Trek to Everest Base Camp, April 2010

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simonov
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Post by simonov »

Fritz is holding out on us.
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Sam Page
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Post by Sam Page »

I saw a video of him on the summit of Kala Pataar (~18,500 feet). I think he has forgotten about the San Gabriels . . .
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simonov
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Post by simonov »

Sam Page wrote:I saw a video of him on the summit of Kala Pataar (~18,500 feet). I think he has forgotten about the San Gabriels . . .
I think he is catching up with all the work he missed, but am disappointed he has forgotten where his real priorities ought to lie.
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mve
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Post by mve »

Do you know which outfitter Fritz went with?
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simonov
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Post by simonov »

mve wrote:Do you know which outfitter Fritz went with?
His friends he was meeting there are with Mountain Trip.

This is their blog: http://mteverest2010.blogspot.com/

Cindy Abbott (frequent Baldy climber) is with them too: http://reachingbeyondtheclouds.com/category/mt-everest/
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mve
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Post by mve »

Very cool, I am interested to read Fritz's TR and I wish Cindy "Happy Trails".
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He219
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Post by He219 »

Hi, everybody!

Just want to report that my friends Denise, Paul & Cindy reached the summit of Mount Everest a few hours ago (Wohoo!) and are at Camp 4 resting before making their way down to Camp 2 tonight ..
Mountain Trip Report

Didn't mean to keep y'all hanging without a report, but I wanted to wait until they made it.
We were all there at base camp to support our friends after-all ...

Uploading photos for you now!
:D
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He219
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Post by He219 »

We started off on April 15th with a 13.5 hour direct flight to Hong Kong ...
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Fritzilla in the streets of HK
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The city has grown a lot since my last visit, when it was still a British colony.
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Partial ETE group shot in HK - 23 of us went up to Everest Base Camp
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We arrive in Kathmandu, Nepal, 34.5 grueling hours after leaving LAX - along with a stop-over in Dhaka, Bangladesh! We lost contact with the Kathmandu Control Tower a couple of times during a thunderstorm. After multiple aborted landing attempts and after circling for almost 2 hours we finally arrive around midnight!
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^ This Sadhu was 103 years old!
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Hindus, Muslims and Buddhists all live together in relative harmony ..
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Symbols of good fortune
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Back of Durbar Palace
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After a stay at the Yak & Yeti hotel we head to Lukla in two small planes and a turbulent flight to the base of the Himalaya Mountains.
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Tenzing-Hillary Airport in Lukla. There are only two airports in the world higher in elevation.



to be continued ..
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Taco
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Post by Taco »

Awesome, brotha!
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mve
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Post by mve »

That's awesome -- keep it coming man! How did you like staying at the Yak & Yeti hotel?
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He219
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Post by He219 »

mve wrote:That's awesome -- keep it coming man! How did you like staying at the Yak & Yeti hotel?
The Yak & Yeti is a pretty sweet joint. Used to be one of the Royal Palaces.
You never know who you're going to run into there. It was especially sweet after almost 3 weeks on the trail.
The shower, food, clean bed, rooms and real flushing toilets were regarded with great appreciation upon our return ..

The Yak & Yeti was an oasis in a town overwhelmed by Maoists staging a general strike by shutting down the city and local transportation upon our return. I think it's still going on. Luckily the people are non-violent and the riot police gave some measured sense of protection.
Good thing we saw the city in a different light when we arrived.
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He219
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Post by He219 »

Arriving in Lukla we made our way on the trail and the 10 day hike to Everest Base-camp.
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Guides & Porters looking for work
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Just above the runway. No room for touch & go's ..
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Lukla
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Typical Prayer wall. You always pass clockwise. It felt great to finally start trekking ..
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One of dozens of suspension and other types of bridges
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Our porters. What a luxury not having to hump the additional weight.
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The Thulo Gumela Monastery at Phakding, 2670m
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End of day 1



Anybody know how to rotate pix on imageshack?
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He219
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Post by He219 »

Day 2
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Sagarmatha National Park entrance
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The food from the various Tea Houses we visited exceeded my expectations.
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Man and beast share the path up and down. You constantly have to watch what you step into.
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The route up to Namche Bazar. This is where we gained some altitude.
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Entering Namche Bazar, 3,440m
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And a nice dinner of Yak Steak, Fries & Wine. Yak only survive above 11,000 feet. This one didn't make it ;]
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Post by mve »

Great pictorial -- keep it coming :D

Where did you stay in Phakding? How was it?
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simonov
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Post by simonov »

Great pics. What kind of distance is it from Lukla to Namche and Base Camp?
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RyanB
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Post by RyanB »

Wow! Amazing picts! Now I'm hungry.
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He219
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Post by He219 »

simonov wrote:Great pics. What kind of distance is it from Lukla to Namche and Base Camp?
Not quite sure, but it's about a 75 mile round-trip from Lukla to Base Camp climbing from 9,000 to 18,500 feet in 10 days, 3 of those being rest days to acclimate. The medivac helo flew multiple times a day up along the route rescuing climbers and trekkers suffering from AMS. Without travel insurance that flight would cost you 8-10k for service to a hospital in Khatmandu!

You lose about a half a day flying into Lukla and hike for 4-5 hours up to Phakding and then 6-9 hours a day including breaks. We stayed at nice lodges, all compartmentalized into 6'x8' sleeping quarters constructed of thin 1/4" plywood with two berths each. You'd hear people snoring in the rooms around and you would shake when they move. Still a lot better than sleeping in a tent. The bathrooms were to be desired, a hole in the ground and a bucket of water to flush. The stench is overpowering, especially with an exotic diet of curry, lentils and garlic. I almost lost it a couple of times and retreated whenever possible.

Our lead guide, Natang, is a bit of a local celebrity. He came out of retirement to help out Mountain Trip when our original guide, Heidi Kloos (RiP), was killed in an avalanche at her home in Colorado just two weeks before our trip. Natang was a top Nepali climber but his wife forced him into retirement and into managing a lodge after 4 members of his joint Nepali-Indian Army climbing team perished 200 meters below the summit of Everest many years ago. Natang runs the Moonlite Lodge high on Namche. That's where we stayed. We had 6 or 7 porters, 5 Sherpa guides and Natang for the 23 of us.

Things really start to get interesting from Namche up. We took an acclimation day at Namche and hiked up to Syangboche and the Everest View Hotel to get our first views of Mount Everest.

April 20th, 2010 (Day 3):
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View from the Moonlite Lodge overlooking Namche Bazar
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First views of Everest and Lhotse from Syangboche. Ama Dablam on right hand side
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Everest with the plume and Lhotse South Face.
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Ama Dablam West Face
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Everest View Hotel
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And back down to Namche.
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Namche Bazar
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A short visit to the Sherpa Museum and some shopping in Namche
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Loads of mountaineering clothes and equipment, mostly inexpensive knock-offs.
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Bought a traditional Nepali-Tibetian fox fur hat ..
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Taco
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Post by Taco »

Gonna hafta sport that hat on climbs!!!
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Post by simonov »

TacoDelRio wrote:Gonna hafta sport that hat on climbs!!!
It needs horns.
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He219
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Post by He219 »

TacoDelRio wrote:Gonna hafta sport that hat on climbs!!!
It's a formal hat, not constructed for climbing ..
;)

Day 4, Namche Bazar to Tengboche (top of middle ridge, rhs). Everest is the distant peak behind the Lhotse ridgeline
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This is where we approach the Rhododendron Forest that surrounds Tengboche
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Crossing the Dudh Kosi and the Imja Khola rivers, then some nice gain
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Looking back towards Namche (beyond the ridge that's below the snow) from Tengboche, 3,867 metres (12,687 ft)
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Tengboche Monastery, one of the most important religious centers for the Sherpa culture. The area is surrounded by the Rhododendron forest.
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Everest, Lhotse and Ama Dablam from Tengboche
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The Monks loved Frisbee. There's always downtime before settling in for the night ..
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mve
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Post by mve »

This picture of Namche that you took is incredible -- it looks as if the whole town is about to slide off the cliff (knocked on wood):
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Sam Page
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Post by Sam Page »

Your pictures bring back some of the best memories I have.
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He219
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Post by He219 »

Sam Page wrote:Your pictures bring back some of the best memories I have.
You've done the trek, Sam?

Day 5: Tengboche to Dingboche (14,250 feet)
The trail passes trough the Rhododendron Forest, a magical place. The whole time I kept thingking that a Unicorn would cross our path ;]
After decending to Debuche we crossed a truss bridge over the Imja Khola and then climbed up to Pangboche among the mani stones.
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Kumar, one of our porters ..
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Ama Dablam South Face
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Everest beyond the Lhotse Ridgeline, Lhotse on the right
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Vegetation diminishes as we enter Alpine territory
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Ice.

Day 6 we hiked up to the village of Chukhung to the east, Lhotse Base-camp approach.
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Ama Dablam North Face
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Island Peak
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Lhotse debris field
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Cold and windy at 17,125 feet overlooking Ama Dablam and the Lhotse debris field. A small group of us decided to suck air and climbed Chukhung Ri.
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Natang during our daily briefings at the Snow Lion Lodge in Dingboche. The ususal Yak-dung fired stove in the middle of the great room ..

Day 7, Dingboche. We did a small hike to another local peak and I used the time to do some badly needed laundry. Met the climbers of the Kazakh Army Climbing team CSKA (Central Sports Club of Kazakh Army) while staying at the same lodge at Dingboche. These guys are tough as nails. A couple of Latvians in our group translated through the Russian language and we got the lowdown on their expedition. After losing a climber last year descending the Lhotse face, they are attempting to summit Lhotse again this year; no Sherpas, no Porters, no oxygen. They approach using Everest BC and veer right at the South Col in lieu of left to Everest. These guys are rock solid and never crack a smile. All they do is climb 8,000+ meter peaks .. totally self-sufficient.
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mve
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Post by mve »

Kumar is a tough dude! No hip belts for these guys ...
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Sam Page
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Post by Sam Page »

Fritz: Yea, I was in the Khumbu for 45 days in the 90s. That's by far the longest I've gone without a bath.
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He219
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Post by He219 »

Haha, Sam. I was happy just getting a bucket shower when available ..
mve wrote:Kumar is a tough dude! No hip belts for these guys ...
Kumar is a great guy, all smiles.

All of the porters are tough cats. Check it out: (somewhere around 16k)
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mve
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Post by mve »

:shock: having done considerable amount of woodwork and construction I am just floored by them carrying all that plywood and beams up there!!! :shock: :shock:
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Post by He219 »

Day 8: Dingboche to Lobuche, 16,175 feet
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Dughla (15,158 feet / 4,620m). Crossing the freezing glacial runoff we head up the Khumbu Glacial moraine
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Chortens to those who perished on Everest, a solemn place.
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Heading up the lateral moraine of the Khumbu Glacier
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.. and arriving in Lobuche
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Lou A, Sherpas and Porters. The youngest two porters are 16 years old!

Day 9, Lobuche to Gorak Shep (17,000 feet) then up Kala Patthar!
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Even small gains become more of a challenge at altitude ..
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The Khumbu Glacier. If you don't believe in climate change then you have to see for yourself how these glaciers have receded.
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Nuptse!
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The tarn at Gorak Shep with Pumori in the background. After a bowl of soup we head up Kala Patthar, just a little bump we think
... but it's out of view and farther up the Pumori ridgeline
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Nuptse West Face (25,790 feet)
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Everest's peak and plume barely visible next to Nuptse ...
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It may look easy, but in the thin air at 17.5k your heart starts racing as you struggle to breathe
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Finally the last scramble, heart practically beating out of my chest!
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And 18,515 feet (5,643m), wohoo - Kala Patthar!
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Everest and Nuptse
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Everest Basecamp and the Khumbu Icefall below
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The next day we head into Basecamp ..
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mve
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Post by mve »

These two pictures are just amazing -- thanks for sharing!

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mve
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Post by mve »

I am still amazed by the second image -- that's Everest base camp in the left bottom corner -- we are so minuscule!!
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