One-legged climber in training for record ascent

A climber wearing a black helmet, sunglasses, and a bright yellow backpack ascends a snowy mountain, gripping a rock, with snow-covered slopes and rocky cliffs in the background.Image source, TOBY RONEY
Image caption,

Luke Tarrant described the climb as "risky, but not reckless"

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An adventurer who lost a leg in an accident is preparing to climb one of the highest peaks ever attempted by people with disabilities.

Twenty-nine-year-old Luke Tarrant, from Bedford, was in a motorcycle crash in 2024 while travelling solo through Colombia on his way to Antarctica from the US.

On 15 August, alongside former professional rugby player Ed Jackson, 36, from Bath, he will attempt to scale a mountain more than 5,000m (16,500ft) high in the ranges of Kyrgyzstan, in Central Asia.

Mr Tarrant said: "It was not really my thing, climbing mountains before my accident, so now I'm trying to sort my head around doing it with one leg."

"I'd like to think it's risky but not reckless," he laughed. "It just depends whether we're up to it, I think it's possible"

The pair expect the climb to take 10 days to reach the summit but have set three weeks aside in Kyrgyzstan for the challenge.

They are hoping to raise money for the charity Millimetres 2 Mountains, external, an out-door focused mental health charity.

Three hikers with backpacks and poles trekking along a snow-covered mountain trail, with rugged peaks and a partly cloudy sky in the background.Image source, TOBY RONEY
Image caption,

It will take the climbers 10 days to reach the summit

Mr Tarrant explained training sessions in the gym are great for cardio preperations but make his prosthetic "awful to wear" for days afterwards.

He said: "It's kind of a balancing act between prosthetic wear and fitness, which has been pretty tough."

When they reach the top of the mountain they will be allowed to name it, as it has previously never successfully climbed.

If this happens the duo will instead allow a local children's charity in Kyrgyzstan to pick a name for the peak.

The adventurer said: "I'm not a huge fan of people from foreign countries turning up in other people's lands and just going and being like 'this is called this now'.

"We'll let them name their own mountain but hopefully we're the ones who climb it first."

Two individuals, one with a prosthetic leg, sitting on a wooden bench in a park, surrounded by trees.

Image source, TOBY RONEY
Image caption,

Ed Jackson (left) is joining Luke Tarrant on the climb

His mother had hoped his motorbike crash would be "the end of him doing stupid things" but it has instead motivated him to keep challenging himself.

He explained: "Initially after my injury, I thought I want to make sure this this doesn't hold me back and it doesn't mean that I can't complete things I would have done before.

"Now I've kind of gone full circle where I'm actually going to try and do things which I would never have done if I hadn't had my injury.

"It almost makes the whole thing worth it. It's like I need to try and make the most out of the cards I've been dealt to the point where I actually have a better life than I would have had before the injury."

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