While plenty of adaptive athletes have summited Denali, and are pretty certain they鈥檙e the first to ski it. (There is no definitive record keeper for adaptive-athlete mountaineering feats.)聽The two men, who are both amputees, summited and skied the 20,310-foot Alaskan peak on June 20. Their six-man team,听which included mountaineers and filmmakers ,听, , and Ben Farrar, was聽comprised of nearly all 鈥攐苍濒测 had made the climb before.
鈥淭hese First Disabled Descents aren鈥檛 about me or Pete or any one individual person,鈥 says Sojitra. 鈥淔DDs showcase and represent the power we as Disabled people have when provided access to opportunities and resources.鈥
Sojitra, a 29-year-old based in Bozeman, Montana, has been steadily ticking off impressive objectives, including the first disabled descent of earlier this year, all while advocating for a more inclusive and diverse outdoor community. McAfee, a 38-year-old radiology technician who is based in Medford, Oregon, and is a father of two, began climbing and skiing peaks about five years ago when he聽became, as he puts it, completely obsessed鈥攑articularly with the uphills.
鈥淰asu is an incredibly talented skier, and Pete is an animal on the uphill,鈥 says Roepke. 鈥淚 have footage of him pulling 180 pounds聽of gear up with a prosthetic leg on and a pirate flag flying off the back.鈥
The group arrived at 14,000 feet during a high-pressure window, but by the time they had acclimatized, storms had descended. After eight days in camp, they聽were uncertain whether they鈥檇 get a long enough break in the low-pressure system to make their summit push. So when a short, iffy window opened up, they went for it.
鈥淲e walked from 14,000 feet to 17,000 in a Ping-Pong ball,鈥 says Roepke, describing the thick fog. They woke the next day to high clouds聽but managed to summit around 10 p.m. via the West Buttress.

鈥淭here was always some doubt,鈥 says McAfee. 鈥淚 think I was the least experienced guy on the crew. But I wanted to test myself and see if I could grit this thing out. I trained like a madman all winter.鈥 Roepke and Retzlaff聽never had much doubt about McAfee, though: they first climbed with him during a , and he dragged them up Mount Shasta, in California, faster than either of them had ever summited the 14,162-foot peak.
Ski conditions on Denali this year were the worst they have聽been in a decade.聽A thin snowpack聽meant that many of the classic descents, including Rescue Gully and the Messner Couloir, were unskiable. The team opted to descend just below their climbing route, on the Autobahn face. 鈥淲e skied every possible skiable slope on the West Buttress route this season,鈥 says Roepke.
Incoming storms urged the group to move quickly off the mountain. A straight 24-hour push brought them from the summit down聽to the聽airstrip at the 7,300-foot Kahiltna base camp. With high winds forecast, they were concerned they鈥檇 miss their opportunity to catch a flight out.
鈥淭he last two miles I was redlining, pushing as hard as I鈥檝e pushed for a long time,鈥 says Roepke. 鈥淚t was the fastest I鈥檝e ever moved on a rope team.鈥
The group聽successfully made it back to the lower 48, where they鈥檙e resting and sifting through footage and photos to put together a short documentary about the聽trip. Keep an eye out for the film in 2022.