Pakistan's K2 porters, the unsung masters of the mountains

21 August 2023
Pakistan's K2 porters, the unsung masters of the mountains

Under mountains that dagger the sky, a misfit caravan of Pakistani porters trudge towards K2 carrying live chickens and lawn furniture for adventurers seeking an audience with the world's second-highest peak. Tour operators typically quote between $2,000 and $7,000 for the trip starting in Askole -- a village in Pakistan's northeastern Gilgit-Baltistan region where jeeps end their muddling journeys and spill trekkers sporting neck pillows and parasols, as well as more hardbred mountain-climbers. Porters -- doing the dogsbody work carting luggage, dining tents and pantries of provisions -- make something like 30,000 to 40,000 rupees ($105 to $140) each trip in the four-month summer season, less than the price of high-end hiking trousers one firm recommends clients wear. Growing numbers of people arriving at K2 has also meant more rubbish. Sajid Ali Sadpara, whose father Ali Sadpara died during a K2 climb in 2021, is now trying to clean the mountain in his honour.

*This video was shot before the death of porter Mohammed Hassan on the climb to K2 on July 27.