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Saturday 23rd April,
9pm. Everest Base Camp
(EST is 9 hours 45mins
behind Nepal)
We get ready
for tomorrow’s journey through
the Ice Fall
Diary by Harold Mah
This is the last blog from Base Camp, before
we start climbing again.
Tomorrow, Sunday,
we will set off at 5am and we plan to get to
Camp 1 where we will stay the night. Then,
we will climb to Camp 2 where we will stay
another night. Finally, we will climb to Camp
3, at around 22,500 feet, and stay one last
night. The climb to Camp 3 is a 70 degree ascent,
literally up the side of the mountain, to a
precarious spot which will be our home for
the night. This is my goal; my Everest. From
there, we return back to Base Camp before Sean
heads back to Camp 3 about a week later for his
final acclimatisation before he makes his summit
bid. We are both excited and filled with a little
trepidation. Excited, because we will be climbing
again after what seems like a long time at Base
Camp. Filled with trepidation, because we have
to go through the Khumbu Ice Fall once more and
go higher than we’ve ever been up Everest.
Apparently the higher camps have a lot of fresh
snow and it’s quite a bit colder than it
is at Base Camp.
Of course, when I return to Base Camp I will
be bringing out the alcohol and having a party!
Today I chatted
with fellow Canadian, Gabriel Filippi. He has
over 10 years climbing experience and almost
made it to the top of Everest in 2,000 but
turned back 500 metres from the top because
of bad weather. Last year he solo climbed Mt
McKinley in Alaska (North America’s highest
mountain at 20,320 feet) also known as Denali
and was the expedition leader on a trip to Mont
Blanc in France. He has climbed in Kenya and
Russia and is an amazing guy, full of energy
and determination.
The weather has
improved and there was no fresh snow today
after three days of snow. This morning, Sean
and I had a snowball fight before spending
more time slimming down our packs so that we
take the bare minimum when we start the ascent
tomorrow. The Ice Fall, in particular, is a killer
if you try and carry too much, so every possible
thing that we don’t need is taken out of
our packs. I now fully understand why so many
climbers are so dedicated to packing light-weight
equipment. We also worked on the satellite equipment
that we will be taking up the mountain and ended
the day with apple pie. Last night we had Jello,
for the first time!
I will continue to send in blogs as we go up
the mountain, so keep looking out for them.
More laterHarold
Harold Mah is staying at Base Camp to support
Sean Egan when he makes his summit attempt in
May.
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