September 27, 2009 9:25 PM

Paraplegic Climber Poised to Touch the Sky

By
Daniel Carty
(CBS)  Using his arms and his will, Chris Waddell finally has the top of Mt. Kilimanjaro in his sights.

The paraplegic climber with his eyes on history has climbed to 15,000 feet and spoke with CBS News' Karen Brown via satellite phone in an exclusive interview.

When asked how hard the mountain had pushed him, Wadell said it had "pushed me pretty hard, harder than I guess I hoped."

Waddell is trying to become the first paraplegic to reach the summit on his own power. He's using a highly engineered four-wheel mountain bike that he showed CBS News on his final training day in Colorado.

"I climbed up a lot of things that I thought 'No way am I going to be able to do that,'" he said then.

Waddell Summit Update, 9/26
Waddell Summit Update, 9/25
Waddell Summit Update, 9/23
Waddell Summit Update, 9/21 Late
See Karen Brown's profile of Chris Waddell
Read Karen Brown's profile of Chris Waddell

But the critical push to the 19,340 summit starts early Monday. He has 4,000 vertical feet to climb. The rocks will be loose and the temperatures below freezing. He'll have to use a winch to pedal up a rope for any chance of traction.

"The winch is a big concern," he said. "I'm not sure exactly how it's going to work. The other big concern is the altitude. I don't know what the altitude might do to me."

Originally, the final leg was slated for 10 hours. But Waddell said it might take 20 instead.

"We might break this up into two days," he said. "We might end up sleeping in the crater tomorrow."

Waddell is the top Paralympic skier of all time. This climb has been his toughest challenge yet.

"The mountain has thrown everything at me," he said.

Day one, Waddell climbed 3,000 vertical feet in seven and a half hours. Expedition porters used boards to help him ford the deep drainage ditches in his path.

Day two was brutal, with Waddell pedaling for 10 and a half hours to climb 3,300 feet in a dust storm.

Day three, he covered nearly 10 miles.

"It was really tough and steep and rocky," he said.

What drives Waddell - his desire that the world stop seeing the wheelchair and notice the man.

"I want them to see the possibilities - of me and other people like me. But I also want them to see the possibilities in themselves.

Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment
by joymotte September 28, 2009 12:56 PM EDT
You go Chris! It's about time someone told the world that the disaled of the world can do anything they set their minds to. yea it might need to be modified, that does not matter. I'd climb it if I were able, but the high altidude might kill me since I'm a shunt dependent Hydrochallic.
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by bubbadubba September 28, 2009 7:21 AM EDT
God bless him and I hope he succeeds but using a machine is not "on his own power" any more than flying a hang glider is flying "without wings".
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by tmittelstaed September 28, 2009 1:04 AM EDT
Mountain climing is idiotic even for a non-parapalegic. He has proved one thing about parapalegics, though - lunacy is spread equally between parapalegics and non-parapalegics.
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by joymotte September 28, 2009 1:03 PM EDT
How would you know? Are you disabled and been told all your life you can't? Untill this happens to you, don't degrade people for having a dream. When I was a pre-schooler, doctors told my parents I'd never even graduate from high school and would always be in special ed. I was fully mainstramed in the 11th grade and went on to complete a bacherer's degree from college. Just try to think of being told by the proffesional that you can't; and be The Little Train that Could.

So excuse the disabled for having a dream and fullfilling it; even if there is danger involved. But it's also dangours to drive a car these days or walk the dog.
by ToolMangler1 September 28, 2009 11:01 PM EDT
lunacy is aspiring to an unachievable goal, like walking naked through a lake of Lava to reach the other side.
What he has chosen is Formidable, 'Doable but formidable'. I personally know of a armless, legless midget that drives his own car, gets in and out by himself and is a top salesman for his company. He taught me the meaning of overcoming obstacles. You don't do it "simply because its there", you do it to expand your horizons and face your inner demons...
by John_Merritt September 27, 2009 9:36 PM EDT
Chris you Rock! I know you will make it to the summit. When you get there and raise your arms in victory look down into the valley. That guys waving, whistling and cheering for you is me. I hope to meet you one day cuz I love your spirit, grit and determination.
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