Thursday 28th April,
8pm. Everest Base Camp
(EST is 9 hours 45mins
behind Nepal)
Very happy. Very strong.
Diary by Harold Mah
Sean and his sherpa are recovering in Dughla.
They are both doing OK but plan to go on to Pheriche
to get medical advice before coming back up the
mountain. They want to make sure that they are
receiving the best possible advice before proceeding.
Last
night we had a dance party in our mess tent
to celebrate my return, which was kind of bizarre.
We had an eclectic mix of sherpa rock music,
Nepali folk music and western rock music and
we all let our hair down, a bit. My new name,
from the sherpas, is “Very happy, very
strong”, and they take delight in grinning
at me and calling out my name. I think it was
the warmest night I have experienced at Base
Camp because I managed to sleep without my gloves
or toque for the first time.
Base
Camp is very quiet. The climbers are coming
off the mountain after their first acclimatisation
ascents and are talking about the first summit
window opening May 8th to 10th, in about
11 days time. It’s an exciting and nervous
time for everyone. The acclimatisation schedule
seems to be to ascend to Camp One, where you
spend a night, before having two nights at Camp
Two, one night at Camp Three, one night at Camp
Two and one night back at Base Camp. Then you
head back down the mountain to Pheriche for what
is called an “oxygen vacation” for
a few days. When the climbers return to Base
Camp they are ready to ascend again, hopefully
all the way.
Today started as another sunny and warm day
and after a fantastic shower I managed to get
my laundry in hand, along with quite a few other
climbers who had also returned off the mountain.
We laid our clothes out on the rocks to dry in
the midday sun, just before a snow storm swept
in and covered us all in two to three inches
of fresh snow. Consequently all my clean clothes
are now covered in snow and frozen to the rocks!
Unlike other days, this snow has not melted but
hopefully it will and the clothes will thaw and
dry before I need them.
It
turns out that when we descended yesterday
we missed a big collapse in the Khumbu Ice
Fall when some of the seracs collapsed. Seracs
are large isolated blocks of ice and when they
dropped everyone was running helter-skelter
for cover. No one was hurt, thank goodness,
but one of the ladders that we’d previously
descended was now hanging three feet clear
of the ice, indicating the size of the fall
a little while after we passed. The Ice Fall
is a highly unpredictable part of the mountain
and everyone is just pleased when they get
through it safely.
A
new party of climbers has appeared at Base
Camp intent on climbing Lhotse, which at 27,939
feet (8,516m) is the fourth highest mountain
in the world. Lhotse is connected to Everest
by the South Col, a ridge that never drops
below 26,200 feet (8,000metres) and it’s
no less daunting than Everest.
Will
Cross, the diabetic mountaineer who injects
himself with insulin six times a day as he
climbs up the higher parts of Everest borrowed
one of my DVDs tonight – Vertical
Limit, which is about a mountain rescue on
K2. I guess he was just getting himself in
the mood!
In
an earlier blog, I reported that Willie Benegas
was part of a shadowy group tangled up with
hijacking and ransoming expedition mascots.
I am happy to report that both the penguin
and the giraffe have been returned to their
homes, none the worse for wear, although I’m
unable to tell you what ransoms were paid.
Thank
you to all the people who have sent us emails – I managed to read them all today – from
family and friends, to the school in Sherbrooke,
Quebec to the folk in South Carolina, Eire and
Taiwan. We don’t know everyone but we really
appreciate all your messages of support and goodwill.
More later
Harold
Harold Mah is staying on Everest to support
Sean Egan when he makes his summit attempt
in May.
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