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A 17-year-old’s Everest dream: The death zone that forced her back

Australian teenager Bianca Adler set out to become the youngest woman to summit Mount Everest. Just 400 meters from the top, brutal weather and oxygen-starved air forced her to turn back — a choice she calls heartbreaking, but life-saving

Newsroom September 25 10:04

At 8,450 meters above sea level, where oxygen levels are too thin to sustain human life for long, Bianca Adler paused. The 17-year-old Australian climber, exhausted and struggling to breathe, realized she had reached her limit. The summit of Mount Everest was only 400 meters above, tantalizingly close — but impossible to reach safely.

“I felt so strong, like I could make it to the top,” she told her followers on Instagram. “But the winds were too dangerous. I couldn’t see anything. My fingers and toes were starting to go numb. It was the first stage of frostbite.”

Viral from the “Death Zone”

Adler had documented every step of her expedition on TikTok. One clip, showing her whispering through shallow breaths after four days in Everest’s notorious “Death Zone,” went viral with over 55 million views. “My throat and lungs… I’ve never felt worse,” she told the camera, visibly drained.

The Death Zone — above 8,000 meters — is where oxygen levels are so low that even the strongest climbers deteriorate rapidly. Sherpas and climbers alike must push upward quickly, before exhaustion, dehydration, and altitude sickness take over.

A Rising Star in Mountaineering

Despite her age, Adler is already one of the sport’s rising stars. She holds the record as the youngest woman to summit both Manaslu (8,163 meters) and Ama Dablam (6,812 meters). Everest was meant to be her next triumph.

@biancaaadler

after spending almost 4 days in the death zone, feeling the worst I have ever felt #fyp #viral #everest #nature #climbing

♬ Fine line (Instrumental) – Kapa Boy

Her attempt was complicated further when her father, climbing alongside her, fell ill and had to remain at Camp 2. On her descent, both were diagnosed with HAPE — high-altitude pulmonary edema, a dangerous condition where fluid builds up in the lungs.

“I Always Choose Life”

Adler made two summit pushes from Camp 4 (7,925 meters), but both ended in retreat. “It was so difficult,” she admitted. “I was devastated. But it would have been foolish to continue.”

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Still recovering from exhaustion and altitude illness, Adler insists she made the only possible choice. “It was an extremely hard decision, but I always choose life over a summit. The mountain will still be there.”

Her story — of ambition, danger, and resilience on the world’s highest peak — has already inspired millions online, and cemented her reputation as one of the boldest young climbers of her generation.

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