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Cathy O'Dowd is the first woman in the world to
climb Mount Everest, the world’s highest mountain, from both its north
and south sides.
The years she spent on or around Everest were for her a degree 'in
living'. The insights she discovered about herself, and about
individuals and teams under intense stress in the face of overwhelming
challenge, are ones she has been sharing with her corporate audiences
ever since. She has been a professional speaker for eight years and has
presented her message to companies in 29 countries on five continents.
Cathy remains an active adventurer. In 2003 she made a bold but
ultimately unsuccessful attempt to climb a new route on the notorious
east face of Everest. In spring of 2004 she took a dog-sled expedition
through the remote wilderness of the Norwegian Arctic to the
northern-most point of Europe. In summer of 2005 she tackled the sheer
rock walls of Yosemite National Park, in the summer of 2006 she explored
the granite alpine peaks of Switzerland and California's Sierra Nevada.
Cathy O’Dowd, who grew up in Johannesburg, South Africa, has climbed
ever since leaving school. She was completing her Masters degree in
Media Studies at Rhodes University, and working as university lecturer,
when she saw an advert in a newspaper for a place on the 1st South
African Everest Expedition.
She was one of 200 women who applied for the Everest place, and was the
one finally selected. The team followed the route made famous by Edmund
Hillary. Despite being the apprentice on the team, on 25 May 1996 Cathy
O’Dowd reached the summit. It was, however, a tough introduction, as
British team-mate Bruce Herrod was killed on the descent.
In 1998 she took on the challenge of the treacherous north side of
Everest, where George Mallory had famously disappeared in 1924. Her
attempt ended just hours below the summit when she stopped to try and
save a dying American woman.
In 1999 she returned once more, and succeeded, becoming the first woman
in the world to climb Everest from both north and south sides.
Cathy O’Dowd has written two book about her Everest experiences,
Everest: Free To Decide, co-written with Ian Woodall, and Just
for the love of it, translated into German as Aus Liebe Zum Berg.
In 2000 she became only the fourth woman in the world to climb Lhotse,
the world's fourth highest mountain.
Cathy O’Dowd is currently living in Andorra, in the Pyrenees mountains,
while she pursues her speaking career, and explores the mountains of
Europe
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