Stray Dog Becomes First Dog To Climb Himalayan Summit
Stray Dog Becomes First Dog To Climb Himalayan Summit
A stray dog joined a mountaineering expedition and followed the participants to the top of a 23,389ft Himalayan peak.
The dog, named Mera, became the first dog to reach the summit of Baruntse in Nepal’s Himalayas, located just south of Mount Everest.

Credit: Don Wargowsky / Facebook
Other than a brief human-aided zip line down a short section of fixed line, Mera made the ascent completely unsupported.
“I am not aware of a dog actually summiting an expedition peak in Nepal,” said Billi Bierlingof the Himalayan Database. “I just hope that she won’t get into trouble for having climbed Baruntse without a permit.”

Credit: Don Wargowsky / Facebook
Mera is believed to be a cross between a Tibetan mastiff and a Himalayan sheepdog.
And she possesses an extraordinary level of confidence.

Credit: Don Wargowsky / Facebook
Mera took a special liking to climber Don Wargowsky of Seattle.
Ten days into the expedition, she passed dozens of climbers on the way up Mera Peak, all of whom could’ve been persuaded to give her food or attention, then crossed a glacier and beelined it for Wargowsky.
At that point the two were inseparable.
Mera became Wargowsky’s tent partner for the next three weeks.

Credit: Don Wargowsky / Facebook

Credit: Don Wargowsky / Facebook

Credit: Don Wargowsky / Facebook
On the day of the final ascent, Wargowsky said Mera seemed unconcerned by the altitude, the exposed ridgeline and huge drop-offs.
She bounded ahead of the group and then kept running back as if annoyed by their slow pace.
“I have no clue if she’d been up there before, but she seemed very confident in what she was doing,” Wargowsky told Outside.

Credit: Don Wargowsky / Facebook
“I’d never been on top of something like that with a dog. She was leaning up against me and wanting to be petted. It was pretty surreal.”

Credit: Don Wargowsky / Facebook
Kaji Sherpa, the expedition’s base-camp manager, ended up adopting Mera after the expedition.
“She’s special. She’s coming with me,” Sherpa told Wargowsky.

Credit: Don Wargowsky / Facebook
Sherpa renamed her Baru, after Baruntse, and says she put back all the weight lost from the climb and “is happy and well-fed.”
