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Canadian among 3 climbers missing on New Zealand’s highest peak | CBC News

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Canadian among 3 climbers missing on New Zealand’s highest peak | CBC News

A Canadian is among three climbers missing after they’d planned to climb New Zealand’s highest peak.

A news release from the New Zealand Police says two Americans, Kurt Blair, 56, and Carlos Romero, 50, and the unidentified Canadian flew into Plateau Hut on Saturday morning and planned to summit Aoraki, also known as Mount Cook.

But the release says they didn’t meet their planned flight out on Monday morning, and were reported overdue.

It says searchers located several climbing-related items that are believed to have belonged to the three men.

“Police have been working with the U.S. and Canadian embassies to inform and support the families of the three men,” Aoraki Area Commander Insp. Vicki Walker said in the release.

Police say the name and any further information about the Canadian won’t be provided until they’re sure family notifications have been carried out.

Search won’t resume until at least Thursday

The release says weather conditions will likely prevent further searching until Thursday, but that police will continue to monitor and assess the conditions.

Blair, from Colorado, and Romero of California — are certified alpine guides, according to the website of the American Mountain Guides Association.

The Silverton Avalanche School in Colorado posted about its colleague Blair, saying he was a “beloved fixture” in the local climbing community who has two sons.

“Anyone who shared time with Kurt in the mountains knows that his calm demeanour and positive presence ran counter to the rough edges and sharp tongues so often exemplified by the hard scrabble ranks of mountain guides,” the school said.

The school said it received notification from New Zealand authorities that it is feared the climbers suffered a fatal fall.

Aoraki is 3,724 metres high and is part of the Southern Alps, the scenic and icy mountain range that runs the length of New Zealand’s South Island. A settlement of the same name at its base is a destination for domestic and foreign tourists.

The peak is popular among experienced climbers. Its terrain is technically difficult due to crevasses, avalanche risk, changeable weather and glacier movement.

More than 240 deaths have been recorded on the mountain and in the surrounding national park since the start of the 20th century.

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