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Wednesday 13th
April, 6pm. Gorak Shep & Everest Base Camp
(EST is 9 hours 45mins behind Nepal)
We climb Kalapather and enjoy a shower
Diary by Terry Kell and Harold Mah
Gorak Shep (Terry Kell)
We spent a comfortable night in the tea house
at Gorak Shep. The environment here is many times
nicer than the brutal harshness of Base Camp
but the air is thick with smoke from the yak
dung fire so I have come outside to find my breath.
Today we climbed Kalapather, which shadows Gorak
Shep and towers up to 18,550 feet. We are obviously
getting acclimatized to the elevation as we managed
it without too much difficulty. It was a little
steep in areas and we had to scramble and climb
over a rock face for the last little bit to get
to the top. We were rewarded with a spectacular
and unbelievable view of Mount Everest. There
was not a cloud in the sky; it was clear and
bright, bright blue. Standing on the summit of
Kalapather, we were actually above Base Camp
and about as high as Camp 1 on Everest. To one
side was an almost sheer 2,000 foot drop that
made me hang back, while other souls peered over
the edge. I went up with Gerry, Keith, Katie,
Harold, Lisa and Yvan and we all made it back.
On the way down we saw someone, in the far distance,
try to parasail off the mountain before they
were dragged over the rocks. Some people are
just a little crazy!
When we got back
we had our first showers and clean clothes
in 6 days. If I’d fallen
off the rock face and gone to heaven it wouldn’t
get any better than this. Everyone is relaxed
and spent time sitting outside in the warm sun.
Keith, Katie, Yvan and Lisa shared lunch with
us and then left. They are trekking on to Kunde
Hospital to continue their research and we will
meet up with them again in Kathmandu. The rest
of the expedition party joined us at 4pm on their
way down from Base Camp. Almost immediately,
Norm and Wayne set off to climb Kalapather and
are only now returning to Gorak Shep.
The Ryerson University research has gone particularly
well and they were helped out by a team from
the National University of Singapore who took
the survey up to Camp 2 and completed it there.
We had a good meal tonight which was freshly
cooked and prepared, despite our appetites still
being low.
Eight of us get
a helicopter ride off the mountain tomorrow
and fly all the way back to Kathmandu. Apart
from the four that have already started their
hike, Dave, Wayne and Chris also decided to
trek back down the trail, so we won’t
all meet up again until they reach Kathmandu
by the weekend. Behind us, we leave Sean and
Harold to brave the mountain.
Everest Base Camp (Harold Mah)
Everyone has
left. It’s quiet and strange
and the pattern of our days is changing. We feel
left behind and miss our friends and families.
Sean and I kept ourselves busy by climbing up
the Khumbu Ice Fall, half way to Camp 1 today
(18,000 feet) and now we have to stay at Base
Camp for the next two days to acclimatise some
more.
We have spent
time rearranging and shrinking our site, as
we need less room. The days are getting warmer
and some of the other expedition’s
tents have flooded as the glacial ice melts.
Some of the rocks have been rolling around camp,
freed by the melting ice, so everyone has been
shifting a little
I gave first aid to some of the sherpas today
to help them with their blistered feet. I was
also a TV producer, helping them with the use
of the camera for Rogers. Tonight we invited
the sherpas to join us for a traditional meal
of lentils, rice and a curry dish. Tomorrow morning
we have been invited to a South Korean meal and
celebration which should be a lot of fun.
We’re a little cleaner today - Sean had
a shower and I had a “passport” shower – face
and hair.
Today I had the
pleasure of meeting Fusmita Maskey, a 24 year
old Kathmandu girl who is a keen mountaineer.
She’s already climbed
three peaks over 5,000m (including Walai) and
has set her sights on K2 once she gets up Everest.
She’s a remarkable person. She’s
well educated, with a Masters in English, and
now teaches English and does medical transcribing.
She’s a dancer, a singer and wants to show
Nepalese women that you don’t have to be
a sherpa to climb mountains.
More later.
Terry & Harold
Terry Kell is returning to Kathmandu, with most
of the expedition party and they will return
to Canada within the next 7-10 days.
Harold Mah is staying at Base Camp to support
Sean Egan when he makes his summit attempt in
May.
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