Despite all these, the seven-man squad, headed by Reggie Pablo accomplished the mission by reaching a peak no other Filipino has ever dared to scale before.
"Its part of the risk but we were not discouraged," said Pablo, who almost lost a finger due to frostbites.
Truly, the seven intrepid climbers Pablo, Ariel Ambayec, Erwin "Pastour" Emata, Leo Oracion, Levi Nayangahan, Karina Dayondon and team doctor Ted Esquerra overcame tremendous odds to conquer the 7,546-meter (24,758 feet) peak recently.
"Its not only a personal triumph for me, this is for the country," said the 32-year-old Oracion, the first Filipino atop the summit.
One member, Ambayec, suffered a mild stroke in the course of their climb. Pablo and Nayangahan, both frostbitten, had to carry Ambayec back to the camp that entailed a seven-hour trek, leaving Oracion, Emata and Dayondon to complete the ascent. They did the feat despite the lack of equipment, high-tech gadgets and amid biting cold weather that led to the death of two Germans.
"We were not able to buy snow shoes. Its a good thing some Japanese spared us some pairs," said Emata, whose right ring finger was also operated on due to frostbites.