Travel News
You are looking at: Home : Travel News

Kili' 'Nearly Killed Me'

Observer Travel article highlights the dangers of the daily peak fee system operated on Kilimanjaro once again


Posted: 18 February 2003
by Jon

'Kilimanjaro ... it nearly killed me' - that was the tag-line for a story in last Sunday's Observer that once again highlighted the inherent dangers of a peak fee system that encourages people to climb the mountain as quickly as possible to save money.

Travel writer Tim Moore, to his credit, doesn't skirt around the risks involved or the unpleasantness of attempting a near 6000-metre peak in just five days without any prior acclimatisation.

Only 25 die per year...

At one point he quotes the co-owner of the Marangu Hotel at the foot of the mountain:
'Nearly 25,000 people a year set off up Kilimanjaro, and only 25 die.' Not since John Gummer wedged that burger in his daughter's mouth - says Moore - has an attempt at reassurance proved so spectacularly ill conceived.

The problem with Kilimanjaro is that a hefty peak fee is levelled for each day spent on the mountain. As a result, in order to keep prices to an acceptable level, tour organisers try to get up the mountain as fast as possible, leading to a now standard time on the normal route of five days.

Ideally, you'd want at least twice that time before ascending to 6,000 metres, and even an extra day in the itinerary would have benefits. One figure we've seen for success rates on the standard route is just 40 per-cent, a woeful figure given that it's essentially a non-technical, high altitude fell walk.

More importantly walkers are not just suffering unnecessarily to climb Africa's highest mountain, but are dying in the process. Something that's quite unjustifiable.

Five days itinerary 'unjustifiable'

In a separate piece, the paper quotes trekking operator Guerba, who organised Moore's trip, as saying that they didn't believe more time was needed for acclimatisation or that more warnings of the dangers were needed, before going on to quote a British Mountaineering Council spokesperson as saying that the five day timespan taken to climb the mountain on the Marangu route is 'unjustifiable'.

Porters and operators are well rehearsed at removing casualties from the mountain at speed, but that shouldn't be allowed to justify a peak fee system that is clearly at best making the ascent of the mountain an unpleasant and pointlessly hard undertaking and, at worst, putting lives in danger.


Previous article
New Kit From Lowe Alpine Scoop
Next article
Brits Win Top Alpine Award


TwitterStumbleUponFacebookDiggRedditGoogle

Related Content

Related Products


Discuss this story

Talkback: Kili' 'Nearly Killed Me'

First Name:
Last Name:
Nickname:
Email:
Security Image:
Enter the code shown:

I agree to the site's Terms and Conditions & Code of Conduct:


Latest posts