
Eric Arnold, a Dutch citizen, died
Friday during his descent, having reached the summit in what his team
leader described as a "childhood dream."
"Tragedy struck our team," expedition leader Arnold Coster said in a post on his blog.
"Descending
from the summit he became slower and slower and it became clear that
something was wrong. His Sherpa who was climbing with him from the
beginning requested to send an additional Sherpa up with more
supplementary oxygen to help him down," Coster explained, adding that
Arnold was able to make it down to the next camp.
"We brought him to his tent, gave him more oxygen, lots off drinks and food and it looked like he was recovering," Coster said.
But Arnold took a turn for the worse and died that night in his tent, he said. He is believed to have died from a heart attack.
Arnold
was a triathlete based in Rotterdam, according to his Twitter bio. A
post on his Twitter account showed a photo of Arnold at the summit,
although it was unclear if it was Arnold himself who posted it.
Another post read "Off we go!!" with a picture of the team at camp.
Maria Strydom, 34
It
was a tough week for Coster's team. The following day, they lost
another member -- Australian citizen Maria Strydom, known by her friends
and family as Marisa, who died after suffering altitude sickness.
"These
tragic events numbed the whole team and our thoughts are with their
family and friends. May they rest in peace," Coster said.
South
African-born Strydom worked as a finance professor with the Monash
Business School in Melbourne. She had told the school in an interview that she and her husband, Robert Gropel, were climbing Everest to prove that vegans are strong.
"It
seems that people have this warped idea of vegans being malnourished
and weak," said Strydom, who added that she and her husband had received
countless questions about their iron and protein levels.
"By climbing the seven summits we want to prove that vegans can do anything and more," she said.
Strydom reached Everest's South Summit on Friday but decided to turn around and descend when she wasn't feeling well, according to Coster's post. Several Sherpas and her husband struggled to carry her down the mountain, but she collapsed the next morning, Coster said.
Gropel,
her husband, was evacuated to Kathmandu the next day by helicopter,
said Coster, who was assembling a rescue team to retrieve Arnold's and
Strydom's bodies.
Strydom's family
was informed that the recovery team had retrieved her body and moved
about 300 meters down the mountain but stopped due to bad weather and
heavy snow. They hope to get down to Base Camp II tomorrow if weather
clears and from there get a helicopter out.
Her
mother, Maritha Strydom, told CNN that her daughter first became
interested in climbing around 12-years ago. The first mountain she
climbed was Mt. Warning near Brisbane.
"I
was worried about her back then because I'm the most protective mother.
After that, she went on to climb in New Zealand and the Andes in South
America," she said.
"We were a
very close-knit family. We took Maria all over the world since she was
little. She has the strongest personality since she was born ... She was
very talented and always wanted to be the best. She had more energy
than anyone."
Subash Paul, 44
Everest struck again on Sunday, as abrupt changes in weather conditions made the climb even more arduous that usual.
Indian
national Subash Paul died at Base Camp II -- at an elevation of about
24,600 feet -- Sunday from altitude sickness, according to Wangchu
Sherpa, Managing Director of Trekking Camp Nepal.
Paul
was part of a team of four Indian climbers and four Sherpas that also
saw two members -- Paresh Chandra Nath and Goutam Ghosh -- go missing
Saturday night.
"It is not clear
what happened. We believe the weather suddenly deteriorated at some
point, and the team lost direction," Wangchu Sherpa said.
Phurba Sherpa, 25
Pictures
of the team emerged Tuesday, showing a happy group about to set off.
But the photos also revealed fatigued climbers, visibly depleted by
Everest's harsh conditions.
A crew
member, Phurba Sherpa, also fell to his death on Thursday. The
25-year-old had been working to fix a route about 150 meters below the
summit when he fell, according to Mingma Sherpa, the Nepal rescue team
leader who was at the Everest Base Camp.




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