Ed Viesturs wants you to know one thing: He was not the first person to climb all 14 of the world’s tallest mountains.
In 2005, Viesturs became the first American to summit every mountain over 8,000 m, a feat considered the pinnacle of alpine accomplishments. It took him 18 years to do them all, as he literally followed in the footsteps of legendary alpinist Reinhold Messner, the first climber to pull it off.
But last week, the Guinness Book of World Records revoked Messner’s biggest achievement after a German historian claimed he stopped 15 feet below the summit of Annapurna. The institution argued that Viesturs, in fact, is the actual record-holder. Except Viesturs refused to accept the record and declined to add his voice to the announcement.
“I was like, this makes no sense to me,” Viesturs told GearJunkie on Wednesday. “Messner is still the record-holder.”
Now, the two climbing legends will meet for the first time on Oct. 14 as part of a sports festival in Trento, Italy. They’ll discuss the fallout of Guinness’ decision — and probably how little the mainstream media understands it.
Investigating Summit Claims
“I was like, this makes no sense to me. Messner is still the record-holder.”
— Ed Viesturs
Viesturs: Mainstream Alpinism Is ‘Regression’
“I truly believe that Reinhold Messner was the first person to climb all 14 8000ers and should still be recognized as having done so.”
— Ed Viesturs