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  1. Kilian Jornet, Path to Everest

    Kilian Jornet, Path to Everest

    2018 · Documentary · 1h 20m
  1. The documentary tells the story of how Kilian Jornet, the world's greatest ever mountain runner, succeeded in completing the historic double ascent of Everest in one week, alone and without oxygen in May 2017. Rentals include 30 days to start watching this video and 48 hours to finish once started.

  2. Feb 14, 2018 · Surrounded by the mountains and people who are his inspiration, in ‘Path to Everest’, the mountain athlete reveals his most intimate fears, contradictions and passions. Download the movie at...

    • Feb 14, 2018
    • 357.4K
    • Kilian Jornet Burgada
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  4. The documentary tells the story of how Kilian Jornet, the world's greatest ever mountain runner, succeeded in completing the historic double ascent of Everest in one week, alone and without...

  5. Feb 20, 2019 · Masterclass about 'Path to Everest' with Kilian Jornet - YouTube. Kilian Jornet Burgada. 92.3K subscribers. Subscribed. 1.7K. 168K views 5 years ago. Here you ha some thoughts and...

    • Feb 20, 2019
    • 169.2K
    • Kilian Jornet Burgada
    • Overview
    • A Complicated Record
    • The Gift of Quick Recovery

    Fueled by a love of the mountains and a drive to push his physical limits, Kilian Jornet achieved what no other mountain runner has before—two Everest summits without oxygen in about five days.

    1:30

    2018 Adventurer of the Year Kilian Jornet

    Kilian Jornet reached the peak of Mount Everest twice in under one week without the use of supplemental oxygen or support.

    Kilian Jornet arrived to Everest base camp with the goal of setting a Fastest Known Time (FKT) for a roundtrip ascent of the world’s tallest mountain from the Tibetan side. What the 30-year-old mountain runner from Spain actually achieved on Mount Everest (8,848 meters) in May 2017, however, defies easy categorization.

    “I came into this project not knowing if it was even possible to climb Everest without oxygen,” he says. “It was all about learning from the beginning.”

    When it comes to assessing Jornet’s Everest speed times, however, it gets harder to set the record straight.

    Other climbers who have attempted speed ascents on Everest have typically begun timing their summit bids at Advanced Base Camp, at 6,400 meters. Jornet, however, initially made the decision to start his stopwatch at Rongbuk Monastery, where the paved Chinese road ends and the trail to Everest basecamp begins. This, in part, was an attempt to bring a fixed landmark to the often arbitrary practice of claiming Fastest Known Times.

    Jornet’s time of 26 hours from the monastery, with an elevation of 5,100 meters, to the summit of Everest, at 8,848 meters, is extremely impressive, but also difficult to compare.

    Further, Jornet had food poisoning, which slowed him down, especially above 7,000 meters. “I had diarrhea, vomiting, but I knew it wasn't going to kill me,” says Jornet. “It was good to see that, even with not feeling 100 percent, if you are physically strong, it's possible to just keep going.”

    Nevertheless, Jornet was apparently dissatisfied with his initial performance because five days later, he went for a second speed attempt. This time, however, he started his stopwatch where other climbers began their speed ascents, the indistinct region called Advanced Base Camp.

    On this effort, Jornet claims to have climbed to the summit in 17 hours, which is about 15 minutes slower than at least two prior records. In 1996, Hans Kammerlander climbed without oxygen from ABC to the summit in 16:45—although he used on-mountain support. In 2006, Christian Stangl claimed a time of 16:43—and he had no support.

    Jornet is physiologically gifted, to put it mildly. He has scored a V02 max of 92 ml/kg/min, one of the highest rates ever recorded. At 33 bpm, his resting heart rate is absurdly low. He trains over 1,200 hours per year, but sleeps just seven hours per night—a statistic that should boggle the mind of any serious trainer.

    “We have just one life, and sleeping is a waste of time!” Jornet says.

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    His ability to train constantly, virtually never take rest days, win back-to-back 100-mile races, and climb Everest twice in the same week without oxygen appears to hinge on his uncanny ability to recover quickly.

  6. Apr 28, 2021 · The Catalan mountain and trail-runner Kílian Jornet has achieved some truly spectacular feats of endurance in his career. Jornet grew up in the Pyrenees. By the age of three, he had climbed...

  7. Kilian Jornet - Path to Everest. Kilian Jornet wrote as a child a list of all the races he would like to win and all the mountains he dreamed of climbing. In May 2017 he crossed off the last top of the list by completing a historic double ascent of Everest alone, without oxygen and in one go.

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