Friday, December 31, 2010

Don’t complain, because you never know what could happen…


I mentioned in my last entry that there were few occasions where I’ve felt I’ve connected with Indian people.   While that still holds true for the vast majority of my interactions, I’ve often been lent a helping hand and sometimes been the recipient of unexpected and timely wisdom.

Accompanying my travel-friend Thomas on a gift buying excursion for his mother in Udaipur, I was readily lured into one of many silver shops lining the main tourist street.  Although I didn’t buy anything, I found myself back there the next day, figuring that if I were to buy something, it might as well be from a shopkeeper I found quite amicable.  After exchanging a couple of words of greeting, Aju said to me “excuse me if I say this, but you are very direct, I like that about you because I know that you are honest, but sometimes you are too direct and not everyone will like this.”  Alright, Aju had my attention!  Our conversation rapidly took a turn towards the philosophical.  Unmarried and, for reasons I am unclear about, not connected with his family, Aju grew up living with his guru, a person that he continues to live with.  Over chai in the cramped jewelry stall, Aju dispensed his wisdom on a wide range of topics.  He cautioned me never to worry about money, because his experience with rich people taught him that they are seldom happy and don’t get the chance to do the things they want to.  (Rich readers, feel free to weigh in on this point)  Besides, why worry when I will always find food to eat and have a roof to sleep under? (he’s right, so far has been true)  He then told me not to worry about love, because that would find me in due course.  He also told me not to worry about my career, because it will work itself out and in the meantime, I should be happy to find and do part-time work.  (Yes, I too noticed the theme here…) Covering all the bases, he advised not to be impatient for things in life, because everything happens for a reason.  Finally, he told me something that has stuck with me ever since and is the title of this entry: “do not complain, because you never know what will happen next.”

This has proven true repeatedly over the course of my trip.  Arriving close to midnight in a ‘small town’ of 80,000 (sorry mom), the son of the hotel owner miraculously appeared to pick me up and whisk me to the guesthouse on the back of his motorbike, backpacks in tow (sorry again).  Unsure of where any train was going at any given time, countless students, young women and families made sure I got the right information.  One time a girl my age and her father even shared their rickshaw to the local bus station with me after finding out on our train ride that we were making the same journey.  I have eaten chocolate, nuts, glutinous sweets and mystery fruits shared by neighbours in my train compartment, never once succumbing to Delhi belly (given my constitution, I’m as shocked as you are). Anticipating that a 4 am taxi ride a train station an hour away couldn’t go smoothly, I was unsurprised when we got a flat tire, and equally unsurprised when my driver deftly changed it and got me to the station on time.  Desperate to print a ticket for my next day’s travel to Goa, I was confronted with the information that the internet in the entire district of Udaipur where I was staying wasn’t working because of a ‘Muslim festival’.  Equally mysterious was the one internet shack in the middle of the chaos that had a signal for ‘the next 20 or 30 minutes’ that let me in, only to have half of my ticket print before the printer was crippled by a paper jam that only the owner could fix (who was of course in absentia, probably due to the festival…).  Arriving in Kerala this week, I was offered a broad array of tours by my guesthouse and tourist information centres alike, only to find out at one of them that there was a taxi/auto rickshaw strike planned for the following day over petrol prices that was anticipated to continue for an indeterminate amount of time!  Unfortunately, having not booked the private taxi tour to Munnar, I am not able to tell you how that situation would have miraculously resolved itself!

The surprises continue with fellow travelers that I’ve met along the way.  I scarcely had time to worry about being alone before I found myself in a conversation with the person next to me, whether it be at a restaurant, in a line or at a yoga class.  What was unexpected is the level of intimacy attainable with complete strangers over fleeting periods of time.  Maybe there is a freedom in having an acquaintance that you are unlikely to meet again.  Or maybe, to use a word that the Germans I’ve met would be happy to see, it stems from the common bond of those also afflicted with wanderlust.  Regardless, my days have been enriched by chats late into the night, laughs about random happenings and invitations to even more places for me to visit!

So Aju’s been right, I could hardly have predicted most of the things that have happened but everything has managed to work out well! Unfortunately, this reality didn’t prevent me from going to bed yesterday worried about where I would find accommodation over New Years eve (Kerala is a popular tourist destination and I detoured there at the last minute).  I’ll even admit to complaining about this in my journal.  But yet again, I could not have guessed what happened next.  Today I am writing this entry in the Delhi airport, waiting for my 3:05 am departure to Toronto.  Yes, you read that right.  One night a couple of weeks ago, despite the fact that the internet was not working on the streets of Bundi, India yet again surprised me by providing an unsecured wireless internet connection for what amounted to five minutes longer than I needed to interview for a volunteer position with the CBA in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.  Yesterday, while lazily spending the morning in Kochi, I found out I got the position.  Confronted with exorbitant price differentials, an initial response from Jet Airways that I could not get a flight back home until January 20th and the imminent transportation strike, I choose the most straight-forward route home presented to me. 

And so, this morning I left Kerala, self described as ‘god’s own country’, the region of India that I first imagined so many years ago.  I didn’t see enough of it, but during my 14 hour train ride south from Goa, I remember thinking clearly that this was the India of my dreams.  Endless rows of coconut trees lined broad lakes interspersed with lush green vegetation.  The paths to homes along the countryside cut red swaths into the earth.  And it was hot, gloriously so!  I think something changes when the temperature rises; I immediately noticed Kochi to be a far more relaxed city than any of the ones I’d recently visited in the North.  To be fair, since I’ve been told that it gets to 50 degrees Celsius during the summer in Rajasthan, I’ll have to reserve final judgment.  Until when? My next trip to India, of course! It is with mixed emotions that I leave here, looking forward to a new place and new adventures and challenges, but at the same time cutting short a plan that was so long in the making.  In a way, it’s comforting to know that you can’t actually see all the places in the world, so I can cut myself some slack on that front.

I will continue to write as I head to Tanzania, but will spare you the details of what I’ll be doing over the next couple of weeks, which will be comprised of decidedly less interested things like laundry, visits to medical professionals and experiments in my parent’s kitchen.  By the time I post this, I will be at home, so you’ll know where to find me!

A happy, healthy New Year to everyone!

Sunday, December 19, 2010

‘ it’s wedding ti-me in rajas-than’


After Kathmandu I headed South to Delhi and then West to Bikaner, to accept the invitation to my Delhi - Kathmandu tour guide Hari’s cousin JV’s wedding (grammar police, get me later).  It is wedding season in Rajasthan (the summers are an oppressive 50 C) and every night you can hear the sounds of traditional music and, if you’re lucky, the occasional riot of fireworks.  Rajasthan is literally the land of kings and on that front it does not disappoint.  As you can see from my pictures (click on the title), this desert state has a history of great wealth and each city outdoes the next with its royal palaces and now-crumbling fortresses.  I am writing this entry from Bundi, a small (80,000) city five hours west of Udaipur, where I am relishing the reprieve from the throngs of tourist stores and of course reflecting on the past three weeks.

The reality is that you can travel a country as I am for months on end without getting a real sense of its culture or the reality of its people.  I, like many tourists, generally seek out the ‘tourist areas’ of every city and there are many practical reasons for this (the least of which is the ready availability of toilet paper).  However, aside from the chorus of “hello, madame, where you from?”s in poor British accents, there is little interaction with actual people.  Traveling on my own, I am learning to perfect my ‘no means: no-I-swear-I-do-not-need-or-want-you-to-clean-my-ears-and-even-if-I-did-it-wouldn’t-be-with-that-hook’ look, which further stifles any hope of meaningful interaction.  All of which is to say, Hari’s generous invitation was a rare chance for a glimpse inside the culture whose rhythms beat around me every day.

Hari drove his parents and I traveled from Bikaner to Jodhpur by ‘tourist’ bus.  This was my first experience on a public bus and I can tell you I was the only tourist on it! Hari’s sons and I sat three to two seats and because to this day I have no idea whether they can understand English, occasionally we played pantomime.  My favourite was when they gestured that this kid in the sleeper compartment of the bus wanted me to hand over my Kindle, as though ‘tourist’ was synonymous with ‘idiot’!

After settling into my hotel room in Jodhpur, I headed across the street to a government building that I surmise is rented to government officials who need the space to host functions.  This was the night before the wedding and the groom’s family was all there.  In one room, all of the gifts for the bride were laid out, to be looked at before being packed to be sent along with the groom to the bride’s house.  I was encouraged to feel the weight of the gold and the traditional dresses and informed by the younger women that wearing these outfits was very, very heavy.  Later in the night, while the women danced to a traditional band, everyone would get up, circle money over their heads and tip the band.  Just before this began, I acquiesced to the demands of Hari’s lovely sixteen year old niece, who insisted that I dance to Waka Waka by Shakira with her as it is apparently the number one song for teenage girls here these days! Mainly I just stood there awkwardly; how does one dance appropriately to Shakira?!?

The next day by virtue of being a foreigner, I had the chance to go along with the groom and the men of his family to the bride in Ajmer.  This procession is known as the Barhat and the women of the groom’s family do not attend.  In car along with Hari and I were two of his nephew-in-laws, both well educated and successful young men around my age.  Since Hari has a fix-or-repair-daily (North America represent!), we had a lot of time to talk during a trip extended by both a flat tire and a cell phone GPS accurate to the nearest 3 kilometers!  What struck me the most about these conversations were their similarities to the conversations that I had with a German who I met at my guesthouse in Jaisalmer.  It occurred to me then that apart from being from being Canadian, I am also a member of a global middle class, reading the same books and websites, contemplating the same questions about the state of the world.  Will similar recognitions of this reality allow us to solve these problems together?

Although as a foreigner and a woman at the Barhat I was painfully conspicuous at times, my conversations were extremely interesting.  Among other things, I learned about why micro finance met its end in Uttar Pradesh and how infrastructure in the country is financed and maintained (don’t worry, details on an ask-only basis).  To my amusement, I found out that lawyers are considered the highest ranking profession, giving me instant (deserved?) credibility.  Emboldened by questions into my personal life, I also dared to ask a couple of questions about meeting before marriage and although I never got a totally straight answer, what I was able to distill is that a man can ask the girl’s family to meet her in advance of the marriage (and I infer, possibly object).  It was explained to me that Rajasthan is especially conservative when it comes to relationships between men and women.  My teenage guide said that your caste will even dictate what kind of celebration that you have.  For example, there was no dancing at this wedding!!! It should be interesting to contrast this wedding with the one in Mumbai in February!

The next day the groom, his bride and the Barhat drove back to Jodhpur for a reception hosted by his family.  Contrary to popular images of India, it is not hot here all the time! Rajasthan is a desert state and in the winter (now) the nights are cold!  My non- EBC wardrobe has only barely been up to the task of keeping me warm.  Luckily, there were outdoor fire pits everywhere and I quickly sat near one.  In retrospect, I still say that it was worth the fact that my hair still vaguely smells like smoke….  Much like at the bride’s family’s reception, there was tons of food and that seemed to be the principal focus.  Quite late in the night the bride and groom arrived and the bride was whisked off to a room with the women of the groom’s family.  There they each took turns lifting the veil covering her face in order to see her for the first time and welcome her to the family.  This was also an opportunity to inspect her clothing and jewelry.  All the while she kept her head bowed and stayed quiet.  I learned from another girl that the bride had not eaten that day, amid all the ceremonies and travel.  Looking at her, I wondered how she felt, days into wedding ceremonies, weighed down in gold, not raising her head… I tried unsuccessfully to inquire about whether women look forward to their wedding days in the same way we do in the West.  I think it was lost in translation when my young host exclaimed “I’m not getting married, I’m in high school!” ah, bless her, she also thought I was nineteen!  This isn’t to say that the groom had it easy, every time I looked at him he had a stoic expression on his face masking what I had earlier observed as a jovial disposition and was often being fed some type of sweet.  Apparently one is only supposed to eat sweet things during their wedding; I was feeling a little queasy watching it.  Above all, I was struck by the level of commitment to one’s family that has people take this great, long, leap of faith together.

Finally, the next morning the groom and his bride returned to his symbolic family house.  They drove in the car that the bride’s family had given him as a wedding gift!  Many ceremonies ensued, including one where he moved a series of trays with his sword and his wife followed behind, collecting them, seven times over.  The man is supposed to lead in life and the woman in death.  Perhaps for the best, my follow up question again was lost in translation.  After lunch, I slipped away to see some of the city of Jodhpur before heading to Udaipur the next morning.  The groom and his bride were spending the afternoon traveling to his family’s village.  Sitting in an auto rickshaw chugging up to another fortress, I was amazed by their stamina and a bit relieved that ‘the party done’.

Next stop? Goa, where my current plans include: lying on the beach, reading on the beach, sleeping on the beach and curiously enough, a pantomime performance at a children’s orphanage!!!

A very merry Christmas (or Happy Holiday) to you all!

After Kathmandu I headed South to Delhi and then West to Bikaner, to accept the invitation to my Delhi - Kathmandu tour guide Hari’s cousin JV’s wedding (grammar police, get me later).  It is wedding season in Rajasthan (the summers are an oppressive 50 C) and every night you can hear the sounds of traditional music and, if you’re lucky, the occasional riot of fireworks.  Rajasthan is literally the land of kings and on that front it does not disappoint.  As you can see from my pictures (click on the title), this desert state has a history of great wealth and each city outdoes the next with its royal palaces and now-crumbling fortresses.  I am writing this entry from Bundi, a small (80,000) city five hours west of Udaipur, where I am relishing the reprieve from the throngs of tourist stores and of course reflecting on the past three weeks.

The reality is that you can travel a country as I am for months on end without getting a real sense of its culture or the reality of its people.  I, like many tourists, generally seek out the ‘tourist areas’ of every city and there are many practical reasons for this (the least of which is the ready availability of toilet paper).  However, aside from the chorus of “hello, madame, where you from?”s in poor British accents, there is little interaction with actual people.  Traveling on my own, I am learning to perfect my ‘no means: no-I-swear-I-do-not-need-or-want-you-to-clean-my-ears-and-even-if-I-did-it-wouldn’t-be-with-that-hook’ look, which further stifles any hope of meaningful interaction.  All of which is to say, Hari’s generous invitation was a rare chance for a glimpse inside the culture whose rhythms beat around me every day.

Hari drove his parents and I traveled from Bikaner to Jodhpur by ‘tourist’ bus.  This was my first experience on a public bus and I can tell you I was the only tourist on it! Hari’s sons and I sat three to two seats and because to this day I have no idea whether they can understand English, occasionally we played pantomime.  My favourite was when they gestured that this kid in the sleeper compartment of the bus wanted me to hand over my Kindle, as though ‘tourist’ was synonymous with ‘idiot’!

After settling into my hotel room in Jodhpur, I headed across the street to a government building that I surmise is rented to government officials who need the space to host functions.  This was the night before the wedding and the groom’s family was all there.  In one room, all of the gifts for the bride were laid out, to be looked at before being packed to be sent along with the groom to the bride’s house.  I was encouraged to feel the weight of the gold and the traditional dresses and informed by the younger women that wearing these outfits was very, very heavy.  Later in the night, while the women danced to a traditional band, everyone would get up, circle money over their heads and tip the band.  Just before this began, I acquiesced to the demands of Hari’s lovely sixteen year old niece, who insisted that I dance to Waka Waka by Shakira with her as it is apparently the number one song for teenage girls here these days! Mainly I just stood there awkwardly; how does one dance appropriately to Shakira?!?

The next day by virtue of being a foreigner, I had the chance to go along with the groom and the men of his family to the bride in Ajmer.  This procession is known as the Barhat and the women of the groom’s family do not attend.  In car along with Hari and I were two of his nephew-in-laws, both well educated and successful young men around my age.  Since Hari has a fix-or-repair-daily (North America represent!), we had a lot of time to talk during a trip extended by both a flat tire and a cell phone GPS accurate to the nearest 3 kilometers!  What struck me the most about these conversations were their similarities to the conversations that I had with a German who I met at my guesthouse in Jaisalmer.  It occurred to me then that apart from being from being Canadian, I am also a member of a global middle class, reading the same books and websites, contemplating the same questions about the state of the world.  Will similar recognitions of this reality allow us to solve these problems together?

Although as a foreigner and a woman at the Barhat I was painfully conspicuous at times, my conversations were extremely interesting.  Among other things, I learned about why micro finance met its end in Uttar Pradesh and how infrastructure in the country is financed and maintained (don’t worry, details on an ask-only basis).  To my amusement, I found out that lawyers are considered the highest ranking profession, giving me instant (deserved?) credibility.  Emboldened by questions into my personal life, I also dared to ask a couple of questions about meeting before marriage and although I never got a totally straight answer, what I was able to distill is that a man can ask the girl’s family to meet her in advance of the marriage (and I infer, possibly object).  It was explained to me that Rajasthan is especially conservative when it comes to relationships between men and women.  My teenage guide said that your caste will even dictate what kind of celebration that you have.  For example, there was no dancing at this wedding!!! It should be interesting to contrast this wedding with the one in Mumbai in February!

The next day the groom, his bride and the Barhat drove back to Jodhpur for a reception hosted by his family.  Contrary to popular images of India, it is not hot here all the time! Rajasthan is a desert state and in the winter (now) the nights are cold!  My non- EBC wardrobe has only barely been up to the task of keeping me warm.  Luckily, there were outdoor fire pits everywhere and I quickly sat near one.  In retrospect, I still say that it was worth the fact that my hair still vaguely smells like smoke….  Much like at the bride’s family’s reception, there was tons of food and that seemed to be the principal focus.  Quite late in the night the bride and groom arrived and the bride was whisked off to a room with the women of the groom’s family.  There they each took turns lifting the veil covering her face in order to see her for the first time and welcome her to the family.  This was also an opportunity to inspect her clothing and jewelry.  All the while she kept her head bowed and stayed quiet.  I learned from another girl that the bride had not eaten that day, amid all the ceremonies and travel.  Looking at her, I wondered how she felt, days into wedding ceremonies, weighed down in gold, not raising her head… I tried unsuccessfully to inquire about whether women look forward to their wedding days in the same way we do in the West.  I think it was lost in translation when my young host exclaimed “I’m not getting married, I’m in high school!” ah, bless her, she also thought I was nineteen!  This isn’t to say that the groom had it easy, every time I looked at him he had a stoic expression on his face masking what I had earlier observed as a jovial disposition and was often being fed some type of sweet.  Apparently one is only supposed to eat sweet things during their wedding; I was feeling a little queasy watching it.  Above all, I was struck by the level of commitment to one’s family that has people take this great, long, leap of faith together.

Finally, the next morning the groom and his bride returned to his symbolic family house.  They drove in the car that the bride’s family had given him as a wedding gift!  Many ceremonies ensued, including one where he moved a series of trays with his sword and his wife followed behind, collecting them, seven times over.  The man is supposed to lead in life and the woman in death.  Perhaps for the best, my follow up question again was lost in translation.  After lunch, I slipped away to see some of the city of Jodhpur before heading to Udaipur the next morning.  The groom and his bride were spending the afternoon traveling to his family’s village.  Sitting in an auto rickshaw chugging up to another fortress, I was amazed by their stamina and a bit relieved that ‘the party done’.

Next stop? Goa, where my current plans include: lying on the beach, reading on the beach, sleeping on the beach and curiously enough, a pantomime performance at a children’s orphanage!!!

A very merry Christmas (or Happy Holiday) to you all!

Saturday, November 27, 2010

There and back again: a 'Chom'olungma tale

I’m back from my Mt. Everest Basecamp trip and am having some much needed respite from the crazy streets of Delhi’s Pahar Ganj neighbourhood in a nice coffee shop with killer lattes (hallelujah!). As usual, click the title for pics :)

Approximately 16 days ago I set out with 6 other people to check seeing the highest point on Earth off of my bucket list. Our ambitious group included a Dane, a Kiwi, an Aussie, a Jersey girl and a Torontonian-cum- NYC-er.  Over the course of 11 days we challenged, motivated and entertained one another on our way into the clouds.  Known as Mt. Everest in the English speaking world, the mountain is called Sargmatha in Nepal and Chomolungma in Tibet.  Our goal was to make it to 5324m above sea level to witness the spot where some of the greatest adventures on Earth begin.

This trip was not for the faint of heart.  Our walk to base camp saw us cover 118km over 8 days of both gentle and steep ascents and descents.  Each night was colder than the last, culminating in a 4am march up Kala Patar to see the sunrise.  Never have I been more grateful for the existence of down, thermal underwear and blister tape. 

I took detailed notes of our journey in my daily journal this post will be guided by some excerpts. Before I begin, I will say that as anticipated, this trip was an emotional one for me.  Never mind the culmination of one of my life’s dreams; the Himalayan mountain range is one of the most spectacular things that I’ve had the fortune of witnessing.  None of my pictures will do it justice.   And with that, to Base camp!

Day 1: Kathmandu 1300m (flight to Lukla 2800m – walk to Phakding 2600m)
  • Words cannot describe the ‘blind landing’ into Lukla airport.  You literally think you are going to crash into the mountain side before realizing that the plane plans to slow down on a landing strip that can’t be longer than 100 feet long, thus awakening the same fears with respect to yet another mountain side!  I urge you to check this out on you tube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vqop17wUiDk&feature=relatedhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vqop17wUiDk&feature=related
  • We walked for 3.5 hours to settle in for the night at an altitude lower than where we started.  Along the way we had our first view of the porters who bring everything into the mountains.  These men carry upwards of 90 kilograms on their backs, up mountainsides, often in flip flops!  It was immediately humbling for me, shuffling up the hills with my walking sticks, day pack and hiking boots!  What a marvel, the things that people do!
“Right now the hills are lush, the rivers are foamy light turquoise and the clouds drift aimlessly across the sky.  Every now and then the scenery is punctuated by the peak of a mountain and I think – good lord, we are actually heading into the sky!!”

Day 2: Phakding 2600m to Namche Bazar 3440m
  • This walk culminated in a steep, 800m ascent into Namche Bazar.  Up until the last push, the trail was beautiful; in fact, it looked a lot like Canada with bubbling streams, blue pine trees and rocky paths.  I asked a young Nepali girl her age and could have sworn that she answered ‘too old’, but those who dispute it will say she said ‘12’.  I prefer the funnier answer myself.
  • We stayed at Kala Patar Lodge, where there was literally no heat and you could see steam rising from our backs and breath when we arrived.  At this point, I described myself in my journal as feeling “acutely alive”…
Day 3: Namche Bazar Acclimation Day
  • After writing smugly about feeling acutely alive, I woke at 4am to the chanting and horn blowing of a contingent of monks also staying at the tea house.  They were conducting prayers to commemorate the one year anniversary of the proprietor’s mother’s death.  The astonishingly cold temperature of the guest house kept me in bed until the last possible minute.
  • Unfortunately for us, our day plan involved ascending 400m to a hotel that boasts views of Mt. Everest on a day where it was so foggy that we could barely see 10m ahead of us.  At least they lit a fire at the restaurant, so we got to experience warmth for the first time in days!
  • After getting back to the hotel, two members of our group fell ill.  Let’s go back to that acutely alive bit one more time….
Day 4: Namche Bazar 3440m – Phortse 3800m

“Where on Earth to begin? I’m at 3800m mainly via will power.  Last night I succumbed to something two other trekkers got earlier in the evening: severe vomiting and diarrhea.” (I know, tmi, deal with it)
  • This morning, I honestly had no idea how I would complete the day’s hike.  If I were at home, it would be the kind of day that I spent in my bed, watching Titanic and willing myself not to die.  Instead I walked for something like 7 hours, fueled by hard candies supplied by Tony, electrolytes mixed by Stine and an i-pod provided by JP.
  • This day also marked our first glimpse of Mt. Everest.  Despite my being completely destroyed, it brought tears to my eyes. 
  • Because of the risk of altitude sickness, we spent our days forcing down water and food in a constant battle against waning appetites.  Exhausted, I ended this day by forcing in liquids and resolving to make it to base camp.  A number of us spent the night in the tea house common room with the stove on all night to recover from the deep chill of the previous two days.  Sweet relief.
Day 5: Phortse 3800m – Dingbouche 4000m                                                                                       
  • A much better day than the preceding one.  The walk wasn’t nearly as difficult as day 4 and our guide Kamal helped by carrying my water bottle.
  •  Some reflections on the experience at this point:
o   I have never seen so much shit in my life (of the yak variety).
o   The water running off of the glaciers is truly the colour of beauty.
o   Despite my lack of religious leanings, I keep hearing in the back of my head ‘stand and look upon the face of god’ (go figure).
o   Each time we go down a hill we’re confronted with going up another.  Each time I think to myself ‘one foot in front of the other’.  Miraculously, each time it works.  I know there’s a life lesson in there somewhere J

Day 6: Acclimation in Dingbouche
  • A steep 400m hill brought us to the lake at the base of the Ama Dablam glacier.  The effort was definitely worth it, the lake was stunning.
  • Unfortunately, by this point I am having an increasingly difficult time sleeping owing to an inability to breathe through my nose coupled with a stomach that refuses to calm down.  I also have a hacking cough that manifests itself whenever I stop moving.  Did I mention the nights are freezing? Thanks to all the water and Diamox, an altitude sickness preventing diuretic, every night involves an internal battle that inevitably culminates in a visit to a freezing squat toilet!
“The more I’m up here, the more I appreciate the feat of humanity.  It is uncomfortable, you are cold, dirty, sick and feeling things you can’t explain.  You can’t eat enough.  You can’t drink enough.  You can only go.  And every day we do, but people go so much longer.  Mt. Everest seems even further away, the closer we get to it.”

Day 7: Dingbouche 4000m to Labouche 4910m

  • During our 5.5 hour walk we scaled a seemingly never ending 200 metre hill which ended in a memorial for many who have lost their lives on Mt. Everest.  It was stunningly beautiful, surrounded by mountains on every side and I thought to myself “what spot could be better for those that lost their lives called by the pursuit of them?”
  • For kicks (i.e. acclimation) we walked up another 100m after lunch and caught our first glimpse of Base camp and Kala Patar (a mountain with an excellent view of Mt. Everest, which you do not actually get at Base camp!)

Day 8: Labouche 4910m – Gorak Shea 5160m – Everest Base Camp 5364m – Gorak Shea 5160m
  • After getting up at 5am we walked for 3 hours to Gorak Shea, had lunch and then walked the 3 hours up to EBC and 2 hours back to Gorak Shea.
  • One of the paradoxes of the mountains is that you can often see where you are going, but as you move closer to it, it seems to be moving further away from you! Up the hill, down the hill, up the hill, down the hill.  Thin air, hot, then cold. Luckily, Mt. Everest afforded us a couple of glimpses of her as incentive as we pressed onwards towards base camp.
  • The first thing that we see is the magnificent Khumbu ice field.  With sheets of ice literally 12 stories high, it is the gateway to Mt. Everest and the first of many grueling challenges for those who dream of summiting.  It is both enchantingly beautiful and foreboding. 
  •  Insert more walking and then, miraculously, we were there.  Base camp is really quite a bleak place; it’s hard to imagine spending weeks on end there as those who summit do.  There is a rock that says ‘Everest Base Camp’ and then a number of stone, inukshuk looking things.  Beyond that, it’s pretty barren – just you, rocks and the daunting Khumbu ice field!
  • As the posing and excitement wore off, it was suddenly freezing!!  Dad, I grabbed you a rock and ran for the hills (i.e. Gorak Shea).
Day 9: Gorak Shea 5160m – Kala Patar (3/4 of the way) – Orsha

“This morning no doubt counts as one of the worst in my life to date. How’s that for some drama?”
  • The trip up to base camp is not complete without the 4am, 400m climb up mountain Kala Patar to witness the pink of the sunrise wash over Mt. Everest.
  • As per usual, I spend much of this night up owing to being unable to breathe through my nose.  Note that this still hasn’t ended at the time of this entry!
  • As we head out into the frigid morning, my headlamp decides to stage a mutiny and busts off my head! Unable to reassemble it as we are leaving, I am left at the mercy of Stine behind me shining JP’s extra flashlight along the path ahead of me.  This of course conjures images of walking off the side of a mountain, unsettling at any time of the day.
  •  As we slowly and deliberately begin to make our way up, my sinuses make it abundantly clear that they will have no part in supporting the effort.  My nose runs uncontrollably.  My hands freeze as I attempt to blow it.  Eventually, my snot will freeze to my face.  I continue to have coughing fits every time we stop.  Having been unable to eat in days, Stine stops.  Desperately cold, I continue to move up the mountain (by now its day light) and make it to the ‘decoy top’ (there is always a fake end to every hill which inevitably is followed by another 100m ascent). Kamal, our tour leader insists on taking a picture of me that actually very accurately reflects the intense misery that I was feeling.
  •  Clip over to the sunrise – the sky behind Mt. Everest is glowing faintly pink.  Of course, my camera isn’t even able to capture this.
  •  By now I can’t feel my toes or fingers.  I can’t breathe properly.  I decide to go back down the hill.
  • When I got back to the tea house, I didn’t speak for ½ an hour.  Later, I would insist to my tour mates that I dissociated from my body ¾s of the way up the mountain.  I literally couldn’t be in my physical body owing to the distress!
  • And then, for good measure, we began our descent and walked 6 hours to Orsha, where we spent another communal night in the tea house common room (although this time it was beyond freezing!)
“The last 9 days have been among the grossest, sickest and most difficult of my life… Let it be a lesson that some things will be so moving, they will be worth working for.”

Day 10: Orsha – Tenboche Monastery – Namche Bazar
  •  Another long day of walking!
  • Tenboche is the most important Buddhist monastery in the Himalayas.  It is nestled on a hill top and surrounded by all the big-shot mountains: Everest, Ana Dablam, Lohoste, etc.  Incidentally, it also has a bakery that serves great cappuccino.
  • Although my respiratory system continued to threaten mutiny, this walk was well rewarded with a stay at Camp De Base (real name) in Namche Bazar – hot water showers (you’ll notice this is the first time I talk of washing) and insulated rooms (another first).
  • The next morning I look in the mirror and recognize myself for the first time since leaving Kathmand
Day 11: Namche Bazar – Phakding

“5- ish hours of walking and a descent of almost a kilometer! I had a great day – I can’t tell you how much better it feels to be getting close to sea level!”

Day 12: Phakding – Lukla
  • The Lukla airport is notorious for flight cancellations owing to low visibility.  In fact, after our arrival, the airport was closed for several days, delaying multiple trips.  Our flight was scheduled to be first the next morning and tensions were running high as people eagerly anticipated flight connections and proper showers.
  • Faced with an entire free day, we played euchre in the Lukla “Starbucks”. This “Starbucks” served Baileys, something I think the ones at home should strongly consider.
  • At night we headed downstairs to the ‘bar’ at our tea house.  All was fun and games with drinking, pool and dirty dancing (sorry Nepal) until this hurt-bag from the UK decided to get into a fight with a local man (who just happened to be the manager of the airport).  Apparently, if you get a Nepali man riled up, his objective then becomes to kill you.  This particular dude picked up an ashtray and a pool ball with the intent to bash the culprit in the head.  Luckily, Tony and JP prevented anything too drastic from happening.  Unluckily, as they say ‘the party done’
Day 12: Lukla – Kathmandu
  • Early morning clarity led to dismay as clouds began to roll into Lukla around 7am and the first flight of the day from Kathmandu turned back.
  •  Then, as quickly as the clouds rolled in, they rolled out and suddenly the airport was filled with planes.  Literally, they were landing, unloading and reloading in the span of minutes and then taking off again.
  • Back to you tube – the planes somehow need to get enough lift from the short runway to get over the hills immediately ahead.  This created some tense moments on our flight when it looked like a very real possibility that we weren’t going to clear the first hill.  Insert the gripping of seats, burying faces in bags and tour leaders crossing themselves.  The good news: we cleared it!  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IzRclzRG8uU&feature=fvw
-          Insert a very rough night ‘celebrating’ life in Kathmandu!

And there you have it, a comprehensive account of 6 people who went a little bit up and a little bit down over and over again on the way to and from Everest Base Camp.  Best of luck to those of you whose mountain climbing experience is just beginning.  I for one am on an indefinite break!