Posts Tagged ‘Tibet’

Border Crossing

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

Sunrise Over Kathmandu

After an early start on the day, we rolled out of Kathmandu at 6 AM.  The streets were calm at that time, so we made it out of the city in time to watch the rising sun burn the fog off the Kathmandu valley.  We saw some pretty country and some hardy people carving a living from the lush, but rugged hillsides.

On the four-hour drive, our driver weaved expertly around dogs and goats, chickens and ducks.  We jostled with a plethora of trucks, and made the international border by 10 AM.

With all the paperwork, 12 people, and 150 bags to carry across, our border crossing into the Tibet region of China took a few hours.  It went well.

We are now in Zangmu, just inside the border.  Tomorrow we will continue our drive north toward Nylam.  Let’s hope for good weather so that we can get see westward and get a glimpse of Shishapangma (another 8,000 meter peak), just 15 miles from the road.

Best wishes from the road.

Time to Climb

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

Gear/Food Bag #99 - Onions & Garlic

It’s time. Time to wrap up the planning and begin climbing Cho Oyu.

Several people have asked about our schedule, so I will give you the overview:

  • Aug 26-31: Drive through Nepal and into Tibet. Take acclimatization days to adjust to the altitude as it rises to 18,000 ft at Base Camp.
  • Sept. 1-5: Move to Advanced base camp (18,700 ft) and acclimate more.
  • Sept. 6-11 Climb to Camp 1 (20,900 ft), then return to Advanced base camp (ABC).
  • Sept 12-18, Rest in ABC, climb to Camp 2 (23,600 ft), return to ABC.
  • Sept 19-23: Rest in ABC, prepare for summit push.
  • Sept 24-27: Summit push! Climb up through Camp 1, 2, & 3 (24,900 ft) and summit if we can
  • Sept 28-Oct 1: Drop to ABC, pack, leave OR make second summit push if needed for 3-5 days.
  • Return to Kathmandu sometime between Oct 2 and Oct 5.

What this plan does not show is numerous rest days to simply wait while our bodies grow more red blood cells and our heart rates settle back towards normal. What this plan can not show is all the uncertainty and variability due to weather, sickness, unexpected occurrences, etc.

What no plan, schedule or blog can possibly show is all the amazing effort that this will require from the team members, sherpas, leader, support staff, truck drivers and yak herders. Today I caught up with our strong sherpa team as they packed the last of our gear and food bags… all 120 of them!

The photo on this post happens to show bag #99 – garlic and onions. Toss on the additional 20-25 duffles of gear from the climbing team, and we will have quite a pile!

My blog postings will be a bit less frequent while we are in transit, due to uncertain technology links. I will post what I can, when I can. So please check back here to see how we are doing.

Thanks for following along.  I wish you good health and good spirits.

Time to climb!

Jim

Krazy Kathmandu

Monday, August 24th, 2009
Walking to the Women's Festival, Kathmandu, Nepal

Walking to the Women's Festival, Kathmandu, Nepal

I should have known better. Having been to Kathmandu on two previous trips, I should have recalled just how crazy the streets of Kathmandu could be. Then why do I feel so overwhelmed and exhausted after going out for a mere two hours?

The task seemed simple enough – go pick up half a dozen items I need for our 40-day trip north into Tibet. But two hours wandering the maze of alleys and unnamed streets in the Thamel District will shock your system. In the first 15 minutes I must have dodged, and been dodged by, more than a hundred motorcycles and mopeds. A few daredevils scared me by zipping past just a few inches from my elbow. Most beeped first to put me on notice, but their warnings were drowned out by an even louder armada of honking taxis, tiny cars, and the occasional three-wheeled vehicle that looked like a man-sized tricycle outfitted with an unmuffled motor. Add in bicycles, rickshaws, and the occasional wandering cow, and the stage is set for madness.

I suppose my non-native experience betrayed me. Sometimes self-preservation made me hesitate as I pondered how to cross an exceptionally busy street. Yet local people walked straight across, seemingly unfazed by the crossfire of vehicles they waded through. The bewildered look on my newbie face must have given the experienced drivers the go ahead signal to surge right past me.

All this activity swirls around you as you try navigating unfamiliar streets whose uneven surfaces range from dirt, to rock, to cobblestones and pavement, all within just a few yards. The gods test you further by trying to distract you with unfamiliar sights, sounds, foods and smells. As a final test of your multitasking abilities, you will also be repeatedly offered the chance to buy one tourist item after another. Carpets and necklaces. Tiger balm and wooden flutes. How many times, and in how many different languages, must I say “No” before they finally believe that I really do not want to buy a fiddle? Besides, it wouldn’t fit in my pack anyways.

Among this frenzy though are glimpses of serenity and joy. Like seeing a cluster of married women, all dressed in red for the festival honor them, walking together. Or the incense and flowers at a street-side shrine, sending prayers up to a beloved Hindu god. In two jam-packed hours, Kathmandu once again showed me how hidden in the crowding and craziness of a busy urban center, lies the basic joys that we all seek: friendship and peace.

I have come to Asia to climb a mountain. Perhaps the rewards and the memories will happen not on the summit though, but in the unexpected moments, both maddening and magical, along the way.

Namaste.