In December 2018, Grace Millane, 22, of Wickford, Essex, was slain in Auckland while out on a Tinder date.
After fighting her way through knee-deep snow to get to the camp, her mother Gillian Millane declared it to be “the hardest thing I have ever done”.
The White Ribbon charity, which works to stop male aggression against women, benefited financially from the climb.
Gillian Millane Grace alongside her late father David and mother GillianGillian Millane Grace, seen here with her late father David and mother Gillian, was a devoted family member who enjoyed traveling. “The weather was the worst they had had there for twelve years,” she said.
Aside from that, though, I had an incredible time, and I was supported by an incredible staff.
The team had to ascend for eight days to get to the camp, which is located at 17,598 feet (5364 meters) above sea level, and descend for four days.
Mrs. Millane bequeathed a stone bearing her late husband David’s name, who passed away in 2020 due to cancer, and another bearing her daughter’s name at the top.
Previously, she had left their names on stones at the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro.