney Harbor to cheer as she cruised past the finish line in her pink yacht.

A Dutch court late last year blocked an even younger sailor, 14-year-old sailor Laura Dekker, from pursuing a similar round-the-world voyage, ordering her to prepare more and wait at least until this year before starting.

And in January, 17-year-old Johnny Collinson of Utah became the youngest person to climb the highest peaks on all seven continents.

Just one mountain remains in Jordan's own quest to climb those peaks, the Vinson Massif in Antarctica.

Jordan's team leaves for Antarctica in December, Bailey said.

"A piece of cake," his mother said.


The Seven Summits
The list comprised of the highest peak on each of the seven continents was first compiled by mountaineer Richard Bass, who completed his seven in the mid-1980s. However, Reinhold Messner compiled a different list presuming different boundaries of Australia (Carstensz Pyramid in New Guinea lies on the Australian continental shelf). According to 7summits.com the youngest person to have made seven ascents is 17-year-old John Collinson

Summits Conquered by Jordan Romero:
Mt. Kilimanjaro, Africa's highest peak at 19, 340 ft. (age 10);
Mt. Kosciuszko, Australia's highest peak at 7,310 ft. (age 10)
Mt. Elbrus, Europe's highest peak at 18,510 ft. (age 11)
Mt. Aconcagua, South America's highest peak at 22,841 ft. (age 11)
Mt. McKinley, North America's highest peak at 20,320 ft. (age 11)
Carstensz Pyramid, Oceania's highest peak at 16,024 ft. (age 13)
Mt. Everest, Asia's highest peak at 29,035 ft. (age 13)

Still to climb:
Mt. Vinson, Antarctica's highest peak at 16,050 ft. (Winter 2010)


For more info:
jordanromero.com
Romero is using his climbs to raise awareness for the following organizations:
Team Duke (John Wayne Cancer Foundation)
Let's Move (Tackling the Challenge of Childhood Obesity)
By Associated Press Writer Raquel Maria Dillon
© 2010 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
20 Comments Add a Comment
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rwsmith29456 says:
"Mt. Kosciuszko, Australia's highest peak at 7,310 ft". Now that's one heck of a mountain. I'll bet it took all morning to get up that one.
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ddog88 says:
Dead climbers line the side of that mountain, having a 13 year old do it is child endangerment in every since of the definition.
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alphaa10000 replies:
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Romero and his parents, as well as their Sherpas, appear to have appropriate respect for Everest (Whether their respect for is shared by those who imitate them, is a worrisome prospect).

Romero's father, in particular, provided adult supervision and the practical basis for young Romero's successful attempt. Both Jordan and his father began the quest with better than tourist-class climbing experience.

Even so, the Romero climb furthers the commercialization of Everest. While such tourism provides a thriving economy for the Sherpas and Nepalese, as well as outsiders charging (1996) $65,000 per climber for guided Everest expeditions, it obscures the fact Everest remains a deadly peak. One in four climbers dies in the attempt.

Anyone who dreams of a "personal Everest" expedition must read Jon Krakauer's book "Into Thin Air"-- the account of an ascent in 1996 which killed several climbers and their guides. Krakauer, a member of that expedition, provides an absolutely compelling account of human beings facing imminent death, yet determined somehow to survive the mountain. (Krakauer's book became a movie, as well.)

http://productsearch.barnesandnoble.com/search/results.aspx?WRD=into+thin+air
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alphaa10000 says:
ON THE TIBETAN SIDE

CBS reports, "Jordan, from Big Bear, California, was climbing Everest with his father... He left for the peak from the base camp on the Chinese side."
---

Actually, it was the Tibetan side-- the fact Beijing invaded Tibet in 1950 does not establish a legitimate claim. The Chinese arrived in Tibet the same way Americans arrived in Iraq.

History of Tibet-- Ancient to Modern
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Tibet
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terrjudy says:
WOW... I must commend you.
An expert in the size of Mother Theresa's crap... that's a VERY interesting claim to fame.
Bless you; someone has to do it!
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rwsmith29456 says:
I'm sure I would have had a much better chance of topping Everest when I was 13 than I do now.
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Threewarriors says:
What kind of jackass parents allow a 13 to climb Mt Everest. This is irresponsible. I went to jail for giving my kid a butt whooping to stop criminal behavior and now I cant own a firearm. These parents put their child in danger and now its all GLORIFIED!!
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Berkeley-SkirtLifter replies:
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if you went to jail for "butt whooping" YOUR child, you probably overdid it. My guess, you might be a baby shaker...
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carolhill814 says:
I am so glad to hear a good thing that a child is doing because now a days all you hear are bad things.

I am very proud of him myself.
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drthvader replies:
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Very proud to hear that any 13 year old can leave his cell phone, his computer and all his electronics behind and do something positive. Most 13 year olds are like trying to nail chewed bubblegum to a tree...impossible. Of course this took an expensive crew and many trained adults to get him to the top. I hope his dad was along with the party.
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th9876 says:
What's next - three year old toddler crawls to the top of Mt. Everest!
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Skruffy1 says:
Amazing what a hundred thousand dollars or so can buy a kid, isn't it?
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terrjudy says:
This is good news?
Wouldn't this bunch be better served by helping with the animals affected by the oil spill or being big brothers and sisters or mirroring the work of Mother Theresa??
Strange what we teach our children as valuable... seems to be "all about me" AGAIN!!!
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