In January 2024, Jakob Herrmann skied uphill to the highest of a run at Radstadt, his house ski resort in Austria, for the thirty fourth consecutive time in 24 hours. In doing so, Herrmann had climbed a complete of 79,534 vertical ft (24,242 meters) — setting a brand new world report for essentially the most vertical climbing on skis in 24 hours.
The 36-year-old broke Kilian Jornet’s 2019 world report of 77,053 ft (23,486 meters), surpassing it by 2,480 ft (756 meters).
“It has all the time been a dream of mine to be on touring skis for twenty-four hours straight and see what number of vertical meters I can obtain,” Herrmann stated in a press launch on the achievement. “I simply wished to know what limits one can attain and the way far past you’ll be able to go. I’ve an important assist crew round me, and I really like merely snowboarding for hours.”
2.74 Mount Everests in 24 Hours
Herrmann is an Austrian native. He has a embellished ski-mountaineering profession with wins in races from Austria, Germany, France, and Italy. He’s competed twice with the earlier report holder, Kilian Jornet, within the iconic Pierra Menta ski touring race.
Additionally a path runner, Herrmann positioned tenth on the 2022 Transvulcania Ultramarathon, in addition to third on the 2021 Grossglockner Extremely-Path 57k.
When Herrmann launched into this venture, he set his vertical goal at 78,740 ft (24,000 meters) — 1,686 ft (514 meters) past Jornet’s report.
The ski resort had curated a particular ascent monitor for Herrmann that was 2.5 kilometers lengthy, with 2,329 ft (710 meters) of ascent, that he skied up and down almost nonstop for twenty-four hours.
He took solely quick breaks to snack on rice, potatoes, isotonic drinks, gels, bars, and home made banana bread. Alongside the way in which, his family and friends supported him, bringing water, providing sustenance, and cheering him on.
In the long run, Herrmann surpassed even his personal expectations, and reset the report at 77,053 ft (23,486 meters). That’s the equal of two.74 Mount Everests, from sea degree to the summit, in a single day.
“I’ve an important assist crew round me, and I really like merely snowboarding for hours,” Herrmann stated. “Probably the most difficult half was snowboarding in a single day with 14 nighttimes. Now I’m overjoyed and proud that I made it.”
[Editor’s Note: This article was first published on our sister site GearJunkie.]