A pair of well-worn alpine mountaineering boots, dark graphite gray with bright blue laces and tiny flecks of dried snow on the rubber soles, resting firmly on a rough granite ledge high above a sea of distant peaks. A small, neatly folded flag with the words “Climb for Huntington” lies beside them, its white and teal colors gently rippling in the thin mountain air. Crisp, late-afternoon sunlight cuts across the scene, carving sharp highlights into the stone and boots while leaving the valley in soft haze. Photographic realism, shot from a low, close-up angle with a shallow depth of field, keeps the boots and flag in sharp focus while the dramatic mountain range blurs into an inspiring, hopeful backdrop.

À propos de Climb

Découvrez l’histoire personnelle derrière ce projet et comment chaque sommet aide à combattre la maladie de Huntington.

À propos

Transformer la douleur en sommets solidaires

Climb for Huntington was born from a family story marked by loss, courage, and a refusal to give up. Huntington’s disease took my father when I was 14. Today, my brother is living with the same diagnosis. Watching this disease slowly steal movement, memory, and independence from the people I love has changed everything about how I see time, health, and purpose. Instead of letting that pain stay silent, I decided to carry it to the world’s highest places—one summit at a time. Climb for Huntington is my commitment to climb the highest peak on each continent, using each ascent as a platform to raise awareness, spark conversations, and channel support toward research and families affected by Huntington’s disease. Every step upward is a stand against a disease that takes so much away—and an invitation for others to join the fight. If this story resonates with you, please visit the Support page to see how you can take action, whether by donating, sharing the message, or partnering with the project.

A pristine steel ice axe and vibrant teal climbing rope coiled with care on a patch of packed, crystalline snow near a summit marker carved into rock that reads simply “Hope.” Behind them, layered mountain ridges fade into the distance under a deep blue sky brushed with thin cirrus clouds. The golden hour sun grazes the scene from the right, catching tiny ice crystals and casting long, gentle shadows across the snow’s subtle texture. The atmosphere is calm and determined. Captured in photographic realism from a slightly elevated angle, the tools form a strong foreground focal point, with the sweeping panoramic background softly blurred to symbolize the vast, ongoing climb against Huntington’s disease.

Récits