Summit meeting
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Mike Sciacca
The view was breath-taking and John Rost, literally, was out of
breath.
That’s what the Huntington Beach resident vividly remembers about
his triumphant ascent at 10:30 a.m. on May 27 to the top of Mt.
Everest, the world’s highest peak that has an official altitude of
29,029 feet.
The expedition took the 40-year-old Rost, who was part of a party
that consisted of five clients, two guides and five Sherpas, two
months to complete.
“Reaching the top was a culmination of so many things,” he said.
“First off, you’re scared because you don’t know if you will come
down the mountain alive. Seven people had died on the mountain within
a 14-day period in May.”
Hours before he reached the summit, Rost had watched a “beautiful”
lightning show in the distance as it danced from cloud to cloud below
where he was stationed.
It was close to monsoon season, and in the distance, he could hear
a thunderstorm rumbling.
But by the morning of Summit Day, the winds had died down and
perfect blue skies gave way to hope. Yet during the final hours of
his climb, Rost said that winds reaching 50 mph picked up and clouds
descended over the top of Everest, which is part of the Himalaya
mountain range along the border of Nepal and Tibet.
“You feel very vulnerable to all the elements and everything
happening around you,” he said. “You’re just exposed to everything.
One little thing goes wrong and it could end your life.
“But I tried to take in as much of the incredible view as
possible, while concentrating on my footing. It’s really fresh in my
mind still, being so out of breath. It took us almost a week to get
down from the top. Summit Day, I can tell you, was one of the
scariest in my life.”
Yet despite the rawness of the elements he faced on Everest and
the grueling climb to the top, Rost, who began climbing during his
college days in Flagstaff, Ariz., says he has a personal agenda to
meet.
Everest is the fifth summit Rost, a father of three, has
successfully reached.
He first tackled Mt. Kilimanjaro in Tanzania, Africa, then
completed Mt. McKinley in North America, before reaching the top of
both Mt. Kosciusko in Australia and Aconcagua in Argentina.
His goal, he says, is to reach all of the world’s highest seven
summits -- and he will reach all seven, he added, within a two-year
period.
“This is a personal goal I’ve set for myself and when I set a
goal, I tend to accomplish it,” Rost said.
He leaves on July 8 to attempt to conquer Mt. Elbrus in Russia.
The expedition will be completed, he said, by July 23.
The final summit he’ll climb is Mt. Vinson in Antarctica, a climb,
he says, that is scheduled for the end of November.
Only 35 Americans and 100 people, worldwide, he said, have
successfully reached all seven summits.
Funds to finance the climbs are perhaps some of the toughest
challenges facing a climber, and for Rost, it was no different.
He said the cost of the Everest expedition totaled $55,000.
He was backed by Chase-Durer and wore two of the company’s watches
when he reached the peak of Everest. He said he will engrave each of
the two watches with sentiments of his climb and present them to his
sons, Alec, 10, and Christopher, 8, when the two turn 18.
He brought photos of his children, who also include Emily, 6, with
him to the top of Everest, and had a picture taken of him holding up
the photos of his children.
He trains rigorously at Los Caballeros Athletic Club, another
sponsor, in Fountain Valley, routinely working the StairMaster with
70 pounds loaded into his backpack and weights strapped to his
ankles.
Rost also received backing from Fiesta Auto Insurance Centers, of
which his is president and owner.
He called the Mt. Everest climb his toughest yet.
He dropped 37 pounds from his 6-foot-2, 195-pound physique.
“Being in top physical and mental shape is of utmost and crucial
importance,” he said. “Training intensely at Los Cab has really paid
off for me and a climber really can’t do this without support from
sponsors.”
Rost said that climbing Mt. Elbrus and Mt. Vinson will cost
$30,000 between the two, and he’s seeking further sponsorship for the
expeditions.
“You know, climbing a summit is like being on this bizarre
vacation,” he added. “It’s not a comfortable experience, at all, and
at times, you think, ‘What the hell am I doing?’ But, I keep training
and going back for more. There’s only two more to go before I reach
my goal.”
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