World | Mount Everest Oldest Climber Rescued From Everest Yuichiro Miura safely back in Nepal via helicopter after bout with bad weather By Polly Davis Doig Posted May 26, 2013 6:16 AM CDT Copied Yuichiro Miura, right, who has had four heart operations in recent years, stands atop the summit of Mount Everest, Thursday, May 23, 2013. (AP Photo/MIURA DOLPHINS CO., LTD.) The oldest climber to ever scale Mount Everest has made it off the mountain with his record—and his hide—intact. Bad weather, including poor visibility, had scotched Yuichiro Miura's attempt yesterday to leave the mountain, but a brief improvement today allowed a helicopter to swoop in and pick up the 80-year-old former extreme skier, reports the AP. Upon arriving at Katmandu's airport, Miura told reporters he was happy with his record, brief though it may be: 81-year-old rival Min Bahadur Sherchan is still on the mountain, hoping to reclaim the title. Read These Next We now know what might send bedbugs scurrying. Their dad left them a nudist colony. Buyers are scarce. He fooled AI into thinking he's a hot dog eating champ. LA medical examiner releases Robert Carradine's cause of death. Report an error