Kenton Cool

Birthday July 30, 1973

Birth Sign Leo

Birthplace Slough, Buckinghamshire, England

Age 50 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

#45405 Most Popular

1973

Kenton Edward Cool (born 30 July 1973) is an English climber and mountain guide.

Cool was born in Slough, Buckinghamshire (now Berkshire) in 1973.

His family surname was originally Kuhle and was changed during the Second World War by his half-German grandfather.

His father was a photographer and his mother a florist, and the family home was near to Uxbridge, in Middlesex.

He was schooled at John Hampden Grammar School in High Wycombe, and later obtained a place at the University of Leeds.

1994

Cool graduated from the University of Leeds in 1994 after studying BSc Geological Sciences.

Cool was first introduced to mountaineering at Scouts.

An obsession with rock climbing developed at Leeds University and, on graduating, he moved to Sheffield to pursue this further.

1996

In 1996, he suffered a fall from a rock face near Llanberis Pass in north Wales with calcaneal fractures of both heel bones; he was told by a specialist that "the chances are you will walk with a stick for the rest of your life."

A year of surgery and therapy saw him determined to regain his climbing form, and he joined the British Association of Mountain Guides scheme.

In his twenties he did not want to be a guide so worked at "industrial roped access" on tall buildings (four months on the Millennium Dome).

He then guided for Jagged Globe, and then co-founded 'Adventure Base' which is now an established worldwide adventure company.

2003

In 2003, Cool was nominated alongside climbing partners for the Piolet d'Or award for a route on Annapurna III.

2004

In 2004 when he first met Ranulph Fiennes he had not completed his guiding qualifications for the Alps, although he had been guiding in Nepal and Everest, the UK and Alaska for years.

2006

In October 2006 he was the first British person to complete a ski descent of an 8,000-metre peak, on Cho Oyu in Nepal, the 6th highest mountain in the world.

2007

Cool is considered one of the UK's top mountain and ski expedition leaders, having made several ascents of hard routes with clients, including the first British guided ascent of the famous North Face of the Eiger in 2007 with polar explorer Sir Ranulph Fiennes, then in his sixties, who was initially afraid of heights.

He has personally reached the summit of Everest seventeen times; in May 2007 he reached the summit twice in one week.

2008

He is one of Britain's leading alpine and high altitude climbers and has reached the summit of Mount Everest 17 times, including leading Sir Ranulph Fiennes' 2008 and 2009 Expeditions.

Cool married in 2008 and now lives in the village of Bibury in Gloucestershire in the UK.

A leading Alpine climber, he operates in the Alps and Greater Ranges of the Himalayas as a fully qualified IFMGA (UIAGM) Guide and Expedition Leader.

Regarding the danger of mountaineering and the many friends he has lost in the sport, he has said: "It's completely unstylish to get stuffed in the mountains... I want to die with my feet up in front of the fire drinking a glass of red wine aged about 95."

In May 2008, Cool and Fiennes attempted to summit Mount Everest but Fiennes turned back 300m from the top.

2009

In 2009, Cool returned to Everest and successfully led Fiennes to the top, making Cool the most successful British Expedition Leader on the mountain.

2010

In the autumn of 2010 Cool made the third-ever ski descent of Manaslu in Nepal, the world's 8th highest mountain.

In doing so become one of only a few people worldwide to ski multiple 8000 metre peaks.

2012

In 2012 he made good on an 88-year-old Olympic pledge by taking one of the 1924 Olympic Gold Medals awarded to the 1922 British Everest Expedition (awarded for "Outstanding feats of human endeavour") to the summit of Everest.

This prompted Lord Coe to personally thank Cool and his team for helping "kick start the 2012 Olympic Games".

2013

He has completed over 45 notable expeditions in the Greater Ranges and, in 2013, became the first person to climb Nuptse, Everest and Lhotse in a single push without returning to base camp.

In May 2013 Cool along with climbing partner Dorje Gylgen attained the Everest Triple Crown.

In the space of just seven days and without returning to Base Camp, he climbed the three mountains that make up the Everest Horseshoe – Nuptse (7,864 metres), Everest (8,850 metres) and Lhotse (8,516 metres).

This was a feat many thought to be impossible, due to the amount of time spent at high altitude and the effect this has on the human body.

As an Expedition Leader, Cool has completed over 40 successful expeditions in the Greater Ranges.

On Everest he holds the highest success rate of any mountain guide.

2015

In January 2015, Cool reached the summit of Everest for an 11th time.

At the top, he held a flag for the Principality of Sealand at the top to symbolize his support for the micronation.

2016

On 12 May 2016 Kenton, at 42, was joined by two Sherpas and another Briton, Robert Lucas, on the summit of the world's highest peak.

The Britons were also the first foreign climbers to reach the 8,850 metre (29,035 ft) peak in two years, after a group of Sherpa guides fixing ropes got to the top on Wednesday 11 May.

On 15 May 2022 Cool successfully completed his record-breaking 16th summit of Mount Everest, the most number of climbs by any non-Sherpa.

Cool was wearing a hand painted protective lid by British contemporary artist Teddy McDonald.

2018

Cool was made an honorary Doctor of Laws by the University of Leeds in July 2018.