“I’d do it again in a heartbeat” - Karen climbs Kilimanjaro for charity despite multiple fractures
Date published: 23 September 2025

Oldhamer Karen Ullah was truly pushed to her limits
When Oldham woman Karen Ullah set off to climb Mount Kilimanjaro, she expected the world’s tallest freestanding mountain to push her to her limits.
What she didn’t expect was to fracture her leg and ankle on the very first day and keep climbing for a further week in agonising pain, determined to raise money for Hospice UK.
The eight-day challenge began with disaster.
Just before the group had even started the trek, Karen, Sales Director at one of the UK’s leading business communications and IT providers, Daisy, slipped awkwardly and twisted her ankle.
Assuming it was just a sprain, she strapped it up, took painkillers and anti-inflammatories, and set her sights on Africa’s highest peak.
What followed was a test of willpower few could imagine.
For days, Karen endured relentless trekking, steep climbs, freezing nights, and the gruelling effects of altitude while unknowingly walking on torn ligaments and a fractured fibula.
“It was the hardest thing I’ve ever done,” Karen admits.
“Every step hurt, but I didn’t want to give in.
"I kept telling myself I could make it.
"The mountain was tougher than I ever imagined - the altitude, the cold, the dirt, the camping - but it was also incredible.
"Every moment felt like an achievement.”
By summit night, however, her body could take no more.
After three hours of scrambling uphill in the dark, Karen’s ankle gave way completely.
Unable to put weight on her leg, she was forced to stop, just short of her ultimate goal.
At 5am, porters carried her down the mountain in a painstaking three-hour effort before she was airlifted to hospital.
Doctors confirmed the devastating news: severe ligament damage, a fractured fibula and three ankle fractures which had to be pinned and plated in a gruelling operation.
Instead of snorkelling in Zanzibar as planned, Karen now faces six weeks in a cast.
But despite the injury, Karen refuses to see the expedition as anything but a triumph.
She said: “Yes, I came back with fractured bones, but I also came back with the best experience of my life.
"The mountain tested me in every way, but I would do it all again in a heartbeat.
“The frustrating thing is now I have six weeks non-weight bearing which will be tough as I like to be busy and I haven’t had a day off work in 30 years!”
Karen’s husband and climbing partner, Chris, carried on and successfully reached the summit.
He described summit night as “brutal,” but said he was proud of what they achieved together.
If you would like to help make Karen’s epic experience even more worthwhile, you can sponsor her here
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