Yes they do but only in the climbing season. They then go back to their village/town.
While climbing on Mount Everest you sleep in a tent at camps that are at different heights.
There are no houses on Mount Everest, only camps during the climbing season that are tents.
Nobody lives on Mount Everest except during the climbing season when climbers from all over the world camp in tents. Near Mount Everest Sherpas live in small villages or farms.
Some people on mt Everest do some wacky things. They either climb and try to get to the top or maybe at the base, it`s good for sledding or sleigh rides.
There is no shelter of any type on top of the highest mountain in the world, Mount Everest. The only shelter you will find on the mountain would be tents in different camps.
The kind of garbage you would find on Mount Everest is, battered old tents, food packages, oxygen cylinders, tent poles, human waste, remains of old clothing and probably much more.
There are no houses on Mount Everest for people to live in. During the climbing season climbers live in tents at different camps up the mountain but once the season is finished these camps are taken apart and brought back down the mountain.
The Sherpa are an ethnic group from the most mountainous region of Nepal, high in the Himalayas. Sherpas migrated from eastern Tibet to Nepal within the last 300-400 years.The term sherpa is also used to refer to local people, typically men, who are employed as guides for mountaineering expeditions in the Himalayas, particularly Mt. Everest. They are highly regarded as elite mountaineers and experts in their local terrain. answer 2 In 1953 the New Zealander Edmund Hillary, and the Nepalese Sherpa Tenzing Norgay, became the first to reach the summit of Mount Everest on the Nepal-Tibet border.
The most common type of trash found on Mount Everest is human waste, food wrappers, broken tents. Today there is a dedicated team who work hard in cleaning up the slopes of the mountain.
Sherpas are the native people who live within range of Mount Everest. On the mountain they have lots of roles: Cook- providing the meals Porter - carry equipment to higher camps Guide - helping you reach the summit
See: What_are_some_environmental_issues_Mt_Everest_is_facing"Mount Everest and the surrounding areas are facing severe deforestation due to the increase in tourist traffic. Pollution from poor waste management facilities taints the local water supply. On Mount Everest itself, trash has become a serious problem. The mountain has been given the nickname "the world's highest landfill." Discarded oxygen bottles, tins, medical syringes and bottles, tents, and corpses litter the mountains' most popular routes, particularly the South Ridge." - Special:Contributions
It is because Mt Everest is littered with the trash of so many climbing expeditions that have tried to summit it. Trash such as food waste and junk such as old, used oxygen tanks/bottles, tents, etc. Also to a certain degree human waste as well with Mt Everest claiming many many victims whos bodies have been preserved by the cold and never been found so it could also be called the world's highest graveyard.