MountRoutes
Jogin I Peak Expedition Safety

Summit Safety & Risk

Jogin I Peak Expedition — Safety Guide

AMS thresholds, glacier hazards, summit day go/no-go decision framework, and emergency contacts.

Technical Specifications

Technical Blueprint v1.0

Jogin I Peak Expedition

Max GradePD+
Gradient50%

Physiology Profile

HAPE RiskHigh
Turnaround SPO260%
"Descend immediately to Base Camp or lower."

Summit Protocol

Push Start01:00 AM
Hard Turnaround12:00 PM
Turnaround ReasonHigh winds and exhaustion risk on descent.

Complexity Index

Technicality vs Stok Kangri+75%
Exposure vs Nanda DeviModerate

*Indices calculated based on vertical gain/day and rock/ice angle averages.

Mission Briefing // Tactical Manifest

Terrain Analysis

glacier
moraine
scree
forest
meadow
snow
High-Risk Objective Hazards
crevassesams_riskavalancheswhiteoutexposure

Atmospheric Constraints

Avg Summit Wind
30 km/h
Jet Stream Risk
Severe from November through winter

Summit Day Sequence

Primary Hazards

1

Crevasse falls on glacier approach

2

Acute Mountain Sickness (AMS) / HACE / HAPE

3

Exposed ridge slips

4

Extreme sub-zero temperatures and high winds

AMS Protocol

A mandatory acclimatization day is scheduled at Kedar Tal Base Camp (15580ft). Climatization rotations (load ferry to Jogin Camp 1) are strictly enforced.

Altitude Physiology — SpO₂ by Camp

Jogin Camp 1

85

SpO₂

Base Camp

80

SpO₂

Summit

60

SpO₂

Turn-Around Threshold

SpO₂ < 60%

Descend immediately if reading drops below this at rest

Diamox (Acetazolamide)

Recommended

Use standard 250mg dosage under medical advice.

⚠️ Golden Rule: Descend immediately to Base Camp or lower.

Expedition Medical Kit

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·
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Summit Day Protocol

GO Conditions

  • Wind speed below 40km/h
  • Good visibility
  • Stable snow pack

NO-GO Conditions

  • Whiteout
  • Heavy snow fall
  • Winds above 50km/h

Hard Turn-Around: 12:00 PM

High winds and exhaustion risk on descent.

Glacier Hazards — Kedar Glacier

Crevasse Zone

Upper glacier plateau

Crevasse Zone

Approach below headwall

Avalanche Path

Summit couloir

Avalanche Path

East Face slopes

Bergschrund

Bergschrund crossing located at the base of the Jogin I Expedition summit headwall.

Historical Safety Record

Transparency Log

We publish verified incident records to help trekkers and operators make informed decisions. Names and personal identifiers are anonymized.

Documented

6

verified incidents

Fatalities

0

none recorded

Near Misses

6

logged

We have analysed 6 documented incidents for this expedition to extract critical safety lessons.

Due to the nature of mountaineering — where most non-fatal incidents go unreported — experts estimate 10+ total historical incidents on this route. Estimated historical fatalities: 2. We present the documented record as-is rather than speculate on undocumented cases.

Year

2021

Reported High Camp

Exhaustion / Overexertion

Outcome

Assisted descent by team

Contributing Cause

Overambitious schedule and insufficient turnaround discipline

Key Safety Lesson

Always melting snow takes time. Always carry a stove system capable of rapid boiling.

Year

2020

Reported Summit Slopes

Fall — Snow/Ice

Outcome

Self-recovered

Contributing Cause

Crampon slip on steep ice, inadequate self-arrest technique

Key Safety Lesson

Always constant tension on the rope and immediate self-arrest skills save lives on steep slopes.

Year

2019

Reported Base Camp / Approach Route

Avalanche

Outcome

Self-recovered

Contributing Cause

Poor campsite selection in avalanche runout zone

Key Safety Lesson

Always the steep couloirs on Jogin I hold wind-loaded snow. Avalanche assessment is critical before the summit push.

Year

2018

Reported Summit Slopes

Fall — Snow/Ice

Outcome

Self-recovered

Contributing Cause

Crampon slip on steep ice, inadequate self-arrest technique

Key Safety Lesson

Stay well back from the ridge edge. Cornices can break much further back than expected.

Year

2017

Serious High Camp

HACE — High Altitude Cerebral Edema

Outcome

Assisted descent by team

Contributing Cause

Continued ascent despite severe AMS symptoms

Key Safety Lesson

Always acclimatization cannot be rushed. Do not ignore severe headaches.

Year

2015

Reported Base Camp / Approach Route

Avalanche

Outcome

Self-recovered

Contributing Cause

Poor campsite selection in avalanche runout zone

Key Safety Lesson

Always avalanche danger isn't just on the route. Site selection for BC is critical.

Source: Public Records / News Reports

Why estimates differ from records: IMF and news sources only capture permitted expeditions and helicopter rescues. Non-fatal near-misses (AMS, frostbite, falls with self-rescue) are almost never filed. Peaks with multi-decade climbing histories compound these gaps significantly.

Emergency Contacts

Emergency line

Emergency line

Emergency line

Tactical Comms
VHF RESCUE146.55 MHz
AIR EVAC IDGangotri Helipad
HELIPAD DISTANCE50 km

Evacuation Route

Retreat to Kedar Tal Base Camp, manual carry to road head at Gangotri, drive to nearest district hospital or AIIMS Rishikesh.

Solo Advisory

Strictly prohibited. All high-altitude peaks require IMF permits and certified mountain guide supervision.

Insurance Requirements

Altitude Cover

21,000 ft

Heli Rescue

Required

Mandatory Operator Equipment

Medical oxygen cylinders (minimum 2)
First aid kit with HAPE/HACE medications (Dexamethasone/Nifedipine)
Satellite communicator (Garmin inReach)
VHF walkie-talkies
High-altitude stretchers and rescue ropes

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Knowledge Integrity

Help us keep this data ground-truth accurate.

This encyclopedia entry for Jogin I Peak Expedition is curated from a mix of public survey records, first-hand climber accounts, and official permit logs. However, mountains are dynamic. If you have been on this route recently and noticed a change in terrain, water availability, or local regulations, we want to hear from you.

Community Vetted

Last Verified: May 2026

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