by Amber Baillie
Academy Spirit staff writer
1/22/2013 - U.S. AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Colo. -- Four
Air Force Academy graduates may be busy preparing to climb the world's
highest peak in May, but they haven't forgotten where mountaineering
first began for them: here, climbing Colorado's 14,000-foot peaks as
cadets.
A team of six seasoned, Air Force mountaineers, currently stationed in
Colorado, Alabama, Florida, Texas and Virginia, will venture on a bold,
50-day journey, encountering frigid temperatures and demanding
conditions, to stand atop Mount Everest's 29,029-foot summit and be the
first American military team to ever attempt Everest and first military
team to climb each continent's highest mountain.
"They call it the 'third pole'--the North Pole, South Pole and Everest,"
Capt. Marshall Klitzke said. "There is no other landmass higher that
you, as a human being, can challenge yourself on. It's all aspects: the
physical, the mental and the spiritual. Your success depends on so many
variables: weather, timing, chance and preparation. Just having the
experience to attempt it is the ultimate test."
The group will meet in Kathmandu, Nepal, on March 26 to begin an
acclimation period that will include climbing Nepal's 20,000-foot peak,
Lobuche.
Klitzke, 30, a KC-135 Stratotanker pilot and flight instructor here,
visited Nepal last fall to climb the 22,349-foot peak, Ama Dablam, with
Capt. Kyle Martin, an Academy graduate stationed at Langley Air Force
Base, Va., who will also scale Everest.
"So far it's been the pinnacle of my mountaineering," Klitzke said. "I
feel like it's given me the credentials to go after Everest."
Klitzke's passion for climbing developed in 2001, while he was a cadet
at the Academy, and began regularly climbing the state's "fourteeners,"
skiing, camping and rock-climbing with friends.
"We were always in the mountains," Klitzke said. "Since then it's stuck
with me. In mountaineering, everything just kind of slows down, you're
very much in the moment and everything else in life just kind of fades
away."
Capt. Colin Merrin, 28, a GPS satellite operations mission commander
stationed at Schriever AFB, Colo., is another Academy graduate who will
join the team. Merrin's resume of peaks include Mount Rainier, Mount
Whitney, Mount Blanc and Mount Aconcagua.
"I want to climb Everest to be a part of something truly amazing,"
Merrin said. "Being an avid mountaineer, this was an opportunity that I
could not turn down. I had heard about the team for years and knew that
it would be a tremendous honor to be a part of such an elite group of
climbers tackling the highest mountain in the world, and most
importantly, supporting the ideals that the 7 Summits Team represents."
The risky, ambitious quest is part of the U.S. Air Force Seven Summits
Challenge, a tax-exempt organization created in 2005 by special
operations pilot Maj. Rob Marshall. The organization strives to shed
positive light on the Air Force by leading teams of Airmen to the summit
of each continent's highest peak and honoring service members who have
lost their lives in the line of duty.
"What we want people to learn is that anything they're good at, whether
it's climbing a mountain, running marathons, playing music or designing
Web pages, they can find a way to use their skills to make the world
better, whether it be promoting the Air Force or promoting the charity,"
Marshall said.
The organization has raised more than $60,000 for charities such as the
Special Operations Warrior Foundation and the That Others May Live
Foundation. The team has conquered six of the summits; Everest is the
final mountain.
If the team reaches the summit, they will mark history as the first
military team to climb each continent's highest mountain and the first
U.S. military team to conquer Everest, Marshall said.
"You're not going to find anybody on our climb that isn't in excellent
shape and passionate about this," Marshall said. "The trip requires lot
of money and time. They're all experienced climbers and two thirds of
the team are Academy grads."
Marshall, a 2001 Academy graduate, said it was through his participation
in the Academy's mountaineering and explorer's club that heightened his
love for climbing. He scaled 27 peaks as a cadet.
"The Academy's sports and clubs try to teach positive, life-long habits and outlets for exercise and health," Marshall said.
"It's been 12 years since I graduated, and I'm taking exactly what I
learned from the Academy and getting ready to climb Mount Everest. If
the Academy's main goal is teaching and generating leaders, then I think
mountaineering is one of the best opportunities to exercise leadership
skills and learn to be a good follower."
Marshall also plans to honor his tradition of doing push-ups on the summit.
"My goal is to see how many I can do in a minute," Marshall said. "I
started doing push-ups on Colorado fourteeners as a cadet. It's fun to
think that I've done them on every mountain peak since being a
freshman."
The team's physical preparation for Everest has included regular gym
training and heavy backpacking each week. Marshall said he's also
encouraged the team to swim, to get a full body work out and practice
controlled breathing to prepare them for the use of bottled oxygen on
Everest.
"The incline in Manitou is my personal beast," Klitzke said. "I try to
do that about twice a week and climb fourteeners. I'm pretty lucky with
the elevation in Colorado Springs already being pretty high."
Marshall, 34, will lead the pack up Everest. He said the group will move
at a slower pace to improve their chances of getting as many people as
possible to the summit.
"You can climb Everest at a faster pace, but from our research, we are
giving ourselves the best chance to acclimatize and the optimal amount
of time to reach the top," Marshall said.
Marshall is aware of the risks that come with mountaineering. In 2008,
when Marshall's team climbed North America's highest peak, Mount
McKinley, the group was tent bound for seven days after being caught in a
heavy blizzard.
Being patient, reading the weather correctly and making the right risk management decisions will be important, Marshall said.
"I think the biggest risk we're going to face on Everest is, 'How do we
manage our team's schedule to avoid crowds but still give ourselves the
best chance to get to the summit?'" Marshall said.
Klitzke said he hopes his mission to the top of the world will empower cadets.
"Hopefully they will see beyond their four years here, see what's
available and what they can accomplish in the Air Force and outside of
it. It's amazing when you set big goals and tackle them -- what you can
bring yourself to do."
It's important for people to know that the Air Force is comprised of
people who pursue their passions with an interest of improving
themselves, Merrin said.
"Climbing Everest doesn't necessarily change the world, but it creates
an awareness that we are capable of outstanding feats," Merrin said.
On the team are:
· Maj. Rob Marshall, 34, a V-22 Osprey pilot, from Mercer Island, Wash., stationed in Amarillo, Texas
· Capt. Andrew Ackles, 29, a TH-1N instructor pilot, from Ashland, Ore., stationed at Fort Rucker, Ala.
· Capt. Kyle Martin, 29, a T-38 Talon pilot, from Manhattan, Kan., stationed at Langley Air Force Base, Va.
· Capt. Marshall Klitzke, 30, a KC-135 Stratotanker pilot from Lemmon,
S.D., currently an instructor pilot at the Air Force Academy.
· Capt. Colin Merrin, 28, a GPS satellite operations mission commander from Santee, Calif., stationed at Schriever AFB, Colo.
· Staff Sgt. Nick Gibson, 36, a Reserve pararescueman and
physician-assistant student from Gulf Breeze, Fla., stationed at Patrick
AFB, Fla.
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