The Ishinca & Tocllaraju
Summit Scholarship for African Women

Made possible by McGill’s Mountains

Calling all African women who dream of mountaineering: apply for a scholarship to travel to South America and climb glaciated 5,000m+ peaks in the Peruvian Andes. Please note that you must have a valid passport in order to participate in this expedition.

This scholarship is made possible through funding from McGill’s Mountains. The scholarship includes the expedition fee for an all-women 14-day expedition to Ishinca and Tocllaraju in the Cordillera Blanca of Peru, a $1000 flight stipend, top-notch mountaineering footwear from LOWA Boots, mountaineering attire from Fjällräven, and more. The scholarship’s total value is >$6,000.

This Scholarship is reserved for aspiring women mountaineers from Africa. To qualify, you must be an African citizen (i.e. hold a passport from an African Nation), with a preference given to candidates currently residing in African countries. If you are not an African citizen, please apply to the unrestricted scholarship for the Ishinca & Tocllaraju expedition instead.

A word about Jeanette McGill of McGill’s Mountains: ‘Jeannette McGill is a proud South African high-altitude mountaineer who thrived in the rugged mountains of the Eastern Cape and Drakensberg. In her twenties she was fortunate enough to go to Bolivia and Peru as her first ever overseas mountain-climbing expedition. Peru is where she subsequently has cut her mountaineering teeth, returning on various occasions. The skills Jeannette built over the years following that first Cordillera Blanca expedition many years ago eventually allowed her to become the first South African woman to summit Manaslu in 2018 and to also climb Dhaulagiri, bad weather stopping her at Camp 3 in 2019. She loves supporting and mentoring others to experience the outdoors and achieve significant outdoor goals. With annual commitments since 2022, Jeannette is paying it forward by sponsoring a recurring Summit Scholarship for a woman mountaineer from Africa to be inspired like she was by the mountaineering experiences available in Peru.’