British climber scales Mount Everest for the 19th time, breaking its own record in most non-sherpa climbs

Kathmandu: British Mountain Guuins broke Mount Everest, the highest peak on its highest mountain, on the 19th through a non-Sherpa guide.
Iswari Paudel of Nepal, Himalaya, said Kenton Cool, 51, from southwest England, scaled the top of the mountain at 8,849 meters (29,032 feet) on Sunday, and he did well on the top, he did well on the top.
Cool First First Clim climbed Mount Everest and has done so almost every year since then.
He was unable to climb Mount Everest in 2014 because the season was cancelled after 16 Sherpa guides died in an avalanche, and in 2015, the earthquake triggered an avalanche that killed 19 people. The 2020 climbing season has been cancelled due to the coronavirus pandemic.
British climber Kent Coul (L) held the 17th time on the summit of Mount Everest (8,849m), a non-Nepal summit. When Wave arrived at the airport in Kathmandu on May 19, 2023, Wave climbed his own highest summit on May 18, 2025, successfully climbing to the 19th time of Mount Everest, a self-summit. (Photo by Nisha Bhandari/AFP)
During the popular spring climbing season, hundreds of climbers and their guides are on the mountain, hoping to expand the world’s highest peak.
Many of them have succeeded, and expect to try before the end of the climbing season at the end of the month, when weather conditions worsen with the arrival of the rainy monsoon season, which makes climbing difficult.
Only Nepal Sherpa Province Guide has scaled the peaks more than the peaks.
The most climbed Everest is the 30 times by Kami Rita, the Nepali Sherpa guide, who is also currently on the mountain and is expected to climb in the next few days.