<p>When Dawa Yangzum Sherpa first set her sights on being a mountain guide, she was told it was no job for a girl. Now she has proved her doubters wrong, becoming Nepal's first woman to earn a prestigious international qualification.</p>.<p>Last month, the 27-year-old completed a rigorous course run by the Swiss-based International Federation of Mountain Guides, often described as a PhD in mountaineering.</p>.<p>The prestigious qualification has been awarded to around 6,000 people worldwide and just 50 men in Nepal, despite climbing being a major revenue earner for the impoverished country.</p>.<p>Sherpa belongs to the Himalayan ethnic group that has become synonymous with mountain guiding thanks to their reputation for being strong climbers with a natural tolerance for the lack of oxygen at high altitudes.</p>.<p>But in Nepal -- home to eight of the world's highest mountains -- climbing remains a man's job.</p>.<p>"This is a challenging field, even more so if you are a girl. There were people who said this is not a girl's job, that I won't get work or (asked) what will I do if I have kids," Sherpa said.</p>.<p>Mountaineering is the lifeblood of Sherpa's home village in Rolwaling valley, which neighbours Mount Everest, and scores of its residents have summited the 8,848-metre peak.</p>.<p>"I knew what I wanted to do. My passion was to be outdoors, to climb. And my family did not discourage me," Sherpa said.</p>.<p>At 17, Sherpa was already guiding tourists on trekking routes, and soon after that scaled her first mountain, Nepal's 5,500-metre Yala Peak.</p>.<p>American climber David Gottlieb, who works with US-based expedition operator Alpine Ascents International, remembers Sherpa showing great promise when he roped her in for an ice-climbing trip in the Rolwaling Valley. "It is something else to see that great a promise of ability in a craft that not everybody is good at. And she displayed that immediately," Gottlieb said.</p>.<p>After racking up a number of summits of smaller mountains, in 2012 Sherpa was selected to join an expedition organised by National Geographic to the world's highest peak. "Everest used to be my aim. I used to think that once I scale Everest it will be enough. But climbing is like an addiction. The more I climbed, the more I wanted to climb," she said.</p>.<p>It was after returning from that successful summit that she signed up to become a certified mountain guide.</p>.<p>In 2014, she was part of the first Nepali women's team to scale Pakistan's K2, considered one of the world's toughest climbs. </p>.<p>She hopes that she is just the first of many women from Nepal who will look to the fabled peaks of the Himalayas for a career.</p>.<p class="byline">AFP </p>
<p>When Dawa Yangzum Sherpa first set her sights on being a mountain guide, she was told it was no job for a girl. Now she has proved her doubters wrong, becoming Nepal's first woman to earn a prestigious international qualification.</p>.<p>Last month, the 27-year-old completed a rigorous course run by the Swiss-based International Federation of Mountain Guides, often described as a PhD in mountaineering.</p>.<p>The prestigious qualification has been awarded to around 6,000 people worldwide and just 50 men in Nepal, despite climbing being a major revenue earner for the impoverished country.</p>.<p>Sherpa belongs to the Himalayan ethnic group that has become synonymous with mountain guiding thanks to their reputation for being strong climbers with a natural tolerance for the lack of oxygen at high altitudes.</p>.<p>But in Nepal -- home to eight of the world's highest mountains -- climbing remains a man's job.</p>.<p>"This is a challenging field, even more so if you are a girl. There were people who said this is not a girl's job, that I won't get work or (asked) what will I do if I have kids," Sherpa said.</p>.<p>Mountaineering is the lifeblood of Sherpa's home village in Rolwaling valley, which neighbours Mount Everest, and scores of its residents have summited the 8,848-metre peak.</p>.<p>"I knew what I wanted to do. My passion was to be outdoors, to climb. And my family did not discourage me," Sherpa said.</p>.<p>At 17, Sherpa was already guiding tourists on trekking routes, and soon after that scaled her first mountain, Nepal's 5,500-metre Yala Peak.</p>.<p>American climber David Gottlieb, who works with US-based expedition operator Alpine Ascents International, remembers Sherpa showing great promise when he roped her in for an ice-climbing trip in the Rolwaling Valley. "It is something else to see that great a promise of ability in a craft that not everybody is good at. And she displayed that immediately," Gottlieb said.</p>.<p>After racking up a number of summits of smaller mountains, in 2012 Sherpa was selected to join an expedition organised by National Geographic to the world's highest peak. "Everest used to be my aim. I used to think that once I scale Everest it will be enough. But climbing is like an addiction. The more I climbed, the more I wanted to climb," she said.</p>.<p>It was after returning from that successful summit that she signed up to become a certified mountain guide.</p>.<p>In 2014, she was part of the first Nepali women's team to scale Pakistan's K2, considered one of the world's toughest climbs. </p>.<p>She hopes that she is just the first of many women from Nepal who will look to the fabled peaks of the Himalayas for a career.</p>.<p class="byline">AFP </p>