John Mock & Kimberley O'Neil



1994 John Mock and Kimberley O'Neil on Darkot An (4650m), Ghizar, Northern Pakistan Lukpe Lawo or Snow Lake, one of the world's largest glacial basins seen from Hispar La, Baltistan, Northern Pakistan 2000 John Mock on Ghidims Pass South (5,650 metres), Shimshal, Gojal, Northern Pakistan 2000 Kimberley O'Neil on Mai Dur Pass (5,700 metres), Shimshal, Gojal, Northern Pakistan
"There are few treasures of more lasting worth than the experiences of a way of life that is in itself wholly satisfying. Such, after all, are the only possessions of which no fate, no cosmic catastrophe can deprive us; nothing can alter the fact if for one moment in eternity we have really lived." Eric Shipton

John Mock PhD and Kimberley O'Neil, a husband-and-wife team, are consultants, award-winning guidebook authors, and avid mountain explorers based in Yosemite National Park.

They have consulted on tourism development and promotion, ecotourism, biodiversity conservation, parks and protected area management, and wildlife conservation in northern Pakistan, Afghanistan's Wakhan Corridor and the Afghan Pamir for the Wildlife Conservation Society, Aga Khan Foundation (Afghanistan), Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ), IUCN-The World Conservation Union, and the Snow Leopard Conservancy.

For fifteen years, they coauthored and contributed to several trekking, hiking and travel guidebooks for Lonely Planet Publications and received a National Outdoor Book Award.

Their love of mountains extends from the Sierra Nevada to Pakistan and Afghanistan where they have reconnoitered new trekking routes and crossed dozens of major passes and glaciers in the Karakoram, Hindukush and Pamir during the past thirty years, logging more than 10,000 kilometers, 60 passes, and 50 glacier traverses. Two of their expeditions were supported by Shipton-Tilman grants from W.L. Gore & Associates.

John Mock, Ph.D., is a South Asian scholar and anthropological linguist who specializes in South Asian languages and literature. His area of expertise is Wakhi language and culture, and the folklore of the Pamir / Hindukush / Karakoram / Himalaya ethnolinguistic region. His main research is on the oral traditions of the Wakhi people of northern Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Tajikistan and he has received major support from the Fulbright-Hays Fellowship program, the Christensen Fund, and the Fulbright Senior Scholar program. Dr. Mock has coauthored four books and monographs, nine book chapters, and five reports. Additionally he has authored ten journal articles, ten book chapters, two reports or other publications, and delivered twenty-one invited national and international lectures or papers. He taught Urdu and Hindi at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Looking back at the past 30 years ….

Here's a glance at some of our accomplishments from exploring and working together:


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