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Friday 15th
April, 8pm. Kathmandu and Camp One
(EST is 9
hours 45mins behind Nepal)
Sean and Harold reach Camp One
Diary by Terry Kell and Harold Mah
Kathmandu (Terry Kell)
We left Gorak
Shep yesterday and left Mount Everest far behind
us. The helicopter was late arriving so we
played a game of Frisbee with the sherpas.
We had a great time and we left them the Frisbee.
The helicopter was an old Russian warhorse
and it flew us back to Kathmandu on the most
spectacular ride I have ever been on. We felt
like we were in an Indiana Jones movie as we
descended and spiralled down the mountainside
with some of the world’s most stunning
scenery flashing by the windows.
Now we are back
in the guest house at Kathmandu where we first
stayed and we are enjoying hot showers, flush
toilets and comfortable beds. We are still
waiting for the hikers to join us – Lisa,
Yvan, Katie, Keith, Chris, Dave and Wayne – and
when they get here, on the weekend, we will have
a celebratory party.
Our thoughts are with Sean and Harold because
we know the level of comfort they have on the
mountain.
Camp One (Harold Mah)
Sean and I have
climbed to 19,370 feet – Camp
1. We gained 1,720 feet in an 8 hour climb and
we are absolutely and utterly exhausted. When
we arrived here we collapsed asleep in our tent
until we were woken by the sherpas with tea and
cookies. And, the most amazing thing! I had my
tea while feeding cookie crumbs to a sparrow!
I have no idea what a sparrow is doing up here
at almost 20,000 feet, but Mother Nature has
a way of reminding you about your precarious
frailty.
Sean has found
the altitude has upset his taste buds and everything
tastes very acidic, so he’s
having trouble enjoying his food. But, other
than that, we’re both well.
Neither Sean
nor I have ever done anything before, as stupid
or as dangerous as crossing the Khumbu Ice
Fall. It has so many challenges that it just
beats the energy out of you. It’s totally
physically and mentally exhausting. You have
to deal with the altitude, the crevasses, the
heat and dehydration, the cold and the wind.
You’re climbing, jumping, descending, scrambling,
using every muscle in your body and hanging on
for grim death. It’s the wind that is so
challenging. One moment it’s calm and warm
in the sun; the next a wind storm has picked
up from nowhere that threatens to throw you down
the nearest crevasse.
The ladders across the Ice Fall were not as
intimidating as we feared. The longest was 5
aluminium ladders roped together vertically and
was a fairly safe climb. We passed huge ice boulders
that you think will roll over you at any moment
but seem to stay attached to the mountain.
The temperature
has plummeted from +27 degrees (it was extremely
hot and sunny today) to 0 degrees in 2 hours
and we have been sleeping in our down jackets,
in our sleeping bags, in our tents. The wind
is so strong that it’s lifting
the tent right now and it seems like only our
weight keeps it from flying away.
I have gained so much new respect for the sherpas
today. They carry tons of gear up and down the
mountain and they were having races down the
Ice Fall. They did not even wear crampons; they
just slid down the Ice Fall.
Camp 1 is quite
different from Base Camp. We are perched on
beautiful blue ice with excellent views of
Mount Everest. Tomorrow, we’ll
climb halfway to Camp 2. It should be a fairly
safe climb up the slopes of the mountain and
will be nothing like as hostile as the Khumbu
Ice Fall. But then we go back to Base Camp, through
the Ice Fall!
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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