Saanvi sood india Mt kilimanjaro
Saanvi Sood India who Climbed Mount Kilimanjaro shares with you some inspiration in regards with her journey.Seven year-old Saanvi Sood made her way to Mount Kilimanjaro which is the tallest mountain on the African continent and the highest free-standing mountain in the world. If you have the will to make through then lets do it.
On the way to Mount Kilimanjaro their are volcanic cones, Mawenzi, Shira and Kibo. Mawenzi and Shira are extinct but Kibo, the highest peak, is dormant and could erupt again. The most recent activity was about 200 years ago, the last major eruption was 360,000 years ago.
Nearly every climber who has summitted Uhuru Peak, the highest summit on Kibo’s crater rim, has recorded his or her thoughts about the accomplishment in a book stored in a wooden box at the top.
IF you have a will then the age is no limit for you you can climb it at the age of 7 and even at 87. Yes, The oldest person ever to summit Mount. Kilimanjaro was 87-year-old Frenchman Valtee Daniel.
While Climbing Mount Kilimanjaro one will get almost every kind of ecological system cultivated land, rain forest, heath, moorland, alpine desert and an arctic summit. It will be an adventure you cannot forget.
Its right time to climb Mount Kilimanjaro as the mountain’s snow caps are diminishing, having lost more than 80 percent of their mass since 1912. In fact, they may be completely ice free within the next 20 years, according to scientists.
Shamsa Mwangunga, National Resources and Tourism minister of Tanzania, announced in 2008 that 4.8 million indigenous trees will be planted around the base of the mountain, helping prevent soil erosion and protect water sources.
South African Bernard Goosen twice scaled Mt. Kilimanjaro in a wheelchair. His first summit, in 2003, took nine days; his second, four years later, took only six. Born with cerebral palsy, Goosen used a modified wheelchair, mostly without assistance, to climb the mountain.
Approximately 25,000 people attempt to summit Mount. Kilimanjaro annually. Approximately two-thirds are successful and Saanvi Sood India was among them. Altitude-related problems is the most common reason climbers turn back.