Wednesday 27 April 2011

First time at ABC

We had a few comms problems between writing and sending my previous post so have in fact been at ABC for a few days now.
The journey from BC to ABC was fairly uneventful and didn't seem as tough as last year, I think this is combination of the body remembering how to acclimatise and my knowing what to expect and therefore how to pace myself. I was certainly more sensible than last year and kept a steady pace so had a lot left in the tank on my arrival at ABC.
The trail is mainly on glacial moraine and the scenery is spectacular, although my own view is probably slighted by the fact I have made the trek seven times already (four up and three down) - at 15 miles each way and around seven hours time that will be around 180 miles and 84 hours on exactly the same track by the end of this trip so you might be able to understand why I go onto autopilot.


There is a decent of path of sorts and Yaks can carry heavy loads up to ABC which means facilities are decent, we have a cook tent, mess tent and toilet tent but life at ABC is much tougher than at BC.
At 6400m ABC is very high and simple tasks can leave you breathless at first and simple tasks like washing, cleaning teeth and dressing are difficult. Having said that, it is amazing what a difference a couple of days up here can make, the slight dizziness and headache that I had on arrival have now completely gone for me although a couple of the team are still suffering.
This is also the first time that we will share tents on the expedition, while this makes tent admin more difficult but since it is so cold at night and we don't have as much stuff as at base camp is probably helpful overall.
The sun is also incredibly strong up there (especially when it reflects off the snow) and some people, like Heather who has acquired the new nickname of Little Miss Sunburn, have been caught out. But I have learnt from past woes, in particular when my lips and nose peeled off on Aconcagua, and have kept myself well covered up.
The weather at ABC has been atrocious until today with a lot of snow which prevents us from doing much - we have managed a bit of climbing practice on the ice towers and a walk up to about 6600m but that is about it. We have had large dumps of snow which makes it very dangerous to go up the North Col, for both hidden crevasses and avalanche, and are hoping to head up the North Col first thing in the morning.

Hidden crevasses are even a bit of a danger around camp for the unwary and unfortunately one of the yaks fell into one earlier today and was killed but hopefully we all have greater awareness of the danger than the poor yak.

Apologies for the fairly dry update but my plan is to head straight back to BC the day after (think two long days will help fitness and stamina) but not sure the computer will be coming down until a couple of days later so thought I had better let you know all was well.


Tuesday 26 April 2011

Acclimatisation Continues

We have now been at base camp ("BC") for six days and are heading up to advanced base camp ("ABC") tomorrow.  I have settled into base camp life once again and for those of us who were here last year there is a huge sense of deja-vu - including the games of Risk. I am pleased to report that, at the time of writing, I am unbeaten (although this will likely change by the time you read this as we have only played once and are hoping to play again this later).


I am also back into the same routine of getting up and going to bed early. This is largely governed by the sunlight and temperature and always reminds me of how people must have lived in the days of yore, like when Dan was a boy and not a Prince Charles lookalike.

The food has been erratic thus far, we seem to have had an awful lot of spam (I can count five times already).  I am not particularly happy about this and still don't know how this can possibly count as meat so am refusing to eat it (I am not the only one). Even the cook team have now taken to stealthly trying to disguise it amongst other foods.  Having said that, I am not in anyway criticising the kitchen staff who do an excellent job and anyone who knows me will know I am not in a position to make judgements on anyone else's cooking ability.


So far, the weather has been much worse than last year so, after a reasonable start, the last three days and nights have been very windy and it is showing no sign of abating which could make our stay at ABC interesting.

I have done three separate acclimatisation walks up to 5500m, 5700m and 6000m over the past few days. The purpose of the acclimatisation walks is get my body used to higher altitude and increase my red blood cell count. Each time, I will try and spend as long as possible up high to maximise the benefit. Despite suffering from a very sore throat since arriving at BC, I haven't really encountered any difficulties and my training seems to be working so far (but as previously said I would really know how I am doing until I get to ABC and beyond).


I was concerned that my throat was the start of the famous Khumbu Cough but, after a couple of disturbed nights' sleep, it has now thankfully gone only to be replaced by a cold. I only have myself to blame for the cold though, after I had the bright idea to go up to 6000m only in a shirt and windproof jacket on a very windy day - I guess I should really know better by now. Maybe I was still deluding myself that I lived in Durham and could get away with this before I became an adopted Southerner?

We have also had our main Puja ceremony a few days ago. The Puja is a Buddhist ceremony where a Lama comes to camp and blesses the mountain, the team and our equipment. The Sherpas will not climb on the mountain until the Puja has taken place and many of them use it as a last chance to relax before the hard work begins. I decided to take the precaution of getting my knee support blessed this year as well as my boots, crampons, ice axe etc. I have also managed to avoid losing my prayer string thus far after losing it the day after last year!

The walk to BC to ABC is around 15 miles with an ascent from 5150m to 6400m across tough undulating terrain. It would normally take me around 7 hours and is extremely tiring but I am strangely looking forward to it as it should give me an idea of how strong I am compared to last year. We will split it into two the first time and use an intermediate camp at 5700m. Intermediate camp is probably the most depressing place in the whole world and I am not looking forward to our night there.  The walk itself is mainly through a moraine and there is no real objective danger apart from a load of huge rocks defying gravity and menacingly perched over the route like something out of a cartoon and just ready to fall, I remember the first time I saw them I thought "This is dangerous".

ABC is a very tough place to live and I will aim to spend around four days there this time. It is very cold, windy and high (6400m above sea level, so a mile above Mont Blanc and 500m higher than Kilimanjaro) and very basic tasks are draining when you first arrive. Apparently, we are in exactly the same place as last year so I will aim to get there as quickly as possible and secure one of the best tent spots (i.e. not at the top of a small hill from the mess tent and toilet like last year).

One indicator of acclimatisation is oxygen saturation (although often mis-used), my oxygen saturation has risen back above 90%, as opposed to 83% when I first arrived at BC. Admittedly this is not good compared to the normal 99% at sea level (where under 90% would lead to admittance to intensive care) but much higher than most (including some of the sherpas). I feel very well acclimatised so will hopefully not suffer too much as we ascend although will be interested to see what it drops to at ABC and the North Col.

Once at ABC, we will get a fantastic view of the whole route up to the summit and the plan is to spend a couple of days getting used to the altitude and then climb up the North Col to over 7000m. After over three weeks out here this will be our first bit of proper climbing so am looking forward to that and it will feel like we are finally getting going.
Over and out to the next time !!
Andy

Monday 18 April 2011

Journey to Base Camp

It turned out that our last night in Kathmandu was Nepali New Years Eve so we set out 1 January 2068 (Nepali years) although I still haven't managed to find out what year zero signifies. The bus used for our early morning trip to the border had no suspension and brakes that sounded like they'd not been oiled for quite some time. The road itself is pretty interesting and has featured in the lists of the 'World's Ten Worst Roads', mostly on account of the winds that swirl around it and the general surface condition. However, the locals are nothing if not resourceful and they get around this by driving up the middle of the road and honking their horn to warn oncoming traffic. A little unorthodox but seems to work ! I wasn't too worried as I've shared a few car journeys with Jarrod and am still here to tell the tale.

This is the third time I have made this journey in the past couple of years and after a losing a wheel on the way to Cho Oyu and suffering a puncture last year it was nice to make it to the border unscathed this time. However the Iceland team (the other UK team on the North Side of Everest this season) were not so lucky and they lost a bus full of supplies down a ravine a couple of days earlier, killing the driver and nearly ending their expedition. We saw the bus as we drove past and it was completely destroyed.

The border crossing across the Friendship Bridge was trouble free, aside from the usual Chinese bureaucracy which meant that every single bag was emptied and searched, as usual they seemed more interested in reading material than anything else. Once over the border we are in the hands of the CTMA (Chinese Tibetan Mountaineering Association). They pick us up at the border and drop us off at base camp as part of our climbing permit. In between they tell us where we stay, what we eat and where we go.

Right over the border we were in a Chinese town Zhangmu which was perched on the side of the hill and was a typical frontier town - not very charming lots of shady characters and dubious establishments the CTMA informed us we would be spending the night here.

Tibet is on Beijing time (we stayed on Nepali time) so we set off very early the next morning, the first thing that you notice in China is the markers denoting the distance to Beijing every km. These reminders plus the military checkpoints you pass through leave you in little doubt as to who is in charge here.  The road up to the Tibetan plateau is superb. When I first came through a couple of years ago the new road was incomplete and there were tents on the roadside for the workmen to live in but now it is complete, I have no idea how many people died in the construction but it is a fantastic feat of Chinese engineering and a real contrast to the Nepali side.

Once on the Tibetan plateau itself the landscape becomes much more barren. We swapped our bus for Land Cruisers at the border so we made swift progress through Nylam and Tingri. Unfortunately in Nylam we learnt that the leader of the Adventure Peaks Everest North Col/Lhakpa Ri expedition, who had been acclimatising in Tibet and will be sharing base camp with us, has been attacked by wild dogs in Nylam and will have to return to the border to get himself checked out. Wild dogs are a real problem in these places and I have always carried a walking pole to fend them off but it sounds like he was attacked by a pack and could do nothing about it.

After a long day in the car driving through Tibet, with most of us avoiding Tibetan food and water after one of last years team is thought to have contracting Hepatitis E here, we finally arrived at base camp. At around 5150m above sea level base camp is over 300m higher than Mont Blanc and we would not drop below here until our way out in late May/ early June. We had also seen our last tree and buildings for weeks but at least had the consolation of waking up to a magnificent view of Mount Everest every morning.

We have been at Base Camp for a couple of days now, quite a few team members are sick (I am fine so far) so we have had to alter our schedule. A few of us walked up to 5500m this morning and we should move onto 6000m in the next few days. While we are still on schedule, some of us are not convinced the revised is aggressive enough as a few days bad weather could cause problems so will have to keep an eye on this continue to try and push where possible. Over and out !! Take care all

Wednesday 13 April 2011

Life on the road

Life on the acclimatization treks was basic but comfortable, we have been spending our evenings in Nepali teahouses.  The teahouses are charming little places, although some of the decor looks like it has come straight out of the Magic Roundabout.

Teahouse bedroom

Local artwork
But there are also some familiar names around and it was particularly nice to see that the Nepalis don't just support the winning teams!
Liverpool's favourite son
The diet is pretty standardized along the entire trek, meat is limited to Yak and Chicken and I haven't seen any sign of fish (probably a good thing in a landlocked country).  I have avoided meat so far as the level of meat hygiene over here is a bit different to that we are used to and seeing meat carried open on the trek was a pretty common sight that doesn't fill me with confidence.  So far I have avoided any significant problems but you always have to be very careful particualrly as running water is scarce and hot water is a luxury up there.
Local meat transportation "lorry"
The kitchens are basic and the contents of the menus are pretty uniform.  I have tended to stick to the same dishes - Dhal Bat (lentils, rice and veg), porridge, lots of eggs and rice and Mars bar pies.  I did attempt Pizza once, they used Yak cheese and it didn’t go well, so learnt my lesson and wasn’t so adventurous again.

Friendly "local"

Dorje helping in the kitchen
I did at first think that the Khumbu region was the first place in the world I had visited without an Irish pub.  Alas, when we returned to Lukla we found that even this part of the world has been inflitrated.
Probably the highest Irish pub in the world
While it was certainly much more enjoyable and a nice change from the Tibetan acclimatisation I followed last year and on Cho Oyu, I am still not convinced that the Nepalese acclimatisation route is as effective.  It is over ten days since I left the UK and while we have been over 5000m, we have only really touched this height and not actually spent a night above 5000m.  We will spend tonight in Kathmandu, tomorrow in Tibet (probably in Nylam at around 2900m above sea level) and then onto base camp at around 5200m.

We are a few days behind the schedule we followed last year, having said that there are still plenty of reserve days built in, we did spend a long time waiting at base camp last year and the team seems to be much healthier so hopefully it is just my natural tendency to compare to last year.

We did cover a fair distance but the trekking through the Khumbu region was straightforward and I felt strong throughout.  This is reassuring but I think it is difficult to tell anything until we get higher.  I have regularly measured my pulse and oxygen absorption levels and the readings are encouraging.

It still feels to me like we have not really started yet and that the expedition proper starts tomorrow (at about 0500 when leave the hotel).  Within the next week or so we will move up to base camp and then up to advanced base camp (6400m) but at least they gave me the "Everest" room in Lukla so hopefully that is a good omen for the coming weeks...
Cheesy picture of the Everest room

Acclimatising on the South Side of Everest

Have been in Nepal for over ten days now but time seems to have flown by. 

After a week or so following the classic Southside Everest base camp trail in the Khumbu region of Nepal, I am now back in Kathmandu and preparing to travel across the border into Tibet tomorrow.  Apologies to those chasing an update, the communications in the Khumbu region were very "basic" and didn't have a great deal of spare time.  Once I arrive at base camp updates should become more regular.

The trek was a lot of fun and we followed the famous route through Namche Bazaar, Pangboche and Dingboche before trekking back to Lukla and flying out again.

As I had expected the flight into Lukla last Monday was an experience (and not necessarily a pleasant one).  The turbulence as our little two engined plane flew through the hills was something else, it was more like a roller coaster than a flight at times and I was extremely glad to finally land safely on the famous sloped runway.
The airport is like no other I have ever visited.  Planes only fly in the morning (before the clouds come in) and during this time they appeared to take off and land every a couple of minutes, in many ways it was more like a taxi-rank than an airport.  It was absolute chaos compared to our airports although the mayhem didn't seem to bother some of the employees.
Sleeping bank clerk at Lukla airport
We shouldn't complain though, the airport was only built in the late 1970s and before that the only way in was a two month trek into Lukla.

We set off on the trek as soon as we landed, the trekking itself was not particularly taxing and the weather seemed to follow a pretty regular pattern - bright and sunny from the morning through to mid afternoon then the clouds would arrive sometimes accompanied by snow.  As always at altitude, the sun was fierce and hot but once it disappeared it became bitterly cold.  
View of Lhotse from the trek
The route was surprisingly quiet on the way out but far busier on the way back to Lukla.  We were able to visit the centre of the Sherpa world, Namche Bazaar.  I had always wanted to visit, it is an important trading post between the Sherpa people and Tibetans who have made the five day trip over the Nangpa La pass near Cho Oyu.  Unfortunately there were no Tibetans there at this time but the town is still main hub on the Everest base camp trek and is still a busy little town.
Namche bazaar
The original plan to visit Ama Dablam base camp was aborted as the tea house had not yet opened (we are delaying our first night in a tent until we reached base camp) but this allowed us to visit Everest ER and the memorial at Piriboche.
Everest Southside memorial
And also visit Khumjung and see the famous Yeti scalp.  I am told that it is genuine but I am a bit sceptical particularly as this particular Yeti appeared to have ginger hair and a centre parting and not the white frizzy hair I expected.
Yeti scalp
We also stopped off at the famous Everest View hotel en route.  The hotel is famous for Japanese tourists flying in to enjoy the views and requiring supplementary oxygen in their rooms but is now rumoured to be one of the destinations on William and Kate's honeymoon so may soon be famous for a different reason.  The view of Everest (left with the plume) and Ama Dablam (right) is certainly quite spectacular, although I have to say absolutely nothing on the view of Everest from the North side. 
Everest and Ama Dablam from the Everest View hotel

We climbed up to 5100m on Saturday, spent some time up there to maximise our acclimatisation, then descended and began the walk back out to Lukla.
On ridge up towards 5100m

Saturday 2 April 2011

Take off

The day has finally arrived, I fly out tonight and am itching to get going.

Have eased up on the training over the past couple of weeks and mainly been resting up to get rid of all those little niggles and eating lots.  In fact am absolutely sick of food now (something I thought I'd never say) but am a couple of kilos heavier than last year which was my target and hopefully is a good thing.

Have spent the couple of days packing my kit and then repacking it, seem to have managed to get it under the 36kg baggage allowance but given I have freighted out 12kg of stuff out already achieving this on the way back should be even more of a challenge.

Adventure Peaks news feed for the expedition is still not live but I am assured it will be soon and that Stu  will be updating live on summit day, he has even promised to wear his lucky pants for us!!  It will be here (it is also linked on the right hand side) once it is live:
Adventure Peaks Everest 2011 news feed

Thank you in advance to Dave, Euan and Paddy who will help keep this up to date while I am away.  I am hoping my thinly veiled threats of mentioning certain events in Paddy's best man speech and sporting a huge handlebar moustache in Rachel and his wedding photos in June will be enough to ensure that they don't follow through on their promise to "doctor" the updates too much.  Just in case this doesn't quite work, I will definitely not be posting any Yeti pictures until I get back so any that "find their way" onto here should be taken with a pinch of salt.

Finally, thanks for all your kind wishes they are much appreciated and will certainly help me on the way.  I have had a few quotes that people have passed in my direction over the past few days but a couple probably sum things up nicely, from TS Eliot "Only those who risk going too far know how far they can go" and Ed Viesturs "Getting to the top is optional, getting down is mandatory."

I will have both of these in the back of mind over the coming weeks and while I will be giving it everything to achieve the summit  I will also make sensible decisions on the mountain to ensure come back in one piece.
tenzing-norgay-on-everest-summit.jpg