Griff Pugh: The man who really conquered Everest

By Steve Myall

Daughter of physiologist who helped Sir Edmund Hillary and Nepalese Sherpa Tenzing Norgay  to conquer Everest reveals extraordinary story of survival.

 

British Expedition: Physiologist Griff Pugh (circled) with the team in May 1953.

 British Expedition: Physiologist Griff Pugh (circled) with the team in May 1953.

(The Granger Collection / TopFoto
It seemed an impossible dream… team after team of brave adventurers had tried and failed to ­conquer Mount Everest.

But 60 years ago, on the eve of the Coronation, news came through that delighted the whole of ­Britain – Sir Edmund Hillary and Nepalese Sherpa Tenzing Norgay had, finally, reached the snowy peak of the world’s highest mountain.

It was an amazing achievement by undoubtedly brave men. But why did they succeed where so many had failed?

One reason has, until now, ­remained hidden to history. The success of Sir Edmund and his team was, in fact, due to the work of a man who himself never reached the summit.

He was Griff Pugh, the physiologist on the trip. His daughter, Harriet ­Tuckey spent eight years researching the expedition and her father’s role in it. Here she reveals how the greatest achievement in mountaineering came to pass.

Mount Everest
Mount Everest: Peak is 8,848m above sea level. (BBC)

 

Between 1921 and World War Two seven major British expeditions had tried to scale Everest… and failed.

Although six men reached 28,000ft (8,500m) in 1924 – a thousand feet below the summit – they were ­unable to climb higher.

There were two reasons for their difficulties. The first was that Britain then controlled and restricted access to the mountain.

This meant our climbers faced no competition and, extraordinary though it may seem by today’s standards, they believed aids such as bottled oxygen were “unBritish” and “unsporting”.

Traditionally Everest had always been climbed from the north, through Tibet, as it was thought there was no climbable route up the mountain from ­Nepal.

But in 1951 – after Western climbers were stopped from using Tibet by its ­Chinese occupiers – a British climbing team found a way up via ­Nepal.

They applied for permission to use that way the next year but, to their horror, found the Swiss had already had a crack at the climb, getting further up than anyone ­before them.

Unlike the British, the Swiss team had consulted specialist ­physiologists and used purpose-built oxygen ­equipment.

The worried British got permission to climb in 1953 ­knowing the French planned a similar expedition in 1954, and the Swiss another in 1955.

They then sent a training expedition to the Nepalese mountain of Cho Oyu to test the theories of Pugh, who said the appliance of science would make the crucial difference.

Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay
Tough Climb: Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay below the South Summit on Everest. (Alfred Gregory)

 

 At the dizzying heights near Everest’s summit the air is thin and breathing is difficult.

But while oxygen equipment for climbers had been available since 1922, in the years before their successful attempt, the British considered ­artificial aids “unethical”.

The majority of climbers also feared the weight of the apparatus cancelled out any potential benefits.

Oxygen was not the only problem. Everest climbers were terribly afflicted by cold and thought some frostbite was unavoidable.

Climbers also suffered from extreme exhaustion, disturbed breathing, headaches, loss of appetite, rapid weight loss, sleeplessness, persistent coughing, sore throats and stomach problems. All these sapped their strength, undermining their chances of success.

They were unable to recover from fatigue and their strength was further undermined by extreme dehydration which they did not understand.

Climbing teams returned from high altitude thin and haggard – mere ghosts of their former selves.

There was also the problem of diet. Climbers at high altitude lost their ­appetites and suffered drastic weight-loss and stomach upsets.

Time and again, the strongest men were stopped in their tracks long before they could reach the summit of Everest, or indeed the summit of any of the 10 highest mountains in the world. It was these problems that needed to be solved before anyone would reach the top.

In 1952 on Cho Oyu little changed in the British approach.

The team was led by experienced but disorganised Eric Shipton who doubted Griff Pugh’s ­theories on acclimatisation and oxygen use.

But the next year he was replaced by Army officer John Hunt, who was known for his excellent organisational abilities – and Pugh was given the freedom to get to work his own way.

His four-week programme of ­acclimatisation and ­lessons in oxygen use ensured the men were better ­prepared and fitter than any previous team.

He told the climbers how much to drink, made their stoves more efficient and worked out how much fuel would be needed to melt snow for drinking water.

Pugh improved the food too, after first working out the energy costs of carrying it.

He then came up with ­complex dietary principles for high-altitude climbing – which included special treats – which are still followed today.

To top it all, he designed high-altitude boots and wind-proof suits, modified the snow goggles, tents and sleeping bags – and designed special air beds for sleeping on.

Tenzing Norgay and Edmund Hillary
Good Job: Tenzing and Hillary drink a celebratory cup of tea. (George Band)

 

 As with all high altitude climbs, the men had a series of camps.

Hillary and ­Tenzing spent the night before their summit assault sheltering in their “high ridge camp” in a tent made of the fabric chosen by Pugh.

They started up their cooker (made to Pugh’s specifications) and finding it “worked like a charm” brewed “large amounts of lemon juice and sugar”.

After a “satisfying meal out of our store of delicacies” – from the special high-altitude ration boxes devised by Pugh – they retired for the night using sleeping oxygen (under the expert’s oxygen policy), resting on air mattresses also developed specially.

After getting up at 4am they brewed still more sweetened lemonade because Pugh had told them that being dehydrated was the biggest threat to their ability to keep going.

Then they set off and, thanks to Pugh’s work and their level of fitness, found the final climb took only five hours. In fact, they returned from their historic mission in far better condition than any previous Everest assault pair.

Hillary and Tenzing got all the glory. But their magnificent achievement was also a huge success for Pugh. It showed that his ideas really worked.

Despite this, his diary contains only the simple entry: “2pm. Hillary and Tenzing arrive back in camp from the south col after successful ascent of Everest”.

Tenzing Norgay
Everest Conquered: Tenzing Norgay reaches the summit at on May 29, 1953. (Edmund Hillary)

 

Despite the huge role played by Pugh, his contribution was not made public. Team leader Hunt said: “It’s men who climb mountains, not equipment.” A romantic tale of heroism and ­adventure was far more interesting to people than advances in science and technology.

But in the climbing ­community, Pugh’s innovations were immediately studied and copied.

Within three years, the world’s six highest mountains had all been climbed in relative safety.

Within five years, only two peaks above 8,000m remained and one proved completely inaccessible.

Pugh’s later work in hypothermia led to the creation of much of the lightweight outdoor clothes used today.

And his studies into the effects of altitude on the human body still ­influence professional athletes.

But while climbers often talk about this extraordinarily period in ­Himalayan climbing many are still blind to Pugh’s achievements, attributing the successes to a sudden blossoming of skill, courage and ­fortitude.

But Sir Edmund Hillary knew Pugh’s worth. In an interview shortly before he died in 2008 he told Harriet: “Your father, he, in a way, made it possible for us to climb Everest.”

From: http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/secrets-behind-conquering-everest-60-1911119

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