In 1958, the Government sponsored an expedition to
Cho Oyu (26,864 ft), the sixth highest mountain in the world. Jayal died of
pulmonary oedema caused by overexertion on this expedition at Camp I. He had started late and tried to catch up with the main party. There was also a problem in his medical care as much of the expedition equipment had been lost in a Dakota crash en route to Nepal. His death and that of some others brought home the cruel lesson of need for acclimatisation and discipline in the pursuit of Himalayan mountaineering.
Tributes Pandit
Jawaharlal Nehru, the
Prime Minister of India, paid rich tributes to Jayal saying "the Major has set an example of courage and adventure which should inspire our young people. The news of his death came to me as a shock and I feel that the country has suffered the loss of her finest mountaineer..." Arthur Foot, Jayal's Headmaster of Doon, noted that "The Himalaya completed his education into a stature of nobility", echoing a sentiment expressed two years earlier by Jayal himself who had noted, after an expedition to Saser Kangri, that "Pushing the body to the utmost for something indefinably inherent in a person, is intrinsically noble and worthwhile." R.L. Holdsworth, a teacher at Doon who had encouraged Jayal to pursue mountaineering noted after his death that "He died very much the master of himself and of most of the world that is worth mastering."
Commemoration • The Indian Mountaineering Foundation had a Nandu Jayal Fund and published, along with the
Corps of Engineers, a book
Nandu Jayal and Indian Mountaineering, which contained articles on various aspects of Indian Mountaineering by him and by others. • Nandu Jayal's life and career motivated many young officers of the Corps to take up mountaineering, most prominent of whom were his nephews,
Harsh Vardhan Bahuguna and
Jai Vardhan Bahuguna In Hope of Glory-The Brothers Who Died on Everest; both were officers of the Indian Army, dedicated mountaineers and both died on
Mount Everest. • In 1962,
Vidya Dhar Jayal donated a silver cup to the
Bengal Engineer Group and Centre to commemorate his brother. ==See also==