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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

500 times on top of Rainier

No one close to climbing guide’s 500-time record to Rainier’s summit

George Dunn climbs Mount Rainier for the 498th time as he leads a group of scouts and their fathers on July 8. The group is on a switchback climbing Panorama Point on the way to Camp Muir. Dunn has been a mountain guide since the 1970s.  (Associated Press)
Craig Hill Tacoma News Tribune

George Dunn, his crampons crunching through the snow atop Mount Rainier, was poised to make history this week and it might not even be the highlight of his day.

The 56-year-old guide planned to climb Rainier with friends and family and become the first person to summit the 14,411-foot peak 500 times.

The ironman feat astonishes even those who were guiding when he was in high school.

It means 4.5 million vertical feet and 9,000 miles of climbing in a string of two- or three-day endurance tests.

The numbers don’t include the estimated 100 times he’s had to turn around short of the summit because of poor weather or other hazards.

“It’s always a physical challenge,” Dunn said. “I’m tired every time.”

Of the thousands of people who’ve climbed Rainier, most do it only once. Eight have climbed the mountain 300 times and three have 400 summits.

“But it’s not about the numbers,” said Dunn, a director at Ashford’s International Mountain Guides. “The beautiful thing about this job is the people I’ve met and getting to share lifetime memories with them. That’s why I do this.”

So for Dunn, the best part about No. 500 will be that it will be summit No. 1 for Jeremy, his 16-year-old son.

“He never focuses on himself,” Nancy Dunn said of her husband. “He is very passionate about helping others have a great experience.”

But while Dunn’s pride will be directed at his son, those who know him and Rainier will use the landmark moment to celebrate his accomplished career.

“You can’t quantify how impressive 500 summits are because there are no words to describe that much effort,” said Robert Link, who has the eighth-most summits, 301. “He puts his head down and goes to work every day at the hardest job on the planet. I’m in awe.”

Dunn doesn’t remember for sure the year of his first climb. He figures it was in 1969, when he was a student at Renton High School.

Dunn was born in Wichita, Kan., before his family moved west. He didn’t have much interest in mountaineering until he heard about his school’s climbing club.

“Of all the fluky things,” Dunn said. “I swear the club only existed while I was going there. Then I think they realized, ‘This is crazy. We can’t do this.’ ”

Bad weather forced him to turn around on his first two attempts. He carried a kite to the summit when he finally reached the top on his third attempt, but he couldn’t get it to take flight because the weather was so calm.

The same couldn’t be said for the gangly kid’s stomach. As is the case with many on their first ascent, he spent most of the time on top lying in the crater, feeling nauseated.

But he had an epiphany shortly after he staggered down the mountain and thought about what he’d just done.

“I thought, ‘Wow, that was so cool’ and it was like boom,” Dunn said, snapping his fingers. “I knew I wanted to do that for the rest of my life.”

He likes to say the loves of his life are tied to Rainier. It’s been his home, playground and office.

He met Nancy at Paradise where she worked as a park ranger in the 1980s.

George Dunn was a 22-year-old student at the University of Washington in 1975 when he took a job guiding for Rainier Mountaineering Inc. He picked out two older guides, Phil Ershler and Eric Simonson, to be his role models.

Ershler and Simonson were quickly carving out reputations as some of the best guides on the mountain, with boundless energy and aspirations of leading international trips.

They climbed Rainier as often as they could, so Dunn did the same.

A good-natured rivalry soon sprang up among the three as they raced to see who could be the first to 100, 200 then 300 summits.

“It was the slowest race in history,” Ershler said, and Dunn lost them all.

But Simonson started slowing down after 200. He now has 282 summits. Ershler was the first to scale Rainier 300 times, but Dunn passed him soon after and never looked back.

Ershler still has the second most Rainier summits with 439. Both men will accompany Dunn on his 500th summit.

“The significance of No. 500 is that it symbolizes his dedication,” Simonson said.

And it was never about the stats for any of the men.

In 1986, they formed International Mountain Guides along with fellow guide Paul Baugher and started leading expeditions all over the world. Today they put more people on top of Mount Everest each spring than any other American guide service.

Along the way Dunn has stood on top of Everest and Kanchenjunga (the world’s third-highest peak), trekked across Antarctica and led numerous trips in the Alps.

“He’s done so much more than Rainier,” Baugher said. “That’s one of the other things that make 500 summits so impressive. He’s so durable. It’s an honor and privilege to have a guy like that as a partner.”

While Dunn still guides international trips, he scaled back that work to be on Rainier closer to his family.

“He loves adventure, but he’s a family man, a great guy,” Nancy Dunn said. “He never sits back and watches TV when he’s home. He always pitches right in.”