Tag: brennan

  • Loveland mountaineer Matt Brennan to climb tallest mountain in Antarctica

    Loveland mountaineer Matt Brennan to climb tallest mountain in Antarctica

     I’m not messing around. I’m going to get this done.

    by Sam Smith

    Loveland, Ohio – Matt Brennan is a man who sees a challenge and is only met with one option: surmount. His current hurdle? Climb to the tallest points on all seven continents.

    He’s conquered South America’s Mt. Aconcagua, North America’s Mt. McKinley, Africa’s Mt. Kilimanjaro, Europe’s Mt. Elbrus. He’s left with only two more.

    Up next is Antarctica.

    Loveland Resident Matt Brennan is the owner of Loveland Excavating and Paving and founded the Cincinnati Center for Autism. He has had the climbing bug since he was a child, and has only continued to push himself further with each peak.

    “I’m just a typical guy. There’s nothing special about me. If you’ve got a goal, reach out there and work hard and achieve it. It can be achieved,” Matt Brennan claimed in a phone interview with Loveland Magazine.

    Loveland resident Matt Brennan to climb Mt. Everest in area first

    He has climbed four of the famed Seven Summits– the seven highest mountains on each continent. Less than 500 people have completed the challenge, and less than 150 Americans have summited all seven.

    Soon, Brennan will climb Mt. Vinson in Antartica, becoming one of the few to make the trek.

    Matt Brennan on Mt. Everest

    Vinson Massif is one of the most remote places in the world, located 750 miles from the South Pole. At 16,067 feet and located in some of the Earth’s most intense climate conditions, the dangerous ascent has only been attempted by 1,400 climbers since the mountain’s first summit in 1966. From November to January, the sun shines in 24 hours a day and the average temperature is -20° Fahrenheit.

    Brennan’s climb will take a minimum of 14 days depending on the weather. He will fly from Puntas Arenas, Chile to Union Glacier, Antarctica and plans to reach the summit of the mountain from November 22 to December 14.

    Brennan will be lead by Dave Hahn, one of the most accomplished climbers in the world. He has summited Mt. Vinson more than any other mountaineer– 35 times. Hahn has climbed the mountain in a PBS NOVA documentary and is one of the few frequent and trusted Mt. Vinson guides.

    Dave Hahn is also the most prolific western Everest climber, summiting 15 times. He is known for the discovery of the partially mummified body of early Everest explorer George Mallory. According to Brennan, Hahn is one of the most experienced climbers in the world. Brennan previously climbed Denali with Dave Hahn in 2017.

    Matt Brennan (left) and Dave Hahn (right) pose on Denali

    Through a climbing company called RMI, Hahn reached out to Matt Brennan and asked if he would like to accompany him on a Mt. Vinson climb. His climb will once again be sponsored by Horter Investments, a local investment firm.

    “It’d be like Tom Brady calling you up and asking you to play on his touch football team,” Brennan claimed.

    Matt Brennan and Dave Hahn descend Denali

    Mt. Vinson presents unique challenges. Logistically, Brennan will fly to Chile and land at a polar exploration outpost. From there, he will take an AN-132 transit plane that will land on ice. Vinson is blanketed in glaciers and, although the South Pole is considered a desert, inclement weather is still likely. There is about a 30 day period where the mountain is fit to climb within the entire year. Physically, Matt will carry fifty to sixty pounds of gear and necessities on his back and will haul a sled around forty to fifty pounds.

    The extreme conditions present their own difficulties– not just physically.

    “Mentally, you have to be able to block out being uncomfortable. But from a gear standpoint, the proper equipment is critical. If you don’t have the proper equipment, your chances of making it are not very good,” Brennan said in a phone interview with Loveland Magazine.

    Brennan expected to have claimed five of the seven summits by now but will have to return to Asia for another attempt.

    The Antarctica trip, along with a milestone in Matt Brennan’s pursuit of the Seven Summits, also serves as preparation for his second attempt at Mt. Everest.

    After intense training, Matt Brennan tried to climb Mt. Everest in April of 2018. However, due to an injury, he did not summit. His injuries have mostly healed, and Brennan cannot be kept from climbing. He plans to utilize his upcoming Mt. Vinson ascent to train further for his upcoming second Everest attempt in spring of 2019.

    Lovelander Matt Brennan begins Everest ascent

    “I think Dave [Hahn] will really dial me in for Everest. I climbed Denali with Dave and he was relentless on improving my mountaineering skills,” Brennan said.

    It’s been only a few months since Brennan returned to Loveland from his attempt to surmount Everest, and he already has caught the climbing bug again. Rather than take a year off between Everest attempts, he has opted in the meantime to persevere and take on the South Pole.

    “I just don’t believe in quitting. You can’t quit. Everest is reachable, I just couldn’t reach it on one leg. For me it’s always been about goals and reaching those goals[…] If you don’t fail, you haven’t set your goals high enough,” Brennan said.

    Nerf football defeats Loveland Everest climber Matt Brennan

    Matt Brennan must summit Vinson and Everest, and then complete a day hike of Mount Kosciuszko in Australia in order to put his name among the ranks of the few skilled climbers who have conquered the Seven Summits. He hopes to finish the challenge by August of 2019.

    The Seven Summits (plus Mauna Kea and Mt. Kosciuszko). CC via the Wikimedia Foundation.

    “It’s become… not an obsession… but I’m going to do these. I’m very goal-oriented. I’m not messing around. I’m going to get this done,” Brennan concluded.

    Follow Matt Brennan on his Facebook Page for updates on his expeditions.


    Jarvis Global Investments, LLC

    Jarvis Global is an investment advisory firm in Symmes Township, Ohio which offers private portfolio management and retirement services to high net worth individuals.



     

  • Nerf football defeats Loveland Everest climber Matt Brennan

    Nerf football defeats Loveland Everest climber Matt Brennan

    by Sam Smith

    Loveland, OH- For Loveland resident, business owner, and mountaineer Matt Brennan, failure is just another step to greater success. On March 25th, Brennan set out with one goal: to summit the world’s tallest mountain. Through a nearly lifetime of training and months of rigorous preparation, Brennan attempted what no other Cincinnati-area resident had. Although he didn’t reach the top (due to an injury) he plans to utilize his defeat in order to push himself to a new height next year, when he will attempt again.

    Loveland Resident Matt Brennan stands with a Himalayan backdrop. Photo used via facebook.com/MattBrennanEverest with permission.

     

    Loveland resident Matt Brennan to climb Mt. Everest in area first

    Brennan ascended Mt. Everest with a group of climbers and guides. He attended a Puja ceremony, in which Sherpas asked the Mother Goddess of the Earth for permission to climb the mountain. Brennan made friends and camped at the bottom of a natural formation so large it can change one’s entire perspective on their place in the world.

    “The scenery is hard to really capture in a picture. When you’re standing there, you have these huge mountains all surrounding you and you’re just so small and so insignificant. It’s just really an amazing feeling[…] It’s really hard to describe,” Brennan told Loveland Magazine over a phone interview.

    Lovelander Matt Brennan begins Everest ascent

    Matt Brennan climbed 21,000 feet (8,000 feet from summiting) before turning around due to a torn groin muscle. Although he did not finish the ascent, he made it over seventy percent of the way and achieved something very few ever have.

    “I was in the greatest climbing arena in the world. I climbed up that mountain, I just didn’t make it to the top”

    “I was in the greatest climbing arena in the world. I climbed up that mountain, I just didn’t make it to the top,” Brennan explained.

    Brennan brought a football to share with the Sherpa guides, a specially-evolved ethnic group known for the mountaineering expertise. An errant catch caused black-and-blue bruising and a torn muscle that Matt Brennan attempted to treat and ignore through the rest of his climb. Eventually, he agitated the muscle again causing swelling, pain, and discoloration. After deliberation, Brennan decided to take a helicopter back to basecamp for his own personal safety.

    “Once I got up to the Western Cwm, I realized I had to go back down. And I had never gone back down, everything had been uphill. So getting up there and looking at the Lhotse Face [a nearly vertical cliff], it was like ‘I think I can get up that thing, but I’m not sure I’m getting down’,” Brennan told Loveland Magazine in an interview.

    A photo Matt Brennan posted to his Facebook page on April 20th. Photo used via facebook.com/MattBrennanEverest with permission.

    A helicopter picked Brennan up in order to bring him to a hospital to asses his injury. Intense weather conditions forced the pilot to fly thirty feet above the ground sideways in order to gain a sense of direction.

    Upon doctor examination, Brennan was told to rest for fourteen days. This marked a point of no return– proof that Brennan had failed his mission to summit Mount Everest. The climb was over, and Matt Brennan returned home.

    “Today I’m honoring Lindsay Warren and the Ohio Dominican Women’s basketball team. I had the honor of watching these women play from behind the bench against Kentucky Wesleyan and despite injuries, a partisan crowd and trailing the whole game these girls never quit and won! Congrats on a great season. I told you I would wear the shirt!” Brennan posted to his Facebook page, @MattBrennanEverest. Photo used via facebook.com/MattBrennanEverest with permission.

    However, Brennan feels that in most ways the climb was a success. He reflected positively on the trek, claiming that it was “an incredible experience” and that he learned a lot about the mountain. He continued to explain in an interview that his failure to summit has only encouraged him to push harder for his upcoming return.

    “If you hit all your goals, you’re not reaching far enough.”

    “I think failure is inevitable if you’re reaching for big goals. If you hit all your goals, you’re not reaching far enough. So, I look at failure as part of the process. You have to fail in order to keep pushing yourself to really to achieve those big goals,” Matt Brennan claimed.

    Brennan has already booked another Everest climb and will return March 24th. Brennan refuses to give up and, rather, chooses to use his failed summit as further motivation.

    “That mountain will be there for me next year, and I’ll be ready to go,” Matt Brennan concluded.


    Jarvis Global Investments, LLC

    Jarvis Global is an investment advisory firm in Symmes Township, Ohio which offers private portfolio management and retirement services to high net worth individuals.