Great HealthWorks, Makers and Distributors of Omega XL, Congratulates Jordan Romero for Achieving History as the Youngest Person to Ever Reach the Top of Mt. Everest, the World`s Highest Mountain

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.–(Business Wire)–
The Great HealthWorks Team wishes to congratulate Jordan Romero for achieving
history only a mere four years after his initial conversation with his Dad. At
age nine, Jordan saw a mural in the hallway at school of Mt. McKinley that
caught his attention. He shared with his Dad that afternoon he wanted to climb
the Seven Summits. Jordan`s Dad, Paul Romero, is an experienced adventure racer
and mountaineer. He is a flight medic with professional skills in emergency
field medicine and is professionally trained in high altitude medicine and
rescue. He planned from that day forward to help his son reach his goal through
solid training and safety measures.

With this lofty goal in mind, Jordan began a rigorous training schedule all the
while keeping those peaks in sight. Romero knew the challenge of climbing would
be preparing from the bottom, looking up at the peak and making all the plans to
reach the top. His plans included a very specific training regimen.

Mt. Everest is the world`s highest mountain. The mountain height is 29,028 feet,
or five and a half miles above sea level. This is equivalent to the size of
almost 20 Empire State Buildings. Jordan Romero achieved climbing this mountain
at age 13. “I have really seen a difference in my performance and my workouts
because I take Omega XL. Every step of his journey required teamwork. Climbing
with his family has proven to be one of his greatest supports through his quest
to climb the Seven Summits. “At the Great HealthWorks family, we have nothing
but admiration for Jordan and we congratulate him for making history,” Ken
Meares, CEO and Founder of Great HealthWorks shared. “It`s been a journey for
all of us through his efforts.”

Great HealthWorks, Inc. is the maker and distributor of Omega XL. Omega XL is a
completely natural superfood made from the oil of the New Zealand green-lipped
mussel (perna canaliculus). Omega XL is a unique combination of omega-3
essential fatty acids. For more information visit www.OmegaXL.com. For more
information on Jordan Romero, please visit www.JordanRomero.com.

Great HealthWorks, Inc.
Jeff Roman, VP – Business Development, 954-707-5080

Copyright Business Wire 2010

Australian climber hopes to solve great Everest mystery

Sydney, May 18 (ANI): Aussie mountaineer Duncan Chessell will be scaling Mount Everest in the hope of finding the missing remains of Briton Andrew “Sandy” Irvine who alongwith countryman George Mallory had ascended the mountain in 1924 but had reportedly perished near the summit of the mountain, sparking off speculation about whether they had managed to conquer the peak or not.

Their mysterious death has for decades been a subject of intrigue for mountaineers. Chessell believes that the conditions are conducive for him to finally unravel the truth as he goes foraging for Irvine’s body and hopefully the camera/reel that they had taken along but which had never been recovered.

“I was at North Col last week and the wind was 150 kilometres (90 miles) per hour and it was stripping snow off the mountain which has been there for many years,” Chessell said in a message from base camp, according to AAP news agency.

If he manages to find conclusive evidence of the mountaineering duo having scaled the summit, they will posthumously supplant Sherpa Tenzing Norgay and Edmund Hillary who currently hold the distinction of being the first persons to conquer Mt Everest, Sydney Morning Herald reports.

“There is now bare rock exposed which has been deeply covered for decades in the most likely areas where Andrew Irvine”s body may be. It is my intention to search those areas en route to the summit and take this rare opportunity to find him and, perhaps, the missing cameras,” said Chessell

He will also be looking to become the first the first Australian to summit Everest three times. (ANI)

Novice climber becomes youngest Brit woman to conquer Mt Everest

London, May 18 (ANI): Bonita Norris, a 22-year-old woman, has become the youngest British female to reach the summit of Mount Everest.

The adventurer said it was a “crazy” dream to climb the world’s highest mountain.

“One morning, in 2008, I woke up with a crazy idea – the kind of idea you dismiss as a pipe dream,” Sky News quoted her as stating on her website.

She added: “The kind of idea that you feel embarrassed to have even considered yourself able to put into action.

“But it stuck – my idea was to climb Everest in its spring season of 2010, and raise a shed load of cash for charity along the way.”

Norris had teamed with British mountaineer Kenton Cool, 36, for the climb.

Also, Cool set a new British record by climbing Everest eight times.

A statement issued on behalf of Cool said he had now reached the summit of Mount Everest four times more than the next most successful Briton.

The climber, from Fairford, Gloucestershire, relayed a message from the summit saying: “I love Everest.

“To have summited once was mildy insane, to have summited for an eighth time is utter madness. Why eight times? Why not.” (ANI)

Nepali cyclist attempts to scale Mt Everest on a bike

Kathmandu, May 14 (ANI): Pushkar Shah, who has acquired fame by cycling through 150 countries, has begun his first attempt at scaling Mt Everest by bike.

Calling it the “Peace expedition 2010″, the Nepali cyclist had earlier told the media that he was going on this expedition to pray for world peace.

Accoding to Xinhua, he said his request for financial aid for the undertaking had been turned down by the Nepal Government, forcing him to sell off his belongings, including the cycle on which he rode around the world.

A five-member team led by Shah, which was stationed at the Base Camp situated at an altitude of 5,343 meters, left for the second camp situated at an altitude of 6,900 meters Thursday morning, according to Nepalnews.

The team aims to reach the top of Mt. Qomolangma, the Nepali name for Everest, on May 16. (ANI)

Now, Nepal will allow gays to marry on Mt. Everest

Kathmandu, Apr.21 (ANI): In 2007, Nepal had classified homosexuality as a crime, punishable by up to two years in prison, but now, the Himalayan nation is about to become the first in Asia to allow same-sex marriages. It is also promoting gay weddings on the world famous Mt. Everest in an attempt to become the continent’s top gay tourism destination.

“We’re completely changing this country. It’s a newborn republic — and we want to showcase this change,” The Times quoted Nepal’s Tourism Minister Sharat Singh Bhandari, as saying.

“We also want to re-establish tourism as a major industry.”

Bhandari says he is aiming to attract at least one million tourists to Nepal in 2011, more than double the number last year.

He kicked off the marketing campaign in October with a written message to the International Conference on Gay and Lesbian Tourism in Boston — an unprecedented gesture for an Asian minister.

“As the world knows, Nepal is the land of Mount Everest, world’s highest peak and the birth place of Lord Buddha, light of Asia,” the message said.

“I, therefore, would like to take this opportunity to invite and welcome all the sexual and gender minorities from around the world,” he said then.

Nepal is also due to host the first Asian Symposium on Gay and Lesbian Tourism in Kathmandu in June.

This sudden turnaround highlights the extraordinary change that has swept the country since a democratic uprising forced King Gyanendra to renounce absolute power in 2006 and the Maoists won power and abolished the world’s last Hindu monarchy two years later.

A same-sex marriage law is working its way through the Nepal Parliament after a Supreme Court ruling in 2008 that ordered the Government to safeguard the rights of “sexual minorities”. (ANI)

Nepal tourist board to host world””s highest gay marriage on Mt. Everest!

London, March 16 (ANI): Gay couples can head to Mount Everest for marriage, as Nepal tourist board is hosting world””s highest same-sex marriage on the base camp of the mountain in a bid to boost the country’s tourism industry.

The authorities believe gay tourists generally tend to spend more than backpackers who prefer cheap tours.

“They do have a lot of income … they are high-spending consumers. If they behave well, if they have money, we don””t discriminate,” the Sun quoted Aditya Baral, spokesman for the Nepal Tourism Board, as saying.

He added: “With that, money will come here and jobs will be created.”

Baral said gay tourists could get married at Everest base camp and honeymoon on an elephant safari.

Tourism fetched Nepal around 350million dollars last year. (ANI)

Nepal bowls googly to Everest Twenty20 teams

Kathmandu, April 12 (IANS) Cricket, described as the glorious game of uncertainty, lived up to its reputation in Nepal Sunday as state officials barred entry to the two teams of western amateur cricketers headed to play Twenty20 at the foot of Mt Everest.

Thirty amateur players accompanied by 20 support staff had left Kathmandu Saturday to journey to the Himalayan region in north Nepal and play a match at Gorakh Shep, a plateau 5,165 metres above sea level.

However, they were stymied Sunday by a googly from the warden of the national wildlife park that fell on their route.

The two teams, named after the first two Everest heroes, Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay Sherpa, were told they would require official permission to enter the national park.

The Dainikee web agency said the officials had said they were under public pressure to stop the teams but did not elaborate who or why.

The much-hyped match is intended to raise money for three projects, including one started by Hillary himself in north Nepal.

The Khumjung School was established by Hillary for his beloved Sherpas in the 1960s and is now a full-fledged high school with his statue. The other two charities are the Himalayan Trust UK, founded by the New Zealander to provide basic infrastructure to the Sherpas like health, education and monastery repairs, and the Lord’s Taverners, established by a group of actors in the tavern at Lord’s cricket ground to encourage youngsters play cricket, especially those with disabilities.

The match is the brain child of Briton Richard Kirtley, who visited Gorakh Shep three years ago, thought it looked like the Oval cricket ground and promptly began to dream an impossible dream. ‘The British have a proud history of being eccentric,’ Kirtley told the media in Kathmandu. ‘I am keeping up with the tradition.’

The players, aged between 22 and 36, include bankers, lawyers and former cops who have two things in common: a zest for cricket and adventure. While English skipper Andrew Strauss is the honorary captain of Team Tenzing, vice captain Alastair Cook is doing the honours for Team Hillary. Also accompanying the team are four umpires from the England Cricket Board.

The bar comes after Nepal’s nodal tourism agency Nepal Tourism Board hailed the players, saying they would boost tourism in the Himalayan republic that has been falling due to frequent strikes and a crippling 20-hour daily power outage.