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On Wednesday, Balin Miller was only 23 years old when he died in a climbing accident – his mother has paid tribute.
A popular Alaskan climber has died after falling from El Capitan in Yosemite National Park, marking the third death in the park this summer.
The 23-year-old, Balin Miller, died in a climbing accident on Wednesday, his mother, Jeanine Girard-Muhrmann, confirmed. “He had been climbing since he was a child,” she said. “His heart and soul were truly passionate only about climbing. He loved climbing, and it was never about money or fame.”
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Miller’s older brother, Dylan, said it was still unclear exactly what happened. He explained that Balin had been rope-soloing on a 2,400-foot (730-meter) route called Sea of Dreams — a method of climbing while secured by a rope. Dylan added that his brother had already finished the climb and may have fallen from the end of the rope while pulling up his final piece of gear.
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Tributes poured in for Miller on social media. Some mentioned that they had seen him climbing on a TikTok livestream just two days before his death, referring to him as “the orange tent guy” because of his distinctive camp setup.
One fan, Michelle Derick, claimed that when the climber reached the top of El Capitan, he tried to retrieve his bags stuck on the rock face.
“When he tried to recover his bags, he fell and died — it was all captured on the livestream,” she told the Daily Mail.
Tom Evans, a Yosemite-based photographer who witnessed the fall, said Miller’s rope “fell many feet short of the bags’ location, but he didn’t seem to realize that fact.”
“On the way down, he went off the end of the rope,” Evans said.
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El Capitan is one of the most iconic features of Yosemite National Park — a massive granite wall rising nearly 3,000 feet (915 meters) that draws big-wall climbers from around the globe. Alex Honnold famously completed the first free-solo climb of El Capitan in 2017, documented in the film Free Solo.
Earlier this year, an 18-year-old from Texas died while attempting a free-solo climb on a different formation in the same park. In August, a 29-year-old woman was killed while hiking after being struck on the head by a falling tree branch.
Miller’s death came on the first day of the federal government shutdown. According to the National Park Service, national parks generally remain open during shutdowns, but with limited operations and closed visitor centers. The park service did not respond to requests for comment, and it remains unclear whether staff were present in Yosemite at the time.
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Miller was already known internationally as a skilled climber. He gained attention for claiming the first solo ascent of the Slovak Direct on Mount McKinley (Denali), a technically demanding route that took him 56 hours to complete. He shared his accomplishment in an Instagram post in June.
He grew up climbing in Alaska with his brother and their father, who was also a mountaineer.
“He said he felt most alive when he was climbing,” Dylan recalled. “I was his older brother, but he was my mentor.”
Previously, Miller had spent weeks climbing solo in Patagonia and the Canadian Rockies, where he attempted Reality Bath, a notoriously difficult ice climb that had not been repeated in 37 years, according to Climbing Magazine.
“His climbing achievements over the last six months were probably the most impressive I’ve seen from anyone,” said Clint Helander, a fellow Alaskan climber, to the Anchorage Daily News.
But his recent Yosemite trip was not primarily about extreme climbing. Miller had arrived just two weeks earlier to enjoy the park’s beauty and solitude, before planning to meet up with his family.
His mother said he was more than just a climber: “He loved animals, and he was funny, kind, and full of life.”