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  • Peak Experience: Climber says `Masis' at top of achievements

    ArmeniaNow.com, Armenia

    Peak Experience: Climber says `Masis' at top of mountaineering achievements

    By Gayane Abrahamyan
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    Karo Hovasapyan has followed Noah. And when he reached the Biblical
    hero's landing site, the mountain climber fell to his knees.

    The climber.

    `When I reached the summit of Masis, I was dead on my feet so I fell
    to my knees with tears of delight burning my eyes.' says mountaineer
    and polar explorer Karo Hovasapyan, who fulfilled his dearest dream by
    hoisting the Armenian tricolor on the snow-white top of the Mount
    Ararat, now the property of the Turks, but the spiritual peak of every
    Armenian.

    Climbing Ararat was not Hovasapyan greatest mountaineering
    experience. He has reached the highest peaks of the six continents,
    including Mount Everest and the North and South Poles.

    Toping `Masis' (as it is known by Armenians), however, was his
    greatest joy.

    `I have felt excitement and pride each time I climbed the mountains,
    but standing on the top of the Mount Ararat symbolizes something very
    special that I think every Armenian should feel,' says the mountain
    lover.

    Hovasapyan and 10 others launched their Ararat expedition on September
    3, and reached the peak 5,165 meters later, on September 6.

    He says climbing Masis (the bigger Ararat) was not a complicated task
    in terms of mountaineering. However it was difficult to get
    permission.

    A citizen of the US and Russia, Hovasapyan had been denied permission
    to climb in Turkey, three times. His fourth application succeeded
    because Hovasapyan had joined Russian mountaineer Shataev's
    expedition. Shataev has been making expeditions on Mount Ararat in
    search of the Noah's Ark for the last seven years.

    Hovasapyan has been the only Armenian who has reach the North Pole and
    the South Pole and will soon become one of only 11 alpinists who have
    been able to conquer the highest points in seven parts of the world.

    `I have only the Mount Winson peak in Antarctica to reach. I think I
    will manage it this December,' he says.

    A carpenter by background, and a native of Tehran (then Russia, Canada
    and, finally the USA), Hovasapyan, age 47, has been enchanted by
    alpinism since childhood, when the heroes of the books about mountain
    climbers became his everyday friends.

    `I dreamt of passing the same route, of overcoming all those
    difficulties. It seemed to be a challenge. You take the dare, you
    overcome and ask nature to help you, to make you its part,' says
    Hovasapyan.

    Hovasapyan got acquainted to the whims of nature in the Geghama
    Mountains and on Mount Aragats (the highest peak in Armenia), which he
    climbed six times.

    But the idea of overcoming Everest would haunt him. `I had been
    dreaming of reaching Everest for 23 years but I managed to do it only
    last year.'

    Hovasapyan reached the roof of the world at first attempt losing 14
    kilograms of his weight in two months.

    He reached the summit of Everest on May 30th 2005 at 6:15 a.m. seeing
    the sunshine on the whole world's panorama in front of him.

    Hovasapyan's two dreams of reaching the tops of Ararat and Everest
    have coincided in time: he has reached both summits at 6:15 a.m. and
    it has become a symbolic time for him.

    `I am lucky. The weather on the summit was perfect that day and I
    managed to stay there for 30 minutes and enjoy the wonderful view of
    the dawn,' the mountaineer says.

    Staying on the top of Ararat for so long turned impossible because of
    the strong wind, when the climber was forced to go down in ten
    minutes.

    Hovasapyan says the weather on Masis is difficult to forecast. It
    changes quite frequently and unexpectedly.

    And still, no weather has ever hindered Hovasapyan to climb the
    mountain he wanted to and to hoist the flag of independent
    Armenia. Until last Friday (September 8) Hovasapyan himself hadn't
    been in Armenia since 1988, when he came to be a rescue worker after
    the Spitak earthquake.

    He does not live in Armenia but its flag is with him even in the most
    difficult moments.

    `In the future I will give the flag that has overcome all the
    difficulties with me as a gift to Armenia. That will be the first
    flag that has been hoisted on the highest peaks of seven parts of the
    world,' says Hovasapyan.
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