ecoworldly.com— Apa Sherpa, 49, has climbed Mount Everest a record 18 times but now he?s preparing for a 19th, this time to clean up the mess left by the thousands of climbers who have scaled the mountain since 1953.
Apr 5, 2009View in Crawl 4
Like f**king smokers who think the world is their ashtray. You want to kill yourself one cigarette at a time? By all means go right a head but throw your trash in the garbage can like everyone else you selfish mother f**kers.
Perhaps there is less water for the surrounding areas because the overall amount of melt every year correlates directly with how much ice there is left to melt? You, sir, are a fool.
Saying that the mountain and environment do not care about garbage is foolish, as well as dogmatic - you don't know that, and an ecosystem is an ecosystem, regardless of whether humans live there. Even if nothing at all lives where the garbage is, it will eventually get to someplace where something does live. Every little bit of refuse that humans drop that won't bio-degrade for years and years to come should be removed from wherever it can be found; as far as removing it from Everest goes, it may not be the most practical place to start cleaning up as far as making an impact goes, however it goes a long way in sending a message to people, which is the ultimate purpose of this journey.I request further thought in the future.
brownsin07Apr 6, 2009
Like f**king smokers who think the world is their ashtray. You want to kill yourself one cigarette at a time? By all means go right a head but throw your trash in the garbage can like everyone else you selfish mother f**kers.
warriorblakeApr 6, 2009
STELLAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA!
fireashesApr 6, 2009
what about Tenzing Norgay Sherpa with the last name sherpa? What about him
Closed AccountApr 7, 2009
Perhaps there is less water for the surrounding areas because the overall amount of melt every year correlates directly with how much ice there is left to melt? You, sir, are a fool.
Closed AccountApr 7, 2009
Saying that the mountain and environment do not care about garbage is foolish, as well as dogmatic - you don't know that, and an ecosystem is an ecosystem, regardless of whether humans live there. Even if nothing at all lives where the garbage is, it will eventually get to someplace where something does live. Every little bit of refuse that humans drop that won't bio-degrade for years and years to come should be removed from wherever it can be found; as far as removing it from Everest goes, it may not be the most practical place to start cleaning up as far as making an impact goes, however it goes a long way in sending a message to people, which is the ultimate purpose of this journey.I request further thought in the future.
Closed AccountApr 7, 2009
Your illogic is stunning. How do you survive?