spanish climber 73 on himalayan adventure
Last Updated : GMT 06:49:16
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Last Updated : GMT 06:49:16
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Spanish climber, 73, on Himalayan adventure

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Arab Today, arab today Spanish climber, 73, on Himalayan adventure

Madrid - AFP

Carlos Soria grew up wandering the Sierra de Guadarrama mountains that loom north of Madrid. Still climbing now at 73, he is making his mark on the vast freezing slopes of the Himalayas. On March 5 the grey-haired Spaniard sets off for Nepal, aiming to add a twelfth 8,000-metre (26,000-feet) peak to his list of conquests -- a feat he says is already unequalled for a climber of his age. "These are the mountains of my childhood, my youth, my whole life, the ones I have seen the most of," he says, gazing at the peaks that loom over his home village of Moralzarzal, his eyes sparkling, his face lined and faintly wrinkled. Now his aim is Annapurna, a formidable peak of 8,091 metres in the Himalayas known for its high risk of avalanches. "It's a bit dangerous, but I'll just have to see... Above 7,000 metres, if something happens to you, no one can help," he says. "I have permission to climb Dhaulagiri if I am doing well and feel like it," he says, naming another even higher Nepalese peak near the first, standing 8,167 metres. That would leave only one peak of more than 8,000 metres in the world left to conquer for the muscly pensioner, who stands 1m 65 cm high (five foot four inches) and weighs 59 kilos (130 pounds). "The last one left is Kanchenjunga," he says -- the 14th peak on his list, also in the Himalayas. "That would be for next spring." Soria says he has climbed more of the world's highest peaks than anyone of his age. "Nine 8,000-metre peaks after turning 60 and more after turning 65," he says. "There are people who have climbed some mountains, but not like me." Soria left school at 11 and worked as a frame maker and then an upholsterer in Madrid, just south of where he lives now. But he heard constantly the call of the mountains. "Whenever there was snow I would leave at noon with a little sandwich and a yoghurt to go cross-country skiing," he recalls. "It was the post-war period. There was very little money and no information" published about the mountain routes, he says, recalling his younger days during the dictatorship of Francisco Franco. So Soria discovered by himself the rocks and trails of the Guadarrama range, where he met his wife Cristina and trained, sometimes along with their four daughters. It served as a practice ground for the world-class summits he went on to scale from the 1960s on -- in the Alps, the Caucasus, Alaska and then the Himalayas. There he passed the 8,000-metre mark for the first time when he was 62, climbing Everest and then three years later, K2. Last year, while climbing Lhotse on the Nepal-Tibet border, he trudged on after seven younger mountaineers had to be rescued by helicopter from the freezing mountain. "They had to have fingers amputated. Others climbed down, exhausted," he recalls. But not Soria. "I used a bit of oxygen from about 7,800 metres up to the summit. A little, very little. At the top I got rid of it and went back down without it." He started out climbing alone and paying his own way, but his accomplishments have now earned him the sponsorship of a major bank, BBVA, which covers the 100,000-euro ($133,000) average cost of each expedition. Soria trains for three or four hours most days, doing exercises and stretches, cycling, power-walking and rock-climbing with ropes. His diet: garlic cloves, porridge and cured meat. "I know I am 73 years old and maybe one day I will be less strong. Not right now. Right now I am very well. I am very well mentally prepared for those mountains," he says. "I'll keep climbing mountains as long as I feel the desire."

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