Experienced guides will take the team to the top
While the Kilimanjaro climb is gentle compared to most Alpine climbing, let alone summiting Everest, only about half of the people who try to reach the top do so. Many are turned back on this journey from savannah to glaciers by altitude sickness. To get the team there and back safely, longtime Climb to Fight Cancer partner Alpine Ascents International — the same Seattle-based expedition leaders who took Timmerman to the top of the world a year ago — will guide the expedition.
Lead guide Eric Murphy, of Bellingham, Washington, summited Mount Everest last year with Timmerman. Joining them will be Lakpa Rita Sherpa, a world-renowned mountaineer who was Base Camp manager on that expedition — and has summited Everest 15 times. Both guides are on Everest again this month but plan to be back in time, and rested, for Kilimanjaro.
“Eric is the most experienced western guide on Kilimanjaro,” Timmerman said. “He has climbed it more than 100 times.”
The Alpine Ascents team successfully guides 90% of its clients to the summit of Kilimanjaro because they insist on a slow, seven-day, 37-mile trek to the top and back, to give team members a chance to acclimate to the cold thin air, just 200 miles from the equator. And just like on Everest, safety concerns prevail over personal goals.
Individual team members will fly out to Kilimanjaro International Airport, near Arusha, Tanzania, on July 18. They will rest and check their gear on the 19th and be dropped off at the trailhead on the morning of the 20th. High up the mountain on the sixth day, July 25, they’ll take the arduous eight- to 10-hour climb in thin air to reach the summit.
An eclectic assortment of experts in business and science
Timmerman said he was astonished at the level of interest in this expedition. “We have a list of 50 people who wanted to do this,” he said. “There are 28 on the team, the group maximum.”
Joining Timmerman and Anderson on the expedition is the Hutch’s chief fundraiser, Kelly O’Brien, vice president of Philanthropy. She's an experienced mountaineer who summited Kilimanjaro in 2012 and trekked to Everest Base Camp in 2014.
“Our team likes to say, ‘Climb a mountain, save a life.’” O’Brien said. “Luke’s vision and leadership, along with the outpouring of support from his climbers and their networks, are showing what’s possible when we pair our community’s passion with the Hutch’s lifesaving work.
“Luke and his team are fueling an extraordinary influx of funds that will accelerate the pace of research and move ideas to patients more quickly. We hope the expedition inspires more climbers to join us and provides hope to those who are in the midst of their own cancer journey.”
Timmerman said he looks forward to seeing his eclectic assortment of business and science experts develop the kind of camaraderie he savors whenever he climbs mountains with a team. “I think there is going to be terrific networking within this group,” he said.
This spring, he has hosted two summits, in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and San Francisco, to raise money for the Hutch and discuss trends in the biotechnology industry he writes about in his newsletter. He will host a third Cancer Summit on Friday, May 10, on the Hutch campus.
“It is deeply meaningful to me that I can take this network that I’ve built over the years and put it to work for cancer research,” he said.