Ian Woodall

Male, Person

1956 –

95

Who is Ian Woodall?

Ian Woodall is a British mountain climber who has climbed Mount Everest several times.

In 1996 Woodall was the leader of the controversial first South African Mount Everest expedition, during which one member of the party died. The expedition reached Camp IV - the last camp before the summit, and 923m below it - on May 10th, but were not directly involved in the disaster that unfolded that day. Following the tragedy the expedition returned to base camp and made a second attempt after a few days rest, achieving the summit on the 28th May. Woodall reached the peak by 10am, four other members of the expedition had done so by 11am, but Bruce Herrod lagged behind and was the last to reach the peak; from there, at 5pm, he spoke to the others by radio, but was never heard from again. The expedition was sponsored by Johannesburg newspaper The Sunday Times, but its support of the expedition was later withdrawn.

In late May 1998 Woodall together with his climbing partner Cathy O'Dowd were again on Everest when they encountered their friend Francys Arsentiev during her last hours in life. They called off their own attempt to reach the summit and tried to help her for more than one hour but because of her condition, the location, and the cold weather they were finally forced to abandon her and to start descending.

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Born
Aug 17, 1956
Nationality
  • United Kingdom

Submitted
on July 23, 2013

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