Group of Indigenous climbers from Alta. trying to summit North America's highest peak - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 05:33 AM | Calgary | -16.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Edmonton

Group of Indigenous climbers from Alta. trying to summit North America's highest peak

A group of mountain climbersfromAlberta, most of whom are Indigenous, arepreparing to tackle the highest peak in North America and break world recordsdoing it.

Mount Denali in Alaska rises 6,190 metres above sea level

A group of people behind a table. In the background is a climbing wall.
Team Denali 2023, shown here at their media launch on Oct. 22 at the climbing gym at the University of Alberta, will be climbing Mount Denali in Alaska in May. (Submitted by Leo Namen)

A group of mountain climbersfromAlberta, most of whom are Indigenous, arepreparing to tackle the highest peak in North America and break world recordsdoing it.

Leo Namen, a 52-year-old heart attack survivor from Edmonton, willlead seven other mountaineers upDenali, in Alaska, in May. The expedition is part of Namen's goal to summit the highest peaks across all seven continents.

"I always thought, 'Well, Denali has to be for the Indigenous people,'" said Namen, who is not Indigenous.

Denali is southwest of Fairbanks, Alaska, and falls under the Alaska Range. Rising6,190 metres above sea level, it is the third-most isolated peak on Earth.

In 1913,Hudson Stick, Walter Harper, Harry Karstens and Robert Tatum became the first people to successfully climb themountain's south summit.

The first fatality on the mountain happened almost two decades later, in 1932. The success rate on the mountain is about 50 per cent.

A man sitting on a rock looking off to the side, with a mountain in the background
Edmonton heart-attack survivor Leo Namen climbed Mount Everest earlier this year. (Submitted by Leo Namen)

Team Denali 2023is made up of members of the Mtis Nation of Alberta, Bigstone Cree Nation, Mikisew Cree First Nation, Blackfoot Confederacy, Alexis Nakota Sioux Nationand Woodland Cree Nation.

If successful, the group believes it would be the first Indigenous male-female team to summit the mountain. Additionally,Namenwould become the first heart attack survivor to reach the top.

Shawna Goodstriker, a 41-year-old woman of the Blackfoot Confederacy, is excited to be part of the team, despite the associatedrisks.

She hopes to inspire younger people from her community to find opportunities such as hiking and mountaineering,that are affordable.

"It doesn't cost a lot to be able to go out and to be one with nature," Goodstrikersaid while onCBC Edmonton's Radio Active.

"I'm 41 years old, I'm a grandmother.But is that stopping me? No. It's making me try harder."

A woman standing in front of a mountain with her brother beside her.
Shawna Goodstriker, left, and her brother Joseph Many Fingers, right, always start and end their hikes by laying down tobacco at the foot of the mountain. (Submitted by Shawna Goodstriker)

Namen sayshehasnever encountered any Indigenous people during his previous adventures.

Part of that is due to lack of funding, Goodstriker said.

"We have many community members who, due to high unemployment rates,just don't have that support system in place," she said.

"If we had more services, more providers to help, we would have a lot more of our kids that would be a part of these programs."

The Denali expedition teamis raising money for the Indigenous Sport Council of Alberta. A GoFundMe campaign was created; its goal is toraise$80,000.

The team isalso looking forsponsors to help fund the expedition.

Training in the Rockies

Goodstriker and her brother, Joseph Many Fingers,who is also part of the team going to Alaska, are avid hikers and have climbeda variety of mountains in southern Alberta.

Before and after every climb, they pay respect by laying down tobacco at the bottom of the mountain.

Goodstriker has been training daily and plans to use the winter months to prepare for the cooler temperatures on Denali.

Namen, who, earlier this year, made his first attempt toclimbMount Everest, says Denali comes with its own challenges.

"Everest was full of assistance," he said. "In Denali, there's no such thing."

A group of people surrounded by their mountaineering equipment with the Rocky mountains in the background.
Part of Team Denali's preparation includes training in the Rockies in Alberta. (Submitted by Leo Namen)

As a consequence, the training in preparation of the climb isa bit more intense, he added.

Namen has been leading his team on short but rigoroustraining sessions eachmonth in the Rockies, ahead of a trial expedition in Mexico in February.

The mountain they will climb in Mexico,Pico de Orizaba, is the third-highest on the continent, so it should more closely mimic the altitude they will encounter on Denali, Namen said.