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Hiker Who Climbed California Peak Over 700 Times Found Dead on Mountain

Seuk "Sam" Kim climbed Mt. Baldy over 700 times and served as an unofficial mountain ambassador, welcoming other hikers and sharing food with them.
Seuk "Sam" Kim, a hiker who climbed Mt. Baldy more than 700 times, was reported missing Sunday.
Seuk "Sam" Kim, a hiker who climbed Mt. Baldy more than 700 times, was reported missing Sunday.Courtesy of San Bernardino Sheriff's Department
/ Source: The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — A man found dead on Southern California's towering Mount Baldy was identified Wednesday as a veteran hiker who climbed the famed peak more than 700 times and served as an unofficial mountain ambassador, welcoming other hikers and sharing food with them.

Seuk "Sam" Kim, a hiker who climbed Mt. Baldy more than 700 times, was reported missing Sunday.
Seuk "Sam" Kim, a hiker who climbed Mt. Baldy more than 700 times, was reported missing Sunday.Courtesy of San Bernardino Sheriff's Department

Seuk "Sam" Kim, 78, was reported missing Sunday after he did not return from his latest solo trek up the 10,064-foot mountain, the highest point in Los Angeles County.

His disappearance prompted a search by 18 search-and-rescue teams, and a helicopter crew spotted his body Tuesday on the mountain's north side. Rescuers retrieved it later that day.

The cause of Kim's death was under investigation, said Lt. David Smith of the Los Angeles County Coroner's Office.

Kim's last hike up the mountain started Friday after he drove an hour and a half from his home in the Los Angeles suburb of Culver City.

He would strap on a backpack and set out, usually alone, for the familiar 4,000-foot climb up well-maintained trails offering spectacular views of the San Gabriel Mountains and Angeles National Forest.

He had a reputation on Mount Baldy for warmly greeting fellow hikers, handing out snacks and posing for photos.

"He was like an ambassador, always out there, talking to folks. We love to hear stories like that," said U.S. Forest Service spokesman Nathan Judy. "The Forest Service extends condolences to his family."

"He was like an ambassador, always out there, talking to folks. We love to hear stories like that."

But Judy warned that hiking Baldy is inherently risky, especially this year after an especially cold winter left ice and snow on many trails.

Speaking to a Los Angeles Times reporter while ascending in December, Kim said: "I'm feeling God's embrace. This is better than church."

Last year, he summited the mountain 240 times

Kim and his family moved from South Korea to Southern California in 1981 and he worked for years at a bank and later owned a convenience store.

After he started his final ascent, it rained on the mountain over the weekend and temperatures dropped to the 30s at night.

As an experienced mountaineer, Kim always carried food, water and appropriate clothing, authorities said.

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