TACOMA, Wash. — The five Americans who hoped to become the first all-woman team to climb Mount Everest were forced to turn back just short of the summit.
Health problems and weather forced the women to turn around early Saturday, just 285 feet from the summit. Minutes earlier, expedition leader Eric Simonson of International Mountain Guides had reported that everything was fine, said his wife, Erin, business manager for the trek.
"Everything was going beautifully," she told The News Tribune of Tacoma. "Twenty minutes later, I'm getting this distress call."
Midge Cross, a 58-year-old grandmother, had turned back Friday. Cross, who would have been the oldest woman to scale Everest, had complained earlier in the week of fatigue.
Alison Levine, Kim Clark, Lynn Prebble and Jody Thompson made the final summit push. The group ran into problems about 6:40 a.m. Nepal time, when Levine collapsed from exhaustion and the effects of altitude, Erin Simonson said.
Clark, Prebble and Thompson started along a thin ridge of snow leading a steep pitch called the Hillary Step. Then Clark radioed that Thompson was having trouble.
At the same time, clouds began forming and the wind increasing so the last three women headed down.
Since Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay climbed Everest in 1953, about 1,100 people — including about a dozen American women — have reached the 29,035-foot summit. More than 170 have died trying.