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<P
align=justify> <SPAN
class=737445113-05092002>...nii et kõva tahtmise korral pole takistusi mägedes
kondamiseks...</SPAN></P>
<P align=justify><SPAN
class=737445113-05092002>
</SPAN>Blind Mountain Climber Completes Seven Summit
Quest;<BR> Erik
Weihenmayer Reaches Top of Tallest Peak In Australia<BR>
SYDNEY, Australia, Sept. 5 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Today, blind mountain<SPAN
class=737445113-05092002> </SPAN>climber, Erik Weihenmayer, reached the summit
of Mt. Kosciuszko completing his Seven Summits quest<SPAN
class=737445113-05092002>. </SPAN> Weihenmayer reached the top of Mt.
Kosciuszko<BR>-- the tallest peak in Australia -- a mountain standing at 7,316
ft. between<SPAN class=737445113-05092002> </SPAN>Melbourne and Sydney in the
Australian Alps. Weihenmayer joins an elite group<SPAN
class=737445113-05092002> </SPAN>of approximately 100 athletes, including 30
Americans, who have climbed the<SPAN class=737445113-05092002> </SPAN>Seven
Summits -- the tallest peaks on each of the seven continents. For
more<SPAN class=737445113-05092002> </SPAN>information about Weihenmayer and to
follow the Allegra -- NFB 2002 Seventh<SPAN class=737445113-05092002>
</SPAN>Summit Expedition, consumers can log on to<SPAN class=737445113-05092002>
</SPAN><A
href="http://www.SevenSummitsExpedition.com">http://www.SevenSummitsExpedition.com</A>.<BR>
Overcoming Obstacles<BR> Weihenmayer started climbing after
losing his sight at the age of 13 to<SPAN class=737445113-05092002>
</SPAN>retinoscheses, an extremely rare eye disease. As a skydiver, skier,
and<SPAN class=737445113-05092002> </SPAN>all-around adventure sports
enthusiast, he has climbed some of the most<SPAN class=737445113-05092002>
</SPAN>technical peaks in the world, dramatizing the limitless possibilities of
all<SPAN class=737445113-05092002> </SPAN>people.<SPAN
class=737445113-05092002> </SPAN>"Visually, my team can easily
differentiate each mountain," said<BR>Weihenmayer. "But my senses -- the
feel of the rock, the smell of the earth,<SPAN class=737445113-05092002>
</SPAN>the sound of the wind howling -- are what make each mountain different
and<SPAN class=737445113-05092002> </SPAN>unique for me."<BR>
The Seven Summits: The Challenge of a Lifetime<BR> Seven years
ago at the age of 26, Erik Weihenmayer embarked on a quest<SPAN
class=737445113-05092002> </SPAN>that would take amazing skill, determination,
and faith. In 1995, beginning<SPAN class=737445113-05092002> </SPAN>with
Denali/ Mt. McKinley in North America (20,320 ft.), Weihenmayer set out<SPAN
class=737445113-05092002> </SPAN>to make history by climbing the highest peak on
each of the seven land<SPAN class=737445113-05092002> </SPAN>continents.
Then, in 1997, he successfully climbed Mt. Kilimanjaro in Africa<SPAN
class=737445113-05092002> </SPAN>(19,339 ft.) and South America's Mt. Aconcagua
(22,840 ft.) in 1999. In 2001,<SPAN class=737445113-05092002>
</SPAN>Weihenmayer reached the summit of both Mt. Vinson Massif (16,067 ft.)
in<SPAN class=737445113-05092002> </SPAN>Antarctica and Mt. Everest (29,029 ft.)
in Asia. This year, Weihenmayer<SPAN class=737445113-05092002>
</SPAN>reached the summit of Mt. Elbrus (18,510 ft.) in Europe and has now
completed<SPAN class=737445113-05092002> </SPAN>his seven-year journey by
reaching the top of Mt. Kosciuszko in 2002. It is estimated that during
the last seven years Weihenmayer has spent<BR>more than 1,000 hours per year
training and preparing for each mountain he<SPAN class=737445113-05092002>
</SPAN>faced. From climbing stairs with a 100-pound pack strapped to his
back to<SPAN class=737445113-05092002> </SPAN>daily stints on the treadmill, the
physical training required to climb large<SPAN class=737445113-05092002>
</SPAN>rock faces and ice mountains is strenuous.<BR>
"Reaching the summit of Kosciuszko is an accomplishment unlike any other<SPAN
class=737445113-05092002> </SPAN>I've experienced," said Weihenmayer. "In
climbing the Seven Summits, I hope<SPAN class=737445113-05092002> </SPAN>to show
people that what may seem unattainable is really within
reach."</P>
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