Share This:

Overlanding: One Mom Reflects on an Epic Family Road Trip

Family road trip.   Those three words can mean so much to so many people. Maybe you have a smile-worthy memory of a weekend getaway to a warm, coastal beach for a reprieve from a harsh…

Family road trip.  

Those three words can mean so much to so many people. Maybe you have a smile-worthy memory of a weekend getaway to a warm, coastal beach for a reprieve from a harsh winter? Perhaps it was a weeklong escape to the mountains to get back to nature after months in a crowded city.  

Road trips can last a day, a weekend, a month or even a season – especially if mom and dad decide to take the kids overlanding on an extended family road trip during a summer vacation. But what would you think if mom decided to take the kids on a family overlanding trip for a few weeks so they could connect with dad during his extended work-related travels but, over the next seven years, that trip evolved into a full-time, overlanding, nomadic lifestyle?  

Meet Carol van Stralen who, with her husband and three children, sold the family home and has been overlanding for seven years. Here’s how it all began.   

Carol van Stralen and family in a tentCarol’s husband, Peter, needed to travel for his business – and the trip durations were getting longer as the business grew. “We got an RV to travel with the kids to meet up with Peter at business-related conferences all over the country so we could all be together more,” she said. But the business trips got longer and, after a family meeting, they unanimously decided to take the kids out of traditional school and put them in an online schooling system designed for traveling students.   

[Related Reading: Summer RV Travel] 

In a recent interview with Global Rescue, Carol admitted it was nothing she had ever imagined. “If you had told me that one day I’d be living out of an RV for three-month-long road trips with the kids I would have laughed in disbelief. It wasn’t something on my radar at the time but it became something I fell in love with,” she said.   

The van Stralen family started with a 90-day trip plan to visit every state and national park they could get to. It all went well. So well in fact that after the trip Carol and Peter asked the kids if they wanted to keep going. “Honestly, Peter and I asked ourselves the same question.”   

Without exception, they decided to keep going for as long as possible. That was seven years and hundreds of thousands of miles ago.  

Keep in mind, Carol van Stralen did not have an outdoor adventure background like Mardy Murie or Isabella Bird who both knew what it was like to travel extensively in the wild frontier.  

Not only did she not grow up camping; she had never used a ground tent. But later in life, after getting married and raising three elementary school-aged kids, things changed. “My first time camping was in our backyard. That’s where it started,” she said.   

It didn’t work out so well. “The tent collapsed in a rain storm and we ended up back in the house,” she added. An unfortunate start but not a deal-breaker. “We all kept going on little hikes and short camping trips because we liked it and wanted more,” she said.  

Family camping in desert at dusk

The more they did, the more they wanted. Soon the RV became a barrier to the more remote regions the family wanted to explore. They had been towing their Jeep behind the RV for a while and they kept seeing people in their 4×4 vehicles who were able to get farther off the beaten path into more remote areas. “We wanted that for ourselves,” she said.   

They put the RV in storage and started driving the Jeep down dirt paths and trail-like roads to campsites and remote areas most people can’t access. “That’s when we solidified our passion for the outdoors and exploring beyond the pavement. I really got the bug for adventure,” she said.  

Are We There Yet?  

When a road trip turns into life on the road, what did the van Stralen kids think? Did they miss their neighborhood friends or school-based social lives? Did they get family fatigue? Carol said no, it was never a problem. Quite the opposite. “Their friend groups exploded. They went places, met people and built new relationships everywhere.”   

Carol found the experience for her children to be deeper and more meaningful than she expected. “It’s beautiful to know that friends can come from anywhere, and it broadens your horizons. You don’t always realize how expansive your perspective has grown until you come home and reconnect with your neighborhood friends,” she said.  

She shared a couple of examples from a trip to New Zealand where they shipped their four-wheeler for a three-month adventure. “Our kids learned how to surf from other kids at the beaches. If they were hiking, then they developed new friendships with other kids who were hiking with their families, too,” she said.   

And it wasn’t only friendships with their peers. “Our kids met many older people. For example, my son loves to fish wherever he goes and ends up learning so much from older anglers along the way. The kids continue to stay in touch with the friends they’ve made all over the world,” she said.   

[Related reading: Traveling With Kids]

There were occasional challenges for the children with the outdoor, overland lifestyle. When Carol’s youngest son was nine, he found some of the treks, hikes and trails troublesome or, perhaps, even a little boring. But Carol discovered a solution in the form of downloadable audiobooks for him to listen to while hiking. “If he needed a helpful distraction from the difficulty of the climb, he would start listening to the audiobook and get so into the story that he’d trek up that mountain like a goat,” she said.   

Carol admitted the additional benefit was that her son would walk by her side chatting away about the story when he was finished listening. “I loved it,” she said, adding that long walks after any long drive became a near-everyday activity. “I’d get hours and sometimes days of getting to talk with my kids without any unnatural distractions.”  

Epic Mom Tips  

Carol didn’t know that a disastrous, rainy backyard campout would be the first step to what is now a seven-year Epic Family Road Trip that’s taken the van Stralens all over the world. Her advice? Start small. “That’s how I got this far,” she said. She’s a firm believer in broadening your knowledge base by including your family, your partner or other like-minded people.   

“I wouldn’t have gone full-time for the outdoor overland lifestyle right off the bat,” she said. “But taking incrementally bigger steps over time, I grew to love all sorts of things that would have made me very uncomfortable before. Now I love being out of my comfort zone.”  

Carol admitted she needed to overcome her fear of the unknown. She sometimes would let her thoughts get out of control over what-ifs and what could happen. Like the time when there was a grizzly bear outside the camp. “I was initially worried whether I had cleaned up everything outside, like food scraps that attract bears, but I knew there was nothing I could do about it at that moment,” she said. That’s when she stopped herself and focused instead on what was happening rather than what could happen. “I calmed myself by thinking of the things I’m grateful for experiencing.”   

Mom woman filling off road vehicle tire with air

By de-escalating her anxiety, she was able to concentrate on useful, protective steps. Fortunately, the campsite was cleaned and the bear moved on without incident. The tip? “Slow down your thoughts and focus on what’s happening instead of what could happen,” she said. “Don’t let fear control you. It’s such a big world out there to experience. Once you get a taste of it, you get addicted.”   

Does Carol miss her former lifestyle? Not really, at least not anymore. In the beginning, she missed going to the gym. “I loved going to the gym but then I discovered during our travels that there were rocks everywhere that I could lift and trails I could run ahead and wait for my family to catch up.”   

She also misses the easy availability of fresh food. Remote locations for long durations don’t lend themselves to convenient access to fresh produce. “Sometimes I’m craving a salad, and I just can’t get it.”  

Carol van Stralen may go salad-less on occasion, but she’s certainly living her salad days on the road with her family.  

Share This:

Harila Is The Fastest Woman To Summit All 8000+ Meter Mountains

LEBANON, N.H. (May 5, 2023) – Kristin Harila, the Norwegian XC skier-turned-mountaineer extraordinaire and Global Rescue Mountain Advisory Council member became the fastest woman to climb all 14 mountains above 8000 meters this week after summiting Cho Oyu.…

LEBANON, N.H. (May 5, 2023) – Kristin Harila, the Norwegian XC skier-turned-mountaineer extraordinaire and Global Rescue Mountain Advisory Council member became the fastest woman to climb all 14 mountains above 8000 meters this week after summiting Cho Oyu. Harila topped the previous record set by Spanish climber Edurne Pasaban in 2010.

“Congratulations to Harila and her ongoing achievements in mountaineering. Her record-breaking history of hard work, perseverance, sacrifice, talent and love of mountaineering is an example for all of us. She is an extraordinarily gifted, focused and spirited athlete and will undoubtedly continue to set new records and bring about fresh innovations to a fast-growing sport,” said Dan Richards, the CEO of The Global Rescue Companies, which has provided Harila with field rescue and medical evacuation protection since 2021.

Harila has a bigger record-breaking plan on her mind. In the spring of 2022, she set out to climb all 14 of the world’s 8,000 meter (26,247 feet) and higher peaks in less than 189 days – and breaking the record held by Nims Purja, a Global Rescue Mountain Advisory Council member. Harila was six months in and two summits away from making history when the Chinese government’s strict zero-COVID policy forced her to stop.

Undaunted, Harila set out in April 2023 for her second attempt to break the speed record. This time she started her attempt in Tibet to mitigate the risk of a repeat of last year’s issues with the Chinese government. Her recent Cho Oyu summit and her April 26th summit of Shishapangma complete Harila’s climbs in Tibet, an autonomous region of China. Harila will now attempt to climb the remaining 12 mountains before the end of October 2023.

###

For more information contact Bill McIntyre at bmcintyre@globalrescue.com or +1 (202) 560.1195.

About Global Rescue   
The Global Rescue Companies are the world’s leading provider of medical, security, evacuation and travel risk management services to enterprises, governments and individuals. Founded in 2004, Global Rescue has exclusive relationships with the Johns Hopkins Emergency Medicine Division of Special Operations and Elite Medical Group. Global Rescue provides best-in-class services that identify, monitor and respond to client medical and security crises. Global Rescue has provided medical and security support to its clients, including Fortune 500 companies, governments and academic institutions, during every globally significant crisis of the last two decades. For more information, visit www.globalrescue.com.

Share This:

Travelers Are Brushing Off Recession Predictions; Keeping Trip Plans 

(Lebanon, N.H. – May 3, 2023) Despite forecasts of a declining economy and a potential slide into a full-blown recession, travelers overwhelmingly are keeping their itineraries for international and domestic trips this year, according to the…

(Lebanon, N.H. – May 3, 2023) Despite forecasts of a declining economy and a potential slide into a full-blown recession, travelers overwhelmingly are keeping their itineraries for international and domestic trips this year, according to the recent Global Rescue Spring 2023Travelers Sentiment and Safety Survey of the world’s most experienced travelers.

More than three-quarters (76%) of travelers said predictions of a recession have not caused them to cancel or postpone international travel in 2023. Only four percent of respondents stated that expectations of an economic recession compelled them to call off or reschedule an upcoming trip abroad.

Travelers are skirting economic projections from financial professionals signaling the U.S. economy is headed for a recession. “Whether travelers disbelieve an economic slowdown is looming or adopted a post-pandemic determination to travel while they can, they are brushing aside recession hesitation and keeping their plans to travel internationally,” said Dan Richards, CEO of The Global Rescue Companies, the world’s leading provider of medical, security, evacuation and travel risk management services, and a member of the U.S. Travel and Tourism Advisory Board at the U.S. Department of Commerce.

Adventure trips (35%) are the leading kind of travel respondents are planning for 2023, followed by fishing trips (29%), beach getaways (27%) and hiking excursions (24%). Two-thirds (66%) of respondents revealed they plan to travel to destinations where they have never been. Africa led all destinations chosen by respondents, followed by Italy, Alaska, Spain and Iceland.

Traveler concerns about trip disruption continue to shift away from pandemic-related worries. Having an injury or illness (47%) is the overwhelming fear among respondents followed distantly by civil unrest (13%), trip cancellation (11%), and losing important things like a passport, wallet or purse (9%).

Most will travel as a couple (45%) while another quarter (26%) will journey with family or a group of friends. Solo travelers comprise 23% of those making an international trip.

Since the pandemic, the travel landscape has shifted. “Whether you’re taking a trip alone or with others obtaining additional precautions – like emergency medical and security evacuation protection – are essential,” Richards said.

### 

Contact Bill McIntyre at bmcintyre@globalrescue.com or 202.560.1195 (phone/text) for more information.

About the Global Rescue Traveler Sentiment and Safety Survey 

Global Rescue, the leading travel risk and crisis response provider, conducted a survey of more than 1,600 of its current and former members between April 25-30, 2023. The respondents exposed a range of behaviors, attitudes and preferences regarding international and domestic travel.

About Global Rescue 

The Global Rescue Companies are the world’s leading provider of medical, security, evacuation and travel risk management services to enterprises, governments and individuals. Founded in 2004, Global Rescue has exclusive relationships with the Johns Hopkins Emergency Medicine Division of Special Operations and Elite Medical Group. Global Rescue provides best-in-class services that identify, monitor and respond to client medical and security crises. Global Rescue has provided medical and security support to its clients, including Fortune 500 companies, governments and academic institutions, during every globally significant crisis of the last two decades. For more information, visit www.globalrescue.com.

Categories:

News
Share This:

Travelers Are Brushing Off Recession Predictions

Categories:

Health & SafetyTravel
Share This:

Huge Demand on the High Seas: Cruises Are Back in 2023

The cruise industry took a big hit during the pandemic. But now travelers are casting off in record numbers, thanks to a post-COVID cruise comeback. 

The 2023 cruise industry is booming. It has far surpassed 2019 levels, breaking sales records in a furious, post-pandemic comeback. Like most tourism sectors, cruising is reaping the benefits of “revenge travel”— vacationers making up for the time that was lost during the pandemic.  

“It’s even better than we thought,” Michelle Fee, CEO of Cruise Planners, told Travel Weekly. She also said bookings in January were “81% higher compared with bookings from the same time in 2019. The client isn’t afraid of traveling anymore. They put their lives on hold for so long that they’re ready to go.” 

The Global Rescue Traveler Safety and Sentiment Survey revealed a post-pandemic robust return to cruising. “Cruises are back on the travel list. Forty percent of respondents have already taken a cruise since the pandemic started or, if they haven’t, they plan to in 2023,” said Michael Holmes, Global Rescue vice president of marketing.  

Cruise line operators aren’t relying exclusively on travelers’ eagerness to come back. New ships—previously held up by COVID-19 production delays—offer new perks to lure people back to cruising in record numbers.  

Some carriers are shaping ship designs to make cruises feel smaller and less overwhelming. One cruise line is offering onboard neighborhoods, each catering to specific passenger needs such as families with children, singles, or couples.  Some cruise customers are opting for smaller ships holding 100 passengers or fewer, or they’re seeking distant excursions to places like Australia or Europe.  

Onboard entertainment with acts from Broadway and London’s West End is available. Still, other ships offer roller coasters with tracks that extend over the sea giving riders a unique sensation.  

Cruise food is getting fancier with famous name chefs, like Emeril Lagasse, providing high-end food while other ships boast on-board breweries.  

It’s no surprise that higher prices are coming with record-high bookings and the new bells and whistles onboard ships. With cruise bookings rebounding quickly and surpassing pre-pandemic levels, cruise ship companies can raise prices, and in many cases they already are.  

Jason Liberty, CEO of the Royal Caribbean Group, shared with Travel Weekly that North American and European cruises are booking at higher prices. Demand is so strong that the company has raised prices across different products and is “not really seeing a pullback from the consumer as we continue to do so,” he said. 

Travelers confirmed they are shrugging off the impacts of inflation. According to the Global Rescue survey, nearly half of the travelers surveyed (45%) are planning to absorb the higher travel costs without skimping. 

Tourist on a cruise ship looking through binoculars at a glacier

As travelers plan trips for 2023, survey respondents revealed a shift in the types of travel they want compared to responses from spring 2022. The biggest change is a 40% dip in respondents who are planning to travel to visit family and friends. Outdoor adventure travel led all types of international travel planning followed by a bucket list trip. Windstar’s Diana Rom told Travel Weekly cruise bookings are now all about checking off a bucket-list destination and getting the best cabins on the ship.” 

As travelers return to cruising, their concerns are changing, too. Traveler fears of COVID have plummeted, according to the Global Rescue survey. The greatest anxiety among the world’s most experienced travelers is having an injury or illness unrelated to COVID.  

When you’re aboard a cruise ship, access to medical help for an illness or injury is limited. Health safety resources on board a cruise ship are similar to a health center – but it’s not a hospital.   

“The professionals who work there have training in emergency medicine and the equipment to stabilize a patient even in dire circumstances. Mostly, though, what they deal with are things like sprained ankles, upset stomachs and people who have forgotten to pack medication,” according to an article in The Points Guy. Since the pandemic, some cruise lines added specialists to handle acute respiratory illness and infection control.  

Serious medical emergencies aboard cruise ships, however, that are beyond the capabilities of the onboard medical team require transportation of the individual to a higher-quality medical facility. The two ways this occurs are by making port for ground ambulance transportation or calling a helicopter for an airborne rescue.  

Both can be challenging.  

Emergency medical helicopters typically operate within a 175-mile radius of their base, making rescues beyond that unfeasible. They’re also expensive. Helicopter medical evacuations can cost six figures unless you have travel protection like a Global Rescue membership. Making port to transfer a patient by ambulance can take time since harbors capable of accepting a big ship are limited and the top speed for most cruise ships is about 34 mph (30 knots). 

As you plan for a summer cruise ship vacation with Broadway on the boat, roller coasters over the ocean and craft beer by the pool somewhere on the Caribbean Sea, remember to obtain a membership with Global Rescue — an affordable way to protect yourself should a crisis occur while at sea. Given the rising prices of a cruise vacation, saving on a potential emergency evacuation will give you the peace of mind you need to relax and enjoy the cruise.  

Categories:

News
Share This:

Anger Growing Over Trapped Americans in Sudan

Categories:

News
Share This:

New Worries, Old Mistakes: What have travelers learned from the pandemic

Categories:

News
Share This:

Security Experts Coordinate Extraction of Travelers Caught in War-Torn Sudan

Categories:

News
Share This:

Global Rescue Works To Evacuate Americans in Sudan

Share This:

Security Experts Coordinate Extraction of Travelers Caught in War-Torn Sudan

Lebanon, NH – April 24, 2023 – Former Navy SEALs and other military special forces veterans are actively assisting and coordinating extractions for travelers caught in war-torn Sudan. Security operations experts for Global Rescue, the…

Lebanon, NH – April 24, 2023 – Former Navy SEALs and other military special forces veterans are actively assisting and coordinating extractions for travelers caught in war-torn Sudan. Security operations experts for Global Rescue, the leading security and medical evacuation and travel risk management services company, are in direct contact with stranded travelers.  

Global Rescue coordinated the maritime extraction of several people to Egypt, a 600-mile journey along the Red Sea. “We moved quickly to advise people in Port Sudan to depart the country immediately. We successfully extracted multiple western tourists from the region, who were initially reluctant to leave. They were advised to depart at once, before the fighting spread to Port Sudan- at which time movement would be nearly impossible,” said Harding Bush, former Navy SEAL and the senior manager of security operations for Global Rescue.  

Highlights: 

  • Global Rescue members were on a fishing vacation off the coast of the Port of Sudan when violent civil conflict broke out prompting them to contact Global Rescue Operations. 
  • Expert Global Rescue security personnel informed the members of the dangerous circumstances, yet they were reluctant to grasp the gravity of the situation and wanted to continue their fishing adventure. 
  • Global Recue intelligence and security experts reiterated the widespread violence, its likelihood to escalate, the closed airports and restricted airspace, the narrowing window to escape the country overland, and strongly advised the members to leave immediately. 
  • The members agreed but then admitted that their passports were not with them and were, instead, held by the charter company in Port Sudan. Knowing it was imperative to retrieve the members’ passports before they could leave Sudan and gain entry to another country, Global Rescue operations experts utilized local, Sudanese resources onboard the fishing boat to return to the port, disembark, recover the passports and safely return the passports to the members. 
  • Global Rescue security and intelligence experts planned and advised the execution of a 600-mile maritime extraction of the members to Egypt along the Red Sea. Global Rescue, working with a partner, secured a different, larger sea vessel capable of making the journey.  

“People in Sudan were advised to shelter-in –place as street fighting and attacks on the airport are preventing the use of overland and aviation departures. We’re tracking their movements and providing immediate security advisory services throughout the ordeal,” said Dan Richards, CEO of Global Rescue and a member of the U.S. Travel and Tourism Advisory Board at the U.S. Department of Commerce.    

Travelers in the region for leisure and business were suddenly trapped when widespread fighting erupted between warring factions and quickly spread to the capital city and the airport, shutting down flights in and out. Bush and his Global Rescue team of former military special forces veterans are experts in medical and security operations. They are providing extensive logistic, rescue, extraction and advisory services and guidance where needed for people trapped in areas where fighting is present and other areas of Sudan. 

“The two rival Sudanese armies are driving the country toward a full-blown civil war. Sudan and adjacent regions are unpredictable and potentially more dangerous. While the U.S. and European embassies are evacuating staff, American and European business and leisure travelers are at tremendous risk of being left behind if they do not have access to professional assistance,” Richards said.   

When Russia invaded Ukraine, travelers quickly learned they needed to add emergency evacuation plans that include the ability to extract clients from a country if conditions become dangerous. “We see similar scenarios playing out in Sudan,” Richards said. 

###  

Contact Bill McIntyre at bmcintyre@globalrescue.com or 202.560.1195 (phone/text) for more information.   

About Global Rescue   

Global Rescue is the world’s leading provider of medical, security, evacuation and travel risk management services to enterprises, governments and individuals. Founded in 2004, Global Rescue has exclusive relationships with the Johns Hopkins Emergency Medicine Division of Special Operations and Elite Medical Group. Global Rescue provides best-in-class services that identify, monitor and respond to client medical and security crises. Global Rescue has provided medical and security support to its clients, including Fortune 500 companies, governments and academic institutions, during every globally significant crisis of the last two decades. For more information, visit www.globalrescue.com 

 

Share This:

High-Altitude Mountaineers Set Their Sights on Record-Breaking Climbs This Season

Global Rescue mountaineers are on a record-breaking mission during the Mount Everest climbing season. 

Mountaineers and trekkers have swarmed into the Himalayas region for the Mount Everest spring 2023 climbing season, among them, a handful of climbers attempting to break a few records.

Two women are trying to break the speed record to summit all 14 of the world’s 8,000+ meter (26,242+ feet) mountains. There’s also a Wyoming, U.S., sports medicine doctor who will attempt to reach the peak of Mount Everest 15 days faster than anyone before. And then there’s a Nepalese Sherpa guide who will try to reach the apex of the planet’s tallest peak for the 27th time – more than anyone else has.

But to say there will be challenges is an understatement. Acute mountain sickness, bad falls, twisted ankles, frostbite, gastrointestinal trouble, snow blindness, avalanches and many other conditions will test climbers and trekkers at every step.

[Related Reading: Record Rescues Expected for the Spring 2023 Climbing Season]

Last year, there were a record-breaking number of climbing permits issued, and Global Rescue conducted a record-breaking number of rescue operations. The spring 2023 climbing season should hit a new high water mark.

Record-Breaking Contenders

Kristin Harila, a relative newcomer to mountaineering and a member of Global Rescue’s Mountain Advisory Council, and Allie Pepper, a veteran high-altitude climber, are each attempting to summit the 14 8,000+ meters (26,242+ feet) — Harila, faster than ever before. Nims Purja, also a member of Global Rescue’s Mountain Advisory Council, holds the current record of six months and six days, shattering the old record of seven years and 310 days. Pepper is attempting to summit all 14 peaks faster than anyone without supplemental oxygen, a record held by Ed Viesturs, also a Global Rescue Mountain Advisory Member.

Pepper’s attempt will be her first and is distinct because she won’t rely on supplemental oxygen. Most mountaineers use supplemental oxygen since O2 content decreases at higher altitudes, making breathing difficult. “The fastest time to complete this challenge is just under 16 years by Viesturs. I aim to complete my challenge in just over two years,” Pepper said.

Mountaineer Kristin Harila smiles at Annapurna base camp.
Norwegian Kristin Harila at Annapurna base camp.

Harila is making her second attempt to surpass the speed record to summit all 14 of the tallest mountains. She was six months in and two summits away from making history last year when the Chinese government’s strict zero-COVID policy prevented Harila from entering the country. Undeterred, she plans to do things a little differently this go-round. “I’m going to use a helmet this time,” Harila laughs, “because there have been some close calls.”

[Related Reading: Kristin Harila Gives the 14 Peaks Speed Record Another Go]

And as if climbing all of the world’s 8,000+ meter mountains wasn’t difficult enough, Harila, like Pepper, plans to climb without supplemental oxygen. “I know this is stupid to say,” Harila confesses, “but I didn’t feel challenged enough last year. The mountains and climbing are challenging in the moment, but I want to try something else. It’s the challenge that keeps me motivated.”

Despite her unaided inhalation aspirations, Harila says she will bring oxygen with her just in case bad weather rolls in and she needs to move more quickly to take advantage of a climbing window or avoid a potentially dangerous situation.

Mountaineer Allie Pepper Summits a mountain in the Himalayas
Australian Allie Pepper stands atop another Himalayan peak. Photo: Adventure Magazine New Zealand

Pepper and Harila are good friends, and they may climb together if schedules align. “Kristin is a close friend of mine, and we are in constant contact. We will be climbing together when our projects coincide,” Pepper said.

Zeroing in on one summit, Dr. Joe McGinley wants to smash the previous speed record of 35 days to summit Mount Everest and, instead, reach the peak in 10 days, according to a report. McGinley’s taking a health-science approach that could result in a medical research publication. For months, he’s been simulating sleeping and exercising at 6,100 meters (20,000+ feet) using an oxygen-restricting mask.

And Kami Rita, a Nepalese Sherpa guide, plans to break 26 successful Mount Everest ascents, a global record he already holds, according to an article. “I will climb Everest for the 27th time, and my climbing date is tentatively in the third week of May.”

On the Ground in Nepal

Records are meant to be broken. Climbing the world’s highest mountains faster or more often included. But that notoriety should never come at the cost of unnecessary risk. Luckily, Global Rescue member mountaineers and trekkers attempting to surpass personal bests or break records this season know what they’re doing. But, if they do get in trouble, emergency support is at hand.

Global Rescue medical and rescue experts are already on the ground in Nepal to arrange rescue operations whenever necessary, including helicopter and ambulance transports, hospital admissions and looking after individuals admitted to a hospital for care.

Dan Stretch is an experienced high-altitude mountaineer with ascents in the Himalayas, Europe, South America and Africa. He will be part of the on-the-ground operations team that will likely be handling 200 high-altitude rescues or more.

An “average day” during a Himalayan deployment is anything but normal. During the two-month spring Mount Everest climbing season, there will typically be several rescue operations performed each day, keeping the deployment team and Stretch busy from before dawn until nearly midnight. The busiest time is the two-week Mount Everest summit window when the medical and rescue operations team performs up to 25 rescues a day.

After a rescue, the Global Rescue team will often meet the members when they arrive at the medical facility and help them navigate the initial process. “We have close relationships with multiple hospitals. We conduct in-hospital visits and monitor medical reports remotely with our U.S.-based physicians who have expertise in high-altitude illness. All of this ensures that recovery is as fast and effective as possible. If the individual requires prolonged treatment our deployed team may assist them getting home,” Stretch said.

Global Rescue is expanding and enhancing its services for the climbing community by increasing its capabilities to provide emergency services in more regions, committing to longer deployments of medical operations personnel, and extending in-field rescue operational durations.

Implementing the High-Altitude Evacuation Package enables Global Rescue to continue enhancing its current service capabilities for the climbing and trekking community worldwide. Any member planning to travel above 15,000 feet or 4,600 meters at any point during their trip, excluding airplane travel, should purchase the High-Altitude Evacuation Package.

[Related Reading: What Is the High-Altitude Evacuation Package?]

“High-altitude outdoor activity worldwide is reaching unprecedented heights of participation,” said Viesturs, the only American to climb all 14 of the world’s 8,000+ meter peaks and the fifth person to do so without supplemental oxygen. “Global Rescue’s High-Altitude Evacuation Package supports this expanding interest with greater depth and breadth of services.”