A good part of your life have been spent in the mountains. You can easily defeat a 1900m mountain pass with 40kgs on your back given 3-4 hours. At the same time you have been freediving passionately for several years and you are ranked as one of the top 20 freediving athletes in the world. You can tolerate very low O2 levels before BO, and your legs works well even in a highly lactic state.
Given this, can you easily skip up to Mount Everest and handle the thin air without any O2 supplements? I just watched a documentary on the extreme physical requirements for being able to reach the top of the world without O2 flasks (and even with) and began thinking that a world class free diver must have some form of advantage over others because of the parallels in high altitude climbing and freediving. Both have elements in which the brain needs to handle low levels of O2.
Of course there are a lot of other crucial considerations, but will the freediver have any edge over a pro mountaineer? Just splashing some thoughts here. It has probably been discussed before, but my browser wouldn't let me search today...
Given this, can you easily skip up to Mount Everest and handle the thin air without any O2 supplements? I just watched a documentary on the extreme physical requirements for being able to reach the top of the world without O2 flasks (and even with) and began thinking that a world class free diver must have some form of advantage over others because of the parallels in high altitude climbing and freediving. Both have elements in which the brain needs to handle low levels of O2.
Of course there are a lot of other crucial considerations, but will the freediver have any edge over a pro mountaineer? Just splashing some thoughts here. It has probably been discussed before, but my browser wouldn't let me search today...