Friday 29th April.
Everest Base Camp
(EST is 9 hours 45mins behind
Nepal)
Tragedy.
Diary by Harold Mah
Sean called me
this morning from Dughla and told me that he
didn’t feel well enough
to hike back to Pheriche. After discussing it
for a while I arranged for the helicopter to
come and collect him and fly him all the way
to Kathmandu. Our thinking was that after a few
days rest and medical attention Sean would come
back to Base Camp and be ready to reacclimatise.
I joked with him about being lazy and not being
bothered to walk down the mountain. He laughed
and joked back, “Don’t be silly,
nothing’s going to happen to me. Just tell
everyone that I love them.” We laughed
and that was the last time we spoke.
I put the phone down and carried on with my
chores.
A little later
the phone rang and one of the sherpas picked
it up. I knew immediately, from the look on
the sherpas’ faces, that something
very bad had happened. He looked at me and just
said, “Sean is dead!”
Apparently Sean
had collapsed as the helicopter arrived, probably
from a cardiac arrest. They carried out CPR
on him but it was no good. The helicopter carried
him to Lukla where he was officially pronounced
dead and then on to Kathmandu where his body
now rests. I have been dealing with the Canadian
Embassy in Kathmandu which has been great – absolutely
amazing.
Everyone cried. Sherpas cried; climbers cried;
I cried. How could this man who was so strong,
die so quickly?
This afternoon,
as the flags at Base Camp fluttered quietly
in the breeze, we knew Sean was with us in
spirit. It was the first sunny afternoon in
I don’t know how long and the beer we
opened to toast his memory didn’t froth
over for the first time ever!
Base Camp is
very quiet, very sad and very lonely. We are
all in disbelief. People normally get better
as they go down the mountain, not worse. Climbers
sometimes die on the mountain, not coming down
from Base Camp. Our friend, Gabriel Filippi,
has announced that he is coming off the mountain
to be with us and one of the other climbing teams
said they’d come with Gabriel and help
him through the Khumbu Ice Fall. A team that
is hoping to summit Everest in late May dropped
by and are taking a small passport photo of Sean
to the top and will bury his picture there. People’s
kindness has been very touching.
They are planning a puja to bless everyone on
the mountain because climbers and sherpas are
very superstitious and everyone is shocked that
the accident happened before anyone has even
summited.
I want to thank
everyone for their kind messages and thoughts.
I will be leaving Base Camp in the next 24-48
hours to go to Kathmandu. My thoughts are with
Sean’s family; my spirit is with
Sean’s.
More later
Harold
This is one of a series of blogs reporting the
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