Expedition Denali Is Under Way

a89db7b7-d9cd-44a8-8430-f20fdba7e338Nine mountaineers currently moving up the Kahiltna Glacier on Denali are preparing not only to make history by summitting the tallest peak in North America—Denali, but also to create a legacy.

In hopes of becoming the first African American team to summit the peak, the Expedition Denali team is doing so to inspire youth of color, currently an alarmingly underrepresented group in the outdoors, to discover and aspire to great heights in the outdoors. They, along with four National Outdoor Leadership School (NOLS) instructors and a documentary film crew, took their first major step toward the summit this week.

Talkeetna Air Taxi flew the mountaineers, in addition to an NBC film crew, to the glacier on Sunday afternoon, June 9. While the NBC team returned to town, the Expedition Denali team began climbing toward advanced base camp at 14,000 feet. From there, they will eventually move to high camp at about 17,200 feet before making a summit bid.

NOLS spearheaded Expedition Denali and is joined by major partners The North Face and REI in making it a possibility for these role models to affect change across the U.S. Special thanks this week go out to Talkeetna Air Taxi for transporting the NBC journalists and to Denali National Park and Preserve for accommodating the media attention this initiative has garnered.

The climb to 20,320 feet is only the beginning of Expedition Denali’s work; following the expedition, the mountaineering role models will tour the nation to speak to youth of color about the importance of outdoor recreation. Until then, NOLS is providing regular updates on Expedition Denali at expeditiondenali.nols.edu and on Facebook and Twitter, and freelancer and support team member James Edward Mills is posting photos and blog posts.

About NOLS

Founded in 1965 by legendary mountaineer Paul Petzoldt, NOLS is the leader in wilderness education, providing awe-inspiring, transformative experiences to 17,000 students each year. These students, ages 14 to over 80, learn in the wildest and most remote classrooms worldwide—from the Amazon rain forest, to rugged peaks in the Himalaya, to Alaskan glaciers and Arctic tundra. Graduates are active leaders with lifelong environmental ethics and outdoor skills. NOLS also offers customized courses through NOLS Professional Training, and the NOLS Wilderness Medicine Institute is the leading teacher of wilderness medicine worldwide. For more information, call (800) 710-NOLS (6657) or visit www.nols.edu.

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Written By

Casey Adams

Casey worked as a writer and PR specialist for NOLS.