Monday, June 11, 2012

Japanese man climbs all world's 14 tallest peaks

Japanese climber Hirotaka Takeuchi stands in front of a banner after he was felicitated by the President of Nepal Mountaineering Association Zimba Zangbu Sherpa, in Katmandu, Nepal, Sunday, June 10, 2012. Takeuchi climbed a Himalayan peak Mount Dhaulagiri 8,167 meters (26,788 feet) high in Nepal to become the first person from his country to scale the 14 tallest mountains of the world, mountaineering officials said. (AP Photo/Binod Joshi)

Japanese climber Hirotaka Takeuchi stands in front of a banner after he was felicitated by the President of Nepal Mountaineering Association Zimba Zangbu Sherpa, in Katmandu, Nepal, Sunday, June 10, 2012. Takeuchi climbed a Himalayan peak Mount Dhaulagiri 8,167 meters (26,788 feet) high in Nepal to become the first person from his country to scale the 14 tallest mountains of the world, mountaineering officials said. (AP Photo/Binod Joshi)

In this Sunday, June 10, 2012 photo, Japanese climber Hirotaka Takeuchi celebrates after he was congratulated by the President of Nepal Mountaineering Association Zimba Zangbu Sherpa in Katmandu, Nepal. Takeuchi, who was nearly killed by an avalanche in 2007, scaled the 8,167-meter-high (26,788-foot-high) Mount Dhaulagiri on May 26 to finish his 17-year mission, has become his country's first person to scale the world's 14 tallest mountains, completing his latest climb in Nepal, mountaineering officials said Monday. (AP Photo/Binod Joshi)

(AP) ? A Japanese mountaineer who was nearly killed by an avalanche in 2007 finished a climb in Nepal last month that made him his country's first person to scale the world's 14 tallest mountains.

"I have always wanted to climb mountains as long as I remember," Hirotaka Takeuchi said Monday in Katmandu. "It was always my childhood dream to scale high peaks."

The Nepal Mountaineering Association said Takeuchi scaled the 8,167-meter-high (26,788-foot-high) Mount Dhaulagiri on May 26 to finish his 17-year mission.

All the top 14 peaks ? including Everest, K2 and Kanchenjunga ? are in the Himalayan or Karakoram ranges of Asia. Takeuchi is the 30th person to climb all 14 and the first climber from Japan, association official Deebash Bikram Shah said.

Takeuchi plans to return to the Himalayas to climb another peak next year. "I will continue to climb as long as my body will allow me," he said.

Takeuchi's mission almost ended in 2007 when an avalanche on Mount Gashabrum swept him some 300 meters (1,000 feet) and buried him completely in snow. Two German climbers were killed in the avalanche, and a third was injured badly. Takeuchi was dug out by other mountaineers and rescued by helicopter.

Associated Press

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