Double amputee tests new prosthetics for next climb
- Published
A double amputee who climbed Mount Everest is helping to design new prosthetics as he looks to complete the seven summits.
Hari Budha Magar MBE, a disability campaigner from Canterbury in Kent, will test new feet and prosthetic designs which he hopes will improve access for outdoor activities in the future.
Mr Magar, who became the first above-the-knee double amputee to climb Mount Everest in 2023, is now looking to climb the seven highest summits on the seven continents including Everest, Kilimanjaro and Mont Blanc.
He said: "I learn so much through doing that but also I am able to prove people with disabilities can do anything."
Mr Magar, who was awarded an MBE by Princess Anne in December, will travel to South America to continue his pursuit of the seven summits climbing feat.
The Pride of Britain award winner said that if he completes the challenge he would join a list of just 500 climbers who have achieved the feat and the only double above-the-knee amputee to do so.
He added his mission was to raise awareness of disabilities around the world through his climbing efforts.
Mr Magar, originally from Nepal, lost both of his legs in an IED explosion while serving as a Gurkha in Afghanistan in 2010.
The father-of-three summited Everest in 2023 after campaigning for people with disabilities to be allowed to climb the mountain.
Mr Magar is now aiming to climb the highest peak on each of the seven continents and will attempt climbing Mount Aconcagua in Argentina in February, which is expected to last three to four week.
He has already completed four of the seven summits and plans to climb Acongagua, Puncak Jaya in Oceania and Mt Vinson in Antartica.
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