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Experienced climber raising funds for cancer-stricken kids dies scaling mountain

Experienced climber raising funds for cancer-stricken kids dies scaling mountain

Metro05-05-2025
An experienced mountaineer has died on a Himalayan mountain while trying to raise funds for a children's cancer charity.
Father-of-two Alexander Pancoe, 39, from the US state of Illinois, fell unresponsive shortly before going to bed on Sunday at Camp II on Nepal's Mount Makalu, the fifth-tallest mountain in the world.
Mr Pancoe, who had survived a brain tumour and was still battling leukemia, had returned that day from a practice climb.
Starting at Camp II, which is around 6,700 metres above sea level, it involves reaching Camp III (roughtly 7,350 metres above sea level) to acclimatise to the the conditions before climbing back down.
He set out to reach the peak having thus far raised $27,838 (a dollar for each foot of the peak's altitude) for Lurie Children's Hospital in Chicago.
His brain tumour was removed by surgeons at the hospital 20 years ago, and it now has a renowned pediatric blood cancer programme.
The 39-year-old found out he had developed blood cancer after becoming 'extremely hypoxic and struggled with the altitude' while climbing another mountain in the Himalayas in 2023.
'Several months later I was diagnosed with Chronic Myeloid Leukemia and learned my body had been unable to make the red bloods cells necessary to acclimate at altitude,' he said in a statement before the Makalu climb.
'CML is a lifelong cancer and after almost two years of receiving treatment to manage it – I am going to be attempting to climb Makalu.
'It's going to be a huge challenge for me – climbing at altitude is plenty hard without a chronic ailment – but I look forward to rising to the challenge.
Pancoe was with his team of four when he began feeling unwell while preparing to rest for the night. More Trending
The team tried to revive him for more than an hour but their efforts were in vain.
Expedition organiser Iswari Paudel told The Independent that he and his team 'suspect that it was a cardiac arrest' that killed Mr Pancoe.
In 2019 he completed the Explorer's Grand Slam, which involves summiting the tallest mountain on each of the world's seven traditional continents, and reaching both the North and South poles.
He is one of only 75 people in the world ever to have achieved the feat, raising $500,000 in the process.
Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.
For more stories like this, check our news page.
MORE: TV presenter James Whale, 73, reveals there's 'no cancer treatment he can have anymore'
MORE: I was 11 when my parents were told to plan my funeral
MORE: Everything we know about King Charles' cancer treatment
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Go on, try — it might send you to sleep. 1 Wear socks at night to keep your feet warm.2 Put your socks in the fridge before bed to keep your feet cool.3 Wear anti-blue light goggles before bed to optimise melatonin production.4 Wear soft gloves before bed to reduce skin stimulation.5 Wear a thick jumper for an hour before lights out on hot nights then remove it to allow your body to cool naturally.6 Tape your mouth shut.7 Tape your nose shut.8 Tie your feet together.9 Eat no eggs after 3pm.10 Masturbate.11 Keep terrapins in the bedroom.12 Stare at the sky for ten minutes when you wake in the morning to reset your circadian rhythm.13 Stare at the moon for five minutes if you wake in the night, to reset your lunar cycle.14 Go to bed as late as possible so as not to associate your bed with sleeplessness.15 Give your bed a friendly name such as 'Archie' or 'Ned' to avoid hostile feelings towards it.16 Do not discuss finances in bed (unless you're shagging your accountant).17 Avoid reading poetry, as rhythm and rhyme can create a 'circular preoccupation' on the resting brain.18 Eat your last meal at least four hours before going to bed.19 Take a laxative two hours before bed as a big poo will send you right off.20 Drink no alcohol in the evening.21 Get battered in the evening.22 If you wake up in the night, turn the light on, read for a bit, even get up and go for a walk; it's what we did in the olden days, and most people sleep in two separate cycles anyway.23 Set an alarm to wake you up at three in the morning, to ensure you get two full cycles and not one-and-a-half.24 Write down preoccupying thoughts before bed.25 Write down the names of all the people you hate, including neighbours, colleagues and close family.26 Buy a Slypwel Kooling Nek Pillo for £1,000.27 Buy a Tempur Pro Air SmartCool mattress for £2,000.28 Buy a really thin sheet for £3,000.29 Soak your earplugs in water and freeze them, to cool your inner ear.30 Avoid citrus fruits in the evening as the acid breaks down crucial sleep enzymes.31 In a heatwave, pile the whole family into the air-conditioned bedroom in the loft.32 Keep a sleep diary.33 Sell your sleep diary to The Daily Telegraph for £10,000 and buy a lifetime supply of zopiclone. 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