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Alex Honnold Casually Summits Another Peak at the Bottom of the World

Days after climbing Antarctica's highest peak with a 'shocking' illness, Honnold and his partner bagged the continent's third-highest mountain.

Alex Honnold(Photo/Todd Wawrychuk/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images/National Geographic via Getty Images)
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Editor’s note: This article was originally published on ExplorersWeb.


It’s hard to knock Alex Honnold’s psych for Antarctic climbing this season.

Last week, the free solo artist (and budding polar explorer) summitted Mount Vinson, Antarctica’s highest peak, despite illness he described as “shocking.”

This week, the send train kept rolling. Honnold yesterday shared that he and his partner, Esteban “Topo” Mena, topped out on Mount Shinn (15,291 feet), the continent’s third-highest peak.

Two words come to mind to describe Honnold’s attitude toward his rash of snowy climbing: undeterred and nonchalant.

He reported the 2-day Mount Vinson adventure and woesome gut problems via a declarative Tweet. Writing about Mount Shinn, he was more prolific, but equally nonplussed.

“Overall, I thought that Shinn was a much cooler summit than Vinson, with much more interesting climbing. It’s too bad that it’s not a little bit taller — it feels a little neglected as a 3rd tallest peak. Everyone’s there to climb the biggest one….” he assessed.

Honnold and Mena’s Antarctic trip concluded shortly after the Shinn summit. Mena added via Instagram that the pair also pulled off what’s “likely” a second ascent of Mount Dolence (6,397 feet) during a 12-mile outing with climbing around 5.5 difficulty.

Where on earth Honnold will show up next remains a mystery. The last time we saw him anywhere other than Antarctica, he was busy scrambling up crumbly, nondescript rock near his home in Las Vegas — on an impromptu first ascent bid.

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