Sunday 24th April,
6pm. Everest Camp One
(EST is 9 hours 45mins
behind Nepal)
Energy drinks and Snicker bars
Diary by Harold Mah
We have arrived at Camp One. (19,290 feet, barometric
pressure 486)
We are sleeping in a tent which has broken zippers
and which is on top of a sharp block of ice which
is pushing through the floor. We don’t
have our usual sleeping pads so we’re cold
and extremely uncomfortable. But we’re
very pleased to be here again.
Sean, unfortunately, has a bit of a minor lung
infection which has slowed him down today. It
took him so long to get to Camp One (ten hours)
that I thought he’d turned back. The good
thing was that by the time he made it here, I
had dinner and hot water available so he was
able to get immediate sustenance. He has shown
enormous strength and tenacity in getting here.
The Khumbu Ice Fall never fails to frighten the
living daylights out of me. We came through safely,
once again, but there is a huge 6-storey block
of ice that is ready to fall at any time that
you have to walk under. It’s adorned with
prayer flags and last time someone was throwing
rice at it and himself and others, to bless everyone.
You just grit your teeth, hope for the best and
don’t stop for any “Kodak moments”.
There is lots of snow here at Camp One and there
have been numerous minor avalanches all day.
We’re in no particular danger from the
avalanches. It’s so bright on the mountain
that you have to wear sunglasses all the time
and everyone carries two pairs just in case they
lose one.
I am proof that the process of acclimatisation
works. Last time I came to Camp One, on April
18th, it took me eight hours. This time it took
me five-and-a-half hours. I didn’t need
to use ascenders or any of things that you can
use to assist you with climbing the ropes. My
body has already spent two nights at Camp 1 and
I have previously climbed to over 20,000 feet
so it knows this experience. I also changed my
approach this time which helped improve my speed.
To start with, I had a really good night’s
sleep last night - I finally figured out what
to wear in my sleeping bag to keep warm all night!
Then, as I was walking up the mountain, I had
energy drinks every 45 minutes and Snicker bars
every two hours. I also used a walking pole.
What was driving me crazy though was that I was
following someone who was sucking on Halls lozenges
and dropped every single wrapper on the mountain.
So I followed this unnecessary trail of litter
all the way up.
Tomorrow I’ll press on to Camp Two. Sean
is resting now and will decide whether to push
on to Camp Two when he gets up in the morning.
More later
Harold
Harold Mah is staying on Everest to support Sean
Egan when he makes his summit attempt in May. |