Hilaree Nelson
Mother, partner, teammate, captain
With a career encompassing dozens of first descents
through more than 40 expeditions to 16 different
countries, Hilaree Nelson is regarded as the most
prolific ski mountaineer of her generation. The
mother of two was the first female to link two 8000m
peaks, Everest and Lhotse, in one 24 hour push. In
the fall of 2018, she returned to 27,940-foot Lhotse
a second time to ski from the summit, linking turns
down one of the most prized un-skied lines in the
world.
Hilaree grew up in Seattle, skiing
on the weekends at Stevens Pass in Washington’s
Cascades. After college, Hilaree booked a one-way
ticket to Chamonix, France that would change the
course of her life. That first season, she learned
the ins and outs of ski mountaineering (and won a
world extreme skiing contest). One winter turned
into five. Hilaree discovered she had the engine for
climbing, and after her first TNF expedition to
India, she was hooked.
In 2014, she received a National Geographic Explorers grant to lead an audacious expedition to a little known peak in the far northern reaches of Myanmar, Hkakabo Razi. Ultimately unsuccessful, the story of human and physical drama that unfolded was documented in the award-winning 2015 film Down to Nothing and earned her a spot on the National Geographic Live Speaker series through which she shared her stories to audiences across the country. In 2017 Men’s Journal named her one of the most adventurous women of the last 25 years.
In 2017, together with partner Jim Morrison, Hilaree
summited 21,165 foot Papsura, a.k.a. The Peak of
Evil, just 12 days after arriving in India,
cementing the first American ascent of the mountain.
After an icy, 3,000-foot, 60-degree virgin ski
descent with almost no visibility, she realized a
dream almost two decades in the making. Her
perseverance with this objective and her ultimate
success earned her recognition as a National
Geographic Adventurer of the Year for 2018. Two
weeks later, Hilaree and Jim headed to Denali in
Alaska, where they climbed the Cassin Ridge and
skied the Messner couloir. It was a breakthrough
year.
In 2018, she was named captain of
The North Face Athlete Team, a title only one other
athlete has held: Conrad Anker.
Hilaree
Nelson held a spirit as big as the places she led us
to. She embodied possibility. Her adventures made us
feel at home in the vastness of the world.