On September 22–23, 2025, Polish ski mountaineer Andrzej Bargiel etched his name in history.

He became the first person ever to both climb and ski down Mount Everest without supplemental oxygen. (The Guardian)

At over 8,848 meters, where the air is thin, the wind brutal, and each breath a fight, he strapped on skis and descended the world’s tallest peak.

Polish ski mountaineer Andrzej Bargiel

Why This Is Beyond Impressive

  • Above the “death zone” for hours. Bargiel spent nearly 16 hours above 8,000 meters, an altitude where oxygen is so scarce the body begins to fail, before even starting the descent. (The Guardian)

  • No supplemental oxygen. More than 6,000 climbers have summited Everest, but fewer than 200 have done so without bottled oxygen, and none had ever attempted to ski back down under those conditions. (PetaPixel)

Check out the amazing video here.

Andrzej Bargiel descending Mount Everest (East Studio / Red Bull Content Pool)

  • Descending through chaos. His route took him through the Khumbu Icefall, narrow ridges, and unpredictable snow slopes. Every turn demanded razor-sharp judgment and sheer nerve. (Red Bull)

  • A legacy-building resume. Bargiel already made history in 2018 by skiing down K2, and his Everest descent adds a new summit to his portfolio. (Red Bull)

Andrzej Bargiel skiing down Mount Everest, Nepal (Credit: Bartłomiej Bargiel / Red Bull Content Pool)

What the Pictures Tell

The images from the expedition feel surreal. A lone figure carving snow ridges above the clouds. A panorama of peaks folding under twilight. A skier’s path etched into the steepest slopes on Earth. These are more than adventure photos, they are visual stories of daring and distance. (PetaPixel)

Bargiel’s silhouette against the ridge looks impossibly small, a reminder that nature remains the great equalizer.

Andrzej Bargiel climbing to the summit of Mount Everest before descending on skis (Credit: East Studio / Red Bull Content Pool)

What It Means in Human Terms

This achievement is about more than pushing limits. It is a reminder of determination at its rawest. Bargiel combined elegance and endurance, audacity and calculation.

Andrzej Bargiel during the summit push on Mount Everest (Credit: Bartłomiej Bargiel / Red Bull Content Pool)

He said little when he reached the summit, only enough to strap skis on, take a few breaths, and begin the descent before daylight faded.

At the bottom, he received a ceremonial Tibetan khada scarf, a symbol of respect and blessing for journeys completed.

Andrzej Bargiel descending on skis from Mount Everest summit (Credit: Andrzej Bargiel / Red Bull Content Pool)

A Peak That Will Be Remembered

Andrzej Bargiel did not just ski Everest, he redefined what was possible on the mountain. This will stand as a milestone in high-altitude mountaineering and ski history, a reminder that even the hardest thresholds can be redrawn.

If you ever find yourself doubting human grit or the beauty of venturing into the unknown, look back at those images. They prove how far courage, curiosity, and a steady heart can carry you, even at 29,000 feet.

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