Zac Zaharias

Zac Zaharias

Lieutenant Colonel Zac Zaharias, retired senior Australian Army officer, veteran Australian mountain climber, adventurer and outdoor trainer.
Personal information
Nationality Australian
Born (1956-07-21)21 July 1956
Climbing career
Type of climber Mountaineer
Major ascents Mount Everest (2001)

Lieutenant Colonel Zac Zaharias Conspicuous Service Medal (21 July 1956  ) is a retired senior Australian Army officer, veteran Australian mountain climber, adventurer and outdoor trainer. Zaharias was part of the Australian Army expedition that climbed Mount Everest in 2010. Zaharias was one of six Australians and two Britons who made it to the summit on 25 May 2010 with an expedition led by South Australian Duncan Chessell.[1] Zaharias is a graduate of the Royal Military College, Duntroon (1974—77) and has served with the Special Air Service Regiment, at the Australian Defence Force Academy and with the United Nations.[2] Zaharias is the president of the Canberra Climbers Association.[3][4]

Expeditions

Zaharias is one of Australia’s leading high altitude climbers, his first expedition to the Himalayas was in the early ’80s and he was a driving force of the Australian Army Alpine Club for many years.[4] He has participated in 17 major high altitude expeditions and has been leader or deputy leader on 13 of his expeditions. He has summited six of the world’s fourteen peaks above 8000 metres. His notable ascents include:[5]

On an expedition to Ganesh IV in 1981 Zaharias was with fellow climbers Maila Pemba, David Simpson and Jim Truscott who were left stranded, without equipment and lucky to be alive after the avalanche destroyed the camp two killing David Sloane.[6]

In 2001 on the Army Alpine Association expedition, one of the team members and two people accompanying him were killed in an avalanche while they were doing an acclimatisation trek in Nepal several hundred kilometres away from Everest.[7][8]

Everest

Zaharias became the second Australian Army representative and the oldest Australian to summit Everest on his third attempt in 2010.[1]

His first attempt was in 1988 as part of the Australian Bicentennial expedition. Zaharias got to within 300m of the Summit. RAAF Sergeant Brian Laursen and Paul Bain made it to the top. His second attempt was in 2001 when he was the leader of the Army Alpine Association team. In that attempt Lieutenant-Colonel Pat Cullinan made the summit on 25 May 2010. Major Zaharias got to within 100m from the summit.[1][4]

The Defence Newspaper said that "It was third time lucky for Major Zac Zaharias when he eventually made it to the top of the world – conquering Mount Everest – after falling agonisingly short on two earlier attempts. When he got there, though, there was no hooting and hollering, no singing, no dancing – just relief and a deep sense of accomplishment, and a brief moment to take in the breath-taking view before focusing on a safe descent."[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Third time tops it all". Department of Defence (Australia). 10 June 2010. Retrieved 3 October 2015.
  2. "OUR TEAM: Brief profiles of key Outdoor Insights staff...". Outdoor Insights Pty Ltd. 2015. Retrieved 3 October 2015.
  3. "It's too easy to go to Mt Everest now, says Canberra mountaineer". Canberra Times. 23 April 2014. Retrieved 3 October 2015.
  4. 1 2 3 Professor Ken Baldwin, Geoff Bartram, Duncan Chessell, Patrick Cullinan, Lincoln Hall, Greg Mortimer, Zac Zaharias, Matthew Higgins (Curator) (11 October 2009). Australians in the Himalayas (Audio on demand transcript). Canberra: National Museum of Australia.
  5. "Expedition Medicine: Meet the Team". Expedition and Wilderness Medicine Pty Ltd. 23 April 2014. Retrieved 3 October 2015.
  6. Steffen, Will (2010). Himalayan Dreaming: Australian Mountaineering in the Great Ranges of Asia, 1922-1990. Canberra: ANU E Press. p. 220. ISBN 1921666161.
  7. "Mountain Men". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 2 October 2009. Retrieved 3 October 2015.
  8. "Change to ADF training after trek tragedy". The Age. 3 June 2003. Retrieved 3 October 2015.

External links

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