“Don’t look up at the mountain, climb it.” Thus said Swami Vivekananda. Climb the mountain we can see the world, not so world can see us. When a goal matters enough to a person, that person will find a way to accomplish what first seemed impossible. Mountains therefore instigate us to make an adventurous attempt which has enormous environmental, socioeconomic and cultural value comprising vitally important resources and functions that benefit society both directly and indirectly: as regulators of climate and water resources; containing important water reserves and providing us with fuel as sanctuaries of a large diversities ecosystems, with unique and exclusive species and an extraordinary variety of landscapes, communities, languages, and cultures, as studying grounds for disciplines such as geology and biology and as ideal settings to develop environmental education activities. There has been a need to enact loss/declarations on mountain protection having a large international tradition linked growing awareness of mountaineering community towards environment, as well as negative effects caused by the increase and mass marketing of mountains sports of tourism activities on mountain ecosystem and local communities. The article presents certain principles in believing that freedom to practice mountaineering depends on the enormous value of mountain areas which are often the sources of products essential to human kind as a whole. The role of mountain tourism is not only in supporting local communities but the misuse of existing resources may lead to the loss of biodiversity, massive or intrusive changes to the landscape, climate change and pollution due to overuse of sensitive areas. Several declarations made by various mountaineering organizations have insisted on accepting the risks and assure responsibility leading to the balance of goals with skills and equipment, adopting fair means and reporting honestly. The declarations also insist to strive for best practice and never stop learning by being tolerant, considerate and help each other for protecting the wild and natural character of mountains and cliffs in order to support local communities and their sustainable development. The values or otherwise termed as ethics of mountaineering connotes human dignity, life, liberty and happiness; intactness of nature, solidarity, self-actualization, truth and adventure. The attraction of sports climbing depends upon utilizing opportunities provided to improve climbing standards and techniques resulting in to experience the pure fun of climbing with the fear of falling greatly reduced and enhancing aspirations of climbers to take the first step on to rock outside in relative safety, gradually learning about widening their climbing experience and having broad based exposure to an adventurous elevated and higher vision improving the social behavior and to fight against the killers of the virgin nature it also improves to have better coexistence with the neighborhood in spite of diversities and multidirectional cultural variations The catastrophe resulted due to earthquake that shook Nepal living thousands of people standards in remote locations beyond the access of roads and helicopters; in a land of expedition the world food program brought food and relief items those in greatest needs opened an access to humanitarian relief. “Respect the mountains” is the key slogan to promote sustainable mountain tourism through a global network of volunteers who activated significant step in mountain protection in their respective territories. The risk, responsibility, duty of care, and liability insisted actions to reduce the risk of litigations against ourselves in taking actions to reduce the possibility of contributing any harms to others. Mountaineering enabled by legal and ethical foundation dictated that “If we were afraid of failures, we don’t deserve success—we make a living by what we get, but we make a life but what we give.”
