You have some good questions, I do wonder what Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay ate to maintain enough energy to keep climbing in such an extreme environment.. Do you think any drink they might've taken on their journey froze?
Some of these questions (you've asked) could be answered easily with some research of your own. It's always good to think of questions that only the person you are interviewing could answer/would know, that is something you could do in future.
A few questions I would probably ask are; ‘Did you hallucinate at all breathing in the thin air?’ and 'Did you see anyone who had frozen to death on the climb? How did it make you feel?’. I bet the mental struggle was almost as tough as the physical climb, I can’t imagine trying to climb in that environment.
Fakalofa lahi atu Miraj,
ReplyDeleteGreat to see you back online and blogging again.
You have some good questions, I do wonder what Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay ate to maintain enough energy to keep climbing in such an extreme environment.. Do you think any drink they might've taken on their journey froze?
Some of these questions (you've asked) could be answered easily with some research of your own. It's always good to think of questions that only the person you are interviewing could answer/would know, that is something you could do in future.
A few questions I would probably ask are; ‘Did you hallucinate at all breathing in the thin air?’ and 'Did you see anyone who had frozen to death on the climb? How did it make you feel?’. I bet the mental struggle was almost as tough as the physical climb, I can’t imagine trying to climb in that environment.
Keep up the good work.
Toe feiloa'i fo'i,
Cia.