In 2000, Chris Warner helped guide an expedition, led by Russel Brice, on the North Ridge of Everest. Although the team didn't summit, it was a great Everest experience: from rescues and intrigue, to bitter cold nights and jet tream winds. And just when things couldn't get worse, a lake formed on the trail to Base Camp, requiring the building of a raft at 20,000 feet.
Climbing the North Ridge of Everest (8850m./ 29,035 ft.)
Expedition Overview
This
will be Himalayan Experience's 6th expedition to Mt. Everest. Russell Brice,
the expedition leader, has twice summited Everest via this route, and has
participated in eight Everest trips in the past. Himalayan Experience's team of
seasoned Sherpas and guides will be leading a team of eight climbers and five
trekkers.
The North Ridge of Everest lays wholly within the country of Tibet. This is the
route pioneered by the British in the 1920's and 30's. It was the sight of the
great Mallory and Irvine epic of 1924, and was first climbed to the summit in
1974 by a team of Chinese climbers.
The North Ridge differs greatly from Nepal's South Col route. Edmund Hillary
and Tenzing Norgay successfully ascended the South Col route in 1953. Since
then, the South Col route has been ascended by over 800 climbers. The North
Ridge has had fewer than 200 successful ascents.
Base camp will be located on the Rongbuk glacier at 5,200 meters. From here, a
rocky trail leads to an Interim Camp and on to Advanced Base Camp at 6,400
meters. Luckily, most of our gear can be carried the 22 km from BC to ABC by
yaks.
ABC will be our base of operations for the upper mountain. This collection of
tents, complete with our supplies of communication equipment, climbing gear,
oxygen bottles and food, is the center of our expedition's logistical
operations.
The first two thirds of the expedition will be spent organizing these and the
higher camps. Teams of Sherpas and climbers will shuttle gear ever higher on
the peak, establishing camps at 7000 m., 7500 m., 7900 m. and 8300m.
Fixed lines (ropes strung along the route and anchored in place) will connect
the camps and lead towards the summit. The fixed lines are a critical part of
the safety system we use. Heavily laden climbers use the ropes to scale the
steeper slopes and weary climbers rely on them to guide their descent. Even in
a storm, a climber attached to the fixed lines, can find their way to the next
camp.
Once the camps are established, we can begin to dream of the summit. A
combination of events are critical to a successful summit day. The weather must
be perfect, light winds and clear skies. And the climbers have to be
acclimatized (the process by which the body adjusts to the altitude) and
healthy.
The North Ridge's primary challenge comes on summit day. The route from high
camp at 8,300 meters climbs through the twisted and blocky yellow band and onto
the crest of the ridge, just below the First Step. Following the ridge line, up
and over the three steps and onto the summit snow slopes is an airy experience.
The Second Step, a 5.8 corner system, is ascended via a ladder placed there by
the Chinese during the first ascent in 1974. Traversing the ridge, you are
treated to spectacular views of the Kangshung face, which dives for over 3000
meters beneath your crampons.
The final climb to the summit takes you up a classic pyramid of snow, slowly
flattening at the top. The summit ridge undulates towards the South Summit and
the route rising from the South Col. We are all hoping to snap photos of
ourselves, with this view behind us.
The Team
The Guides:
Russell Brice (expedition leader). Owner of Himalayan Experience and Chamonix Experience guide services.
A New Zealander living in Chamonix, France, Russell is a U.I.A.G.M. certified
guide, with over 25 years of professional experience. Highlights include 9
seasons on Everest, twice to the top via the North Ridge. Speed records on the
SW Ridge of Ama Dablam and the Tichy route on Cho Oyo. He has participated in
over 35 Himalayan expeditions. Russell is a founding member of IGO8000, a
professional organization which is working to improve the quality of commercial
expeditions to the world's highest peaks. While not guiding, he devotes himself
to organizing the logistics of extreme balloon trips (ballooning over Everest,
the circumnavigation of the globe, and a trip to the stratosphere).
Andy Lapkass ( Breckenridge, Colorado,USA). Andy has been climbing in
the Himalaya since 1984, with over 27 expeditions in Pakistan, Tibet and Nepal.
He has summited Everest twice, both via the South Col (1990 & 1999). Other
summits include: Lhotse, Nuptse, Cho Oyo, Ama Dablam & Pumori. He has 15
years of experience as a guide. Andy is also a physician's assistant, providing
valuable medical training to the team.
Chris Warner (Ellicott City, Maryland, USA). Owner of Earth Treks'
Climbing Center and an A.M.G.A. certified Alpine Guide. Chris has guided over
60 international expeditions. Highlights include new routes on Ama Dablam and
Shivling and ascents of Cho Oyo and over one hundred 6,000 meter peaks.
Mark Whetu (Queenstown, New Zealand). Owner of Mountain Works, a guide
service and gear shop on the South Island. Mark has climbed over two dozen
peaks in the Himalaya. He has twice summited Everest via the North Ridge. Other
highlights include: Cho Oyo, Shishapangma (2x), and Island Peak (5x). Mark is a
very accomplished high altitude cinematographer and will be filming the
expedition.
The Climbers:
Jean Clemenson
(Argentiere, France). Jean is a
certified U.I.A.G.M. guide who has been climbing in the Alps for over 50 years.
He has put up new routes close to home and has been to the Himalayas more than
25 times. He has climbed Cho Oyo, Ama Dablam (3x), Pumori, Shishapangma, and
many others. Jean is 62 years old and hopes to be the oldest to reach the
summit. He has the experience to pull it off: after all, this will be his fifth
expedition to Everest.
Daniel Surchat (Rome, Italy). Daniel, 41, is a mathematician. He has
been on expeditions to Cho Oyo where he reached 7,800 meters. In the Alps he
has climbed such classics as the North Face of Les Courtes, Ag. Argentiere, Mt.
Blanc du Tacul and many others.
Tony Kelly (Surrey, England). Tony turns 45 on this expedition. By day
he is an engineer but on his holidays he has journeyed to all corners of the
world. He has been to 7,400 meters on Cho Oyo. In the Alps he has climbed extensively
in the Chamonix region: the Viper, winter traverse of the Briethorn, etc.
Kin Man Chung (Kowloon, Hong Kong). Chung, 47, owns a handful of
climbing shops in Hong Kong. He was the chief instructor of the Hong Kong
Mountaineering Training Center and chairman of the Hong Kong Mountaineering
Union. In the Himalaya he has been on expeditions to Mustagh Ata, Shishapangma,
Changtse, Everest (2x). Further afield he has climbed Aconcagua, Elbrus,
Vinson, Carstens Pyramid, McKinley and Kilimanjaro. Hopefully this year he will
be able to conclude his seven summits quest with a successful climb of Everest.
Ivan Laredo-Vidal (Ecatepec, Mexico). Ivan, 32, has climbed extensively
in the Himalaya. He has been on expeditions to Makalu, Lhotse, Broad Peak (summited),
Cho Oyo (summited) and Everest. Last year he gave up his summit bid to allow
his wife to reach the summit. This will be his second attempt on the North
Ridge of Everest.
David Sullivan (Glasgow, Scotland). David, 43, is a financial manager.
He reached 5,000 meters on McKinley, where his team was battered by storms. He
has extensive experience in the Alps and in the Scottish Highlands. This is his
first trip to the Himalaya.
Kieron MacKenzie (Saline, United Kingdom). Kieron, 40, is a managing director
for Packard Bell. His climbing bio includes Island Peak (5x), Ama Dablam, Mt.
McKinley, Mt. Kenya, Kilimanjaro, and Mt. Blanc.
Graham Hoyland (Chapel-en-le-Frith, England). Graham, 42, is a
television director. He has been to Everest 3x and has summited via the South
Col in 1993. He has also climbed Himalchuli, during his 12 trips to the
Himalaya. Graham has also summited Mt. McKinley.
In addition to those listed above, there are 5 folks trekking with us to base
camp. Our team of Sherpas is second to none. Most of these guys have climbed to
the summit of Everest 2 or 3 times. It is their power and compassion that fuels
our expeditions success.
April 1, 2000 Departing
for Lhasa
The last few days have been exciting. Team members have trickled into Kathmandu
from all corners of the globe. Each has brought enough gear to outfit a
climbing store. Combined with the group gear, over 100 garbage can sized
plastic barrels, brimming with gear, are stacked into a pyramid nearly as tall
as Everest. We are now ready to depart.
The climbers and trekkers are headed to Lhasa, Tibet by plane. Our group will
begin our process of acclimatizing, by visiting the famed sites of this ancient
city. On April 4th, we will leave the city and set out across the Tibetan plateau
in a fleet of jeeps.
Russell and the Sherpas will be traveling overland with two trucks worth of
equipment and food. At the Tibetan border, they will transfer the gear into
four smaller trucks provided by the Tibetan Mountaineering Association, our
hosts in Tibet. Their journey will take them up and onto the Tibetan plateau.
We will all meet up in the village of Tingri, jumping off place for expeditions
to Cho Oyo and Everest. On the 8th of April we will all gather at Base Camp.
As you can imagine we are excited and a bit apprehensive. Everyone knows that
we are about to leave the comforts of Kathmandu, with its selection of
restaurants, clean hotels w/ showers, and warmth. Some cold nights await us.
Chris Warner
A Traveler's Guide to the Airports of China
Delayed by two hours, we lifted off the tarmac in Kathmandu and soared up
amongst the highest peaks in this region of the Himalayas. The SW face of
Shishapangma (14th tallest peak in the world) was just off our wingtip. Brad
Johnson and I had hoped to climb that face last October, but arrived in the
middle of a week of bad weather. On our first morning in base camp, the snow
stopped for a few hours, but quickly resumed. At 8 that night a Sherpa rushed
into our tent with the news that an avalanche claimed the lives of Alex Lowe
and Dave Bridges. They were traversing the glacier at the base of the face,
when a slab let loose, 5000 feet above them. Their death and the continuing bad
weather convinced us to return to Kathmandu. Flying past it stirred a mixture
of emotions. It was depressing to think of Alex and Dave, yet I still badly
wanted to climb that beautiful face.
The next 8000 meter peak on the horizon was Cho Oyu (6th tallest), which Brad
and I had climbed last September. Of the 12 climbers on our expedition, 5 of us
had summited this peak and two others had climbed it to above 7,400 meters. We
were all excited to see the sun shining on the summit.
Everest, viewed from the south, was the next big peak. At first we could we see
the top of the North Ridge, but it soon disappeared. A plume of snow was
blowing off the top, racing towards the east. The South Col and the upper
reaches of the Lhotse face were in full view. And the great horseshoe formed by
Everest, Lhotse (4th tallest) and Nuptse lay beneath us.
We banked north between the summits of Makalu (5th tallest) and Kanchenjunga
(3rd) and turned to see the Kangshung Face of Everest. As we flew further north
the whole of the North-Northeast Ridge of Everest and then the North Col and
North Ridge came into view. We could see every bit of our route, from the
Rongbuk Glacier to the North Col and upwards to the First, Second and Third
Steps and finally to the summit snow pyramid.
There were two Everest expeditions on the flight. Together with the tourists,
we were yelling and screaming. As a peak crested the horizon on the left,
everyone rushed to that side of the plane, good-naturedly crushing the person
in the window seat. Then a giant peak would pop up on the right and we'd all
shift to that side.
We were all quite friendly with each other, the whole plane in a party mood,
when the pilot announced that we were being diverted to Chengdu, a city in the
center of China. High winds had closed the Lhasa airport.
Well, the Chinese customs officers had no idea what to do with us. A plane load
of tourists, with Tibetan, not Chinese visas descended upon their desks. The
officials were obviously taught to not make decisions. Lethargic attempts at
creating a solution were met with anger by the 150 disappointed and now saddle
soar passengers.
Finally they loaded us on some airport shuttle buses and deposited us in a
local hotel. 8 hours, two bus rides and a malfunctioning plane later, we were
finally seated on a plane that could fly. We taxied down the runway and lifted
off for Lhasa.
Chris Warner
April 3, 2000 Searching
for the Dalai Lama
We ate an early breakfast. For some crazy reason all of China is on Beijing
time. Breakfast was served at 7:30 a.m. which was 5:30 a.m. according to our
internal clocks and the sun's ability to crest the horizon. We were a groggy
lot, but excited to visit the Potala and some of the other important sights in
Lhasa.
The Potala is an enormous building, or better yet, a
collection of buildings all tumbling and pushing up against each other. From
the streets below it looks like one huge place, but inside it is a maze of old
Tibetan government offices, cells, chapels, monasteries and the bedrooms and
tombs of the Dalai Lamas. The Potala, once the bustling center of Tibetan life,
is now a museum. Ever since the Chinese arrived and the Dalai Lama fled, the
building has been emptied of life.
Amazingly the Chinese did not destroy the Potala. In
1959 they lobbed a few bombs at it, but little was damaged. It is still full of
golden Buddhas, cubbies of prayer books, and sculptures of the Dalai Lamas
sitting on altars. We wandered through the mazes, up and down narrow stairways
and on to the roof tops.
After visiting the Potala, we headed to the Jokhang, the most important
religious structure in Tibet. Here narrow streets and twisting alleyways circle
this sprawling collection of monasteries. Hundreds of pilgrims were circling
the buildings, all walking clockwise. I fell in with a group of older women,
most with weathered faces, and each of them spinning a prayer wheel in their
hands.
We circled the building and then broke from the others to enter a narrow
passageway. I ducked into a courtyard and there were over 300 old Buddhists,
chanting "ohm mani padme ohm."
I have a necklace made of a dzi stone and Tibetan corrals and turquoise. It is
a necklace common in the Himalayas. The dzi stone is a remarkable semi precious
stone, with a history ripe with fiction. Some belief they are the petrified
vertebrae of snakes. Other belief that they were created by witch doctors using
an alchemic process (like spinning gold from straw). No one knows how they were
formed and no one can recreate the process. All real dzi stones are hundreds of
years old and are passed from generation to generation. They are valued at
thousands to tens of thousands of dollars. I bought mine from a Tibetan
pilgrim, traveling through Nepal on his way to see the Dalai Lama in exile in
India. I traded him a watch and $240 for the stone.
The women in the courtyard spotted the dzi stone
hanging from my neck. Pushing and shoving each other, they would reach out for
it and then begin to smile and blush. They giggled as they dug among their
shirt necks for their own dzi stones. It was a moment in life when a six foot
four inch white guy and one hundred, four foot ten inch Tibetan women were all
on the same plane. We were all smiling like a bunch of school girls.
Tonight we were the guests of the Tibetan Mountaineering Association. They
threw a big party for us and the Dutch Everest team. They had a Tibetan musical
group, even elaborate Karaoke displays with accompanying videos on a 13 inch
screen at the far end of the room. The head of the TMA gave a speech in
Tibetan, the translation was inspiring though. We were draped in silk scarves,
called "katas" and given nifty key chains with Mt. Everest inscribed
in it.
As the night closes upon our intrepid adventures, the whiskey and espressos
slide past our tongues. It may be a long night. The trekkers are corrupting the
climbers, keeping morale at an all time high.
Chris Warner
April 7, 2000 Tingri,
Tibet
Tingri, Tibet is no Mayberry. Despite the impending
arrival of spring, winter still clings to this village, situated at 14,000 ft.
above sea level. Not a single flower is willing to sprout, much less bloom, as
long as each afternoon brings gusting winds and lashing sands.
We are laying on our bunks, in a 8'x12' room with a packed earth floor. We've
covered the cracks in the doors with an old blanket. Dust, thick enough to
write our initials on our books or glasses, settles about us.
"Yeah....Two more months of suffering like this," sighs Andy.
"At least its not snowing," I reply.
"Yet."
We both roll over and flip the pages of our books.
Tingri is the jumping off place for the base camps of Everest and Cho Oyu. The
team of climbers and trekkers who flew to Lhasa has met up with Russell Brice
and the Himalayan Experience Sherpas here. While we were being rerouted to
Chengdu, China and later visiting the Potala and other monasteries in Lhasa,
they were combating landslides that shut the road a number of times. Russell
and the gang were forced to shuttle loads between trucks and work through the
night. Even then, they arrived 24 hours behind schedule.
It was great to be a big group again, knowing that it was only a matter of 36
hours before we would be in base camp.
At this point in the journey, everyone is healthy and excited. The trekkers
continue to add a lot excitement to the team. Their enthusiasm is contagious.
We have a very diverse group. Luckily each person has been sharing good stories
and useless trivia to our social mix. While it is probably unfair to talk about
having favorites, I have been greatly enjoying the stories Mark Vallance
(founder of Wild Country, a climbing gear manufacturer) has been telling. He
seems to have met just about everyone in the climbing industry and is a real
bridge between generations. Together with Graham Hoyland, who is an Everest
history buff, we are all learning a great deal about what's happened on Everest
in the past.
Now it is time to write our own piece of history.
Chris Warner
Base Camp Here We Come
April 8, 2000 Everest
Base Camp Tibet 17,200 ft.
The Sherpas, Russell Brice
and Mark Whetu, had left Tingri early on the morning of the 7th for base camp.
They were going to arrive there a day ahead of us to set up camp and begin the
process of prepping loads for the upper mountain. The rest of us set out early
this morning from Tingri, up at 3:45 a.m. and on the road by 4:30 a.m. The
drive to base was spectacular. At first the sky was capped with thousands of
stars, the milky way streaking over our heads, while Orion, the Dippers and
Scorpio lazed on the horizon. As dawn approached, the Tibetan landscape
revealed itself.
Plains of sandy soil
stretched across the valley bottom. Towers of eroding sandstone lined the
sides. When we left the "Friendship Highway" the road began a rapid
ascent, cresting the Pang La (pass) at 17,000 ft.
Everest rose above us. It was spectacular. From the summit a plume of snow blew
more than 20 miles to the east. On the left was Makalu (world's 5th highest
peak) and to the right was Cho Oyu (6th). The sky was perfectly clear, and at
6:30 a.m. the temperatures were far below freezing. We were all running around,
snapping pictures and digging through our bags for hats
and gloves.
From this pass, the road dropped rapidly into a series of valleys, each leading
us closer to Everest. We passed through tiny villages in which the people
subsisted solely on farming and herding yaks for Everest expeditions. It was
obvious that life here is difficult. The children looked wild, haven't seen a
bath in years. It is said that a rural Tibetan bathes three times in their
life: the days they are born, marry and die.
Finally we saw the Rongbuk Monastery and the tents of base camp. Russell and
the Sherpas have chosen a sheltered nook, and most of the tents were up before
we arrived. Everest stands right above us. The view from my tent door is
fantastic. We can't wait for the climbing to begin.
Chris Warner
April 11, 2000 Everest
base camp, Tibet
Climbing Mt. Everest is a feat of logistics. The
strongest climbers would never summit if there wasn't a tidal wave of gear and
food pushing them upward. Well, we have one of the best piles I've ever seen.
Here's a brief list:
Over 10 tons of gear has been transported to base camp, in 5 jeeps and two
trucks.
We have nearly 2,000 eggs. Each egg was wrapped in newspaper prior to being
stored in specially made cages.
We have almost 1,000 pounds of vegetables. These have to be kept from freezing.
Each cabbage and tomato, eggplant and head of lettuce is wrapped in paper and
packed in a straw lined basket. The baskets are stored in a 12' x 12' family
camping tent.
We have 45 high altitude tents and 9 family camping tents.
We have almost 10,000 ft of rope, with which to fix lines on the mountain. We
have over 100 bottles of oxygen.
We have 20 pounds of coffee (Mt. Everest Blend from the Riverside Roastery),
thousands of tea bags, ten cases of beer and a garbage can sized barrel full of
booze. There are even 7 cans of whipped cream to sweeten the hot chocolates or
top off the Irish coffees.
I couldn't begin to count the barrels of potato chips and chocolate bars.
All of these items, from the luxurious to the bare essentials, play a critical
role in the formula we've created for success. Climbing Everest is a brutal
game. The storms, the dangers, the lack of oxygen and the personality clashes
all conspire to keep you from summiting. We need this mountain of gear to get
us up the hill at the end of our valley.
But before we can even set foot above base camp, the
Sherpas, who are Buddhists, and the rest of the team undergo a puja ceremony. A
puja is a blessing. Yesterday we gathered at a giant chorten (sculpted pile of
rocks) and made our offerings and received our blessings from the mountain
spirits. We were lead in prayer by the Sherpas.
We raised a pole strung with prayer flags, stretching the four strings of flags
in the four directions.
It was a beautiful day. Everest stood above us, with
no wind blowing snow from the summit snow slopes. It was a good omen.
The ceremony lasted for over two hours, with much chanting, the throwing of
rice and flour, the burning of incense and juniper branches and the blessing of
our ice axes. Like a celebration at home, it was ended with a big meal and
hearty toasts.
Late in the afternoon, the yak men arrived with their
sixty yaks. They set up there tents all around us. It was a two day journey
from their village to base camp. They greeted us with toothy grins and the news
that they needed a day's rest before going higher. Our plans for the 14th were
scrapped. We had hoped to begin to move gear towards advanced base camp today.
It is a three day journey to ABC, and we need to make this journey with three
trains of 60 yaks each.
This morning intensive negotiations broke out between
Russell and the yak men. It is ritualistic this last minute bargaining. The yak
men complain that the loads are too heavy and Russell must stand firm on the
agreement made by the Tibetan Mountaineering Association and the expedition. In
the end, the yak men caved in. They have but one chance each year to earn cash.
They can't be too greedy.
Tomorrow the first loads, along with Russell and a handful of Sherpas will
begin the two day journey to ABC. The rest of us will move up in four days. We
will be spending the next few days sorting out our personal gear and scaling
the local peaks in an effort to get better acclimated.
Chris Warner
Advanced Base Camp (ABC) is Established
April 13, 2000 Everest Base Camp,
Tibet
Russell, Mark, four Sherpas, twelve yak men and sixty yaks, loaded with 120
plastic drums, left base camp yesterday morning. It was quite a chorus of yak
bells, Tibetan "giddy-ups", and the hoots and hollers of the Sherpas.
It is easy to be impatient with the yak men, sometimes a lot of yelling is
needed to get them moving.
The trail to ABC, goes up alongside the Rongbuk Glacier and the huge terminal
moraine it has piled up. In a few hours, the route ascends a side valley along
the the East Rongbuk Glacier. An interim camp is placed in this valley, about 8
miles from base camp. From this camp, it is another 4 to 5 hours, steadily
uphill to advanced base camp. This camp is placed just below the North Col, at
21,500 ft.
Russell, and the gang, arrived at ABC this afternoon. They are establishing
camp today, tomorrow and the next day. The first group of climbers and trekkers
will leave for ABC on the 15th, arriving there on the 17th. The last of us,
myself included, depart for ABC on the 16th. There will be three yak trains,
carrying our gear to ABC. 180 yaks each carrying 110 to 125 pounds.
So in the meantime, we've all been climbing the local hills, in an effort to
acclimate to the thin air. Today Andy and I climbed a 21,000 foot peak that
rises directly above base camp. I did wear short gaiters over my sneakers, kept
the sand out. It is amazing to think that you can climb a 21,000 ft. mountain
anywhere in the world, wearing only sneakers. it took us about 3.5 hours to
reach the top, climbing nearly 4,000 ft. in the process.
Most of the skies were clouded, but the views we did get were great. Everest
darted in and out of the clouds. Our clearest view was of Gyachung Kang, a peak
that is about 50 feet short of being 8,000 meters.
The team is doing great. Everyone seems to be strong and healthy. And by
popular vote, the famed world traveler, David Eaton, has been voted best
dressed trekker. With that going for us, we are bound to be a happy bunch.
Chris Warner
Leaving Camp, Finally
April 16th, 2000
While most of the crew and gear have departed for ABC already, seven of us
climbers are just packing now. The last of us have been at base camp for eight
days. It has actually been good for our bodies and the team effort, to laze
around at this lower altitude. We've climbed more of the local hills (up to
21,000 ft. high), wandered up and down the Rongbuk valley, and have been able
to stuff our tummies for the cold nights ahead.
Meanwhile, the Sherpas, Mark Whetu and Russell have been able to establish a
posh ABC for us. They've had a few hard days of building tent platforms and
erecting tents. ABC is high, 21,500 ft. It sits atop a pile of rocks, underlain
by a glacier. Each year, as the glacier slides down hill, it destroys the old
camp sites. A lot of work is involved with rebuilding the sites each spring.
Our team isn't the only one at ABC. There is a group of Dutch climbers and a
Russian group camped there. The Dutch and I flew into Kathmandu together and we
have been enjoying each other's company for the entire trip. We'd turn our
backs in Lhasa and they would be there. Their base camp is about 100 feet from
ours.
The Russians are trying hard to reinvent the rules of high altitude climbing.
Since arriving a day or two behind us, they have rushed up to 7,000 meters
already. Now they are laying around ABC, some trying to retreat to base camp.
They whipped themselves senseless, climbing too high too fast. Rumor has it
that they are trying to beat all the climbers, including those on the south
side, to the summit. (Traditionally the climbing conditions allow for earlier
ascents on the south side, often two weeks earlier.) Seems like some people are
into this idea of being first in the millennium.
The millennium has brought out some other interesting teams. Camped next to us
at base camp is a huge Chinese TV team. Over 20 Sherpas are trying to get one
Chinese climber to the summit. They will then broadcast live on Chinese TV.
I read in the Kathmandu paper that an orchestra was planning on summiting via
the south side and then playing a 24 hour concert on top. I hope I reach the
top to the subtle sounds of the tuba section playing "When the Saints Come
Marching In."
Not quite finishing the string of interesting teams on Everest, a Spanish group
is planning on climbing in 1920's period clothing (tweed jackets, knickers,
etc.). They've made it to base camp, but their truck, loaded with hemp rope and
cotton tents, is lost somewhere on the Tibetan Plateau. Didn't the Spaniards
know that there were no roads in Tibet in the 1920's.
Well, it is time to put my own two feet into action.
Chris Warner
Advanced Base Camp (ABC)
Everest Tibet
April 20,
2000
A lot has happened since I last sent the dispatch. Normally, I would be
cranking them out, but the hard drive on the laptop has died. So far, three
computers on this expedition have died. We are hoping to have a fourth computer
on-line by tomorrow evening.
I want to catch you up on a few elements of the expedition. First, all of our
team members are now based at ABC – our 21,500 ft camp. Thirteen other
expeditions are at ABC. There must be over 200 tents spread along this narrow moraine
band. We have fixed ropes and established a route to Camp One at 23,000 feet.
We now have at least 2,000 pounds of gear up there. All but four of us have
been to Camp One at least once. It will be about a week before we begin to
sleep there. Tomorrow our sherpas and Andy Lapkass will start to string ropes
to Camp Two, while I go up to Camp One to organize it.
What’ s the weather been like? At night temperatures dip below 0° at ABC. We
eat our breakfast and dinners in down jackets and insulated pants. But during
the day, while temperatures barely creep above 32° F, we might be sweating
while we ferry loads up the fixed lines to Camp One at the North Col. It has
snowed every day since we’ve been at ABC, but the high winds blow the snow
away. This promises to be one of the coldest seasons on Everest.
If computer number four doesn’t freeze solid, we should be sending regular dispatches
again.
Chris Warner
From
a different perspective
Dispatch covering 15th April to 21st April Days 19
through 25
Correspondent: Climber Tony Kelly of Surrey, England
From Base Camp (BC) through Interim Camp to Advance Base Camp (ABC) and
the storming of the North Col @ 7060m.
As I start to write some of this
dispatch (on 19th April) I'm unsure of how its going to reach you since in the
last few days although the expedition is making outstanding progress on the
mountain we have experienced severe technical problems with the computing
technology supporting the dispatch of text and digital imagery and the receipt
of incoming personal mail and also the extremely important weather data. In a
matter of days we have had two hard disks go down and a screen failure which
has taken out 3 of our 5 computers. We are now back on line but a couple of
mails have been lost and there has been delay in outbound dispatches. Please
bear with us, although the human elements of this expedition are handling the
minus 20degC to plus zero temperature swings very well, the computing hard ware
is a little more temperamental.
15th April
We are moving up from BC to Interim camp and then on to ABC in two groups. This
will ease the logistics pressure on Russ and the Sherpa team who have moved
ahead to establish these camps. The trekking members on the team will go in the
first wave since they have a tighter deadline. So David Sayer, David Eaton and
Natalia will be in the first wave. They had a long slog in mediocre weather
taking 7.5hrs to reach interim with Natalia feeling the effects of altitude
badly. Meantime down in BC the second wave were stripping tents in winds
gusting 40mph which was fun. BC will remain in basic form with a store, comms.
and cook tent so that we can retreat there during the expedition as needed and
it is manned with radio cover in the safe hands of Rom, one of the sherpa
team..
16th April
Group 1 pull out of Interim camp to make for ABC at the same time as Group 2
head out of BC for Interim. Natalia has wisely decided that the AMS (acute
mountain sickness) she is suffering due to altitude will best be treated by
descent and group 2 pass her enroute. Group 2 makes Interim in 5.5hrs feeling
in good shape having put on 300m to 6000m. Group 1 having left Interim early in
the morning makes ABC in 7hrs or so. All are well apart from the expected minor
headaches. David Sayer and David Eaton do particularly well in maintaining a
good pace. David Eaton is particularly thrilled as the oldest member of the
team he achieves a life’s ambition of trekking to both sides of Mount Everest.
17th April
The second group heads up for ABC and completes the 22km hike from BC cruising
in 5hrs. Its a hard 2 day slog from BC but we would expect the climbing team to
be doing it in one day as fitness and acclimatization improves over the next
months. Enroute up the Rongbuk we have passed amazing penitentes ice formations
caused by the effects of wind and sun leaving 60ft high ice fins marching up
the glacier with the 7000m plus Changste on our right.
On rounding the last bend in the glacier and approaching the north col nothing
prepares you for the awesome towering walls of the north ridge and the north
east pinnacles of Everest first climbed by Russell Brice our expedition leader.
Even though we are still some 2 hours hike away from the ice face leading up to
the North Col you have to crane your neck back at 45deg. to see the summit.
Russ and the Sherpas have done an amazing job leveling the moraine rock fields
to create a platform for a cook tent, store tent, mess tent and comms. tent and
space for 16 individual tents and a toilet. Its back breaking work.
18th April
A ropey night for most with little sleep and minor AMS headaches are the order
of the day and to be expected having reached ABC at 6460m. It is a busy day
today which includes a puja, the trekkers departing, Russ and the team heading
for the north col and the climbers establishing themselves at ABC. The puja
went very well with good weather and fine views of the summit of Mt. Everest.
The sherpas led the celebrations and rice and tsampa was duly thrown and the
prayer flags were raised on their pole. Our ice axes were blessed with yak
butter and juniper smoke and safe passage was requested on the mountain. We
were immediately blessed with the good luck of two blackbirds landing on top of
the prayer flags. David Eaton and David Sayer pulled out for their 10hr hike
down to BC. It was a bit of an emotional departure as they had brought great
colour and humour to the expedition (and not a little amount of whisky
drinking!) Russ and the Sherpas had a fantastically successful day putting in
the basic route to the North Col at 7060m.
19th April
The morning was spent tuning up climbing gear, reducing weight were possible
and setting leashes on ascendeurs to the optimal length. This is in preparation
for some the climbing team making a first push to the North Col. Russ also
gives us a full briefing on fixed rope technique which is very different to
Alpine rope techniques and it is essential for the safety of the whole
expedition that we all use the same methods.
As mentioned at the introduction to this dispatch today was the day that our
computing problems escalated to the loss of 3 out of our 5 computers. Tony
worked to solve the problems but in this case they were insurmountable at this
altitude without technical back up. The fall back is to bring up the Base Camp
computer. Meantime Andy (one of the professional mountain guides on the team)
and the sherpas do a load carry to the North Col. Andy is immensely strong and
we suspect he is part yak and part sherpa. A small drama over dinner reminds us
that this is a serious game we play. Indeed this is the second time in a few
days that the Himex infrastructure has been called upon to render assistance to
others in difficulty. Whilst at Interim camp our radio facilities where needed
to help arrange the evacuation of a sherpa member of a French Canadian
expedition. This evening, a cook with a Japanese expedition needs treatment in
our Gammow bag to counter the effects of HAPE (high altitude pulmonary oedema).
The gammow bag is a double skinned inflatable plastic chamber that a climber
can be placed in so that when the bag is pressurized the effect is to reduce the
apparent altitude by several thousand feet. The Japanese team do not have a
gammow bag whereas we have two.
As the expedition proceeds it becomes apparent that most other expeditions
recognize that the Himalayan Experience infrastructure for communications,
safety and medical cover is the best there is on the mountain. The problem is
that some expeditions count on it and consequently come under resourced and
also put pressure on our resources.
This problem will manifest itself again with respect to the installation of
fixed rope but more later.
20th April
Chris Warner leads a team of Tony, Jean, Graham, Daniel and Mark Whettu to push
to the North Col with a sub 5 hour target. Although ambient temperatures are
about zero or less there is little wind and consequently when they get onto the
ice and ropes on the slopes of the north col its necessary to peel off goretex
down to fleece and then again down to thermal tops. Only to reverse the process
as we gained height and the wind strength increased. Its a very hard sustained
drive through snow fields, ice cliffs, traversing around seracs and crossing
crevasses (which we feel will later need ladders as the warmer weather causes
them to open.). We crest the col in 4.5hrs @ 7060m some 23,000ft feeling very
satisfied with our progress and celebrate with some hot tea. The weather
started to turn almost immediately so we dropped the loads of sleeping bags and
gas we were carrying and headed for a 1hr 45min. descent back to the relative
comfort of ABC.
Those
that remained in ABC took a hike up to the bottom of the fixed rope starting up
the north col. A couple of the guys are a bit under the weather. Dave is
suffering a little with altitude and Ivan is on medication for a chest
infection but not serious. Overall the expedition is performing extremely well
and we have the best infrastructure with the strongest sherpa team.
21st April
A relatively quiet day for the climbing team with yesterdays north col crew
resting their legs. The sherpa's set off to put in the initial route from camp
1 to camp 2 at 7500m on the north ridge. Tony spent the morning thrashing
around with the computer systems. We are now fully back on line.
Everybody makes use of the time to wash smelly kit and smelly bodies in the
laundry with the best view in the world. Don't be getting any ideas there are
washing machines up here. A wash is an outdoor splash in a bowl in subzero
ambient temps. The trick of the day is managing to wash your hair with frozen
shampoo and then somehow get the hair dry before it freezes and you may as well
snap it off!
Latchu our ABC cook has got the flu and will have to go down to BC but Korbardu
still manages to throw together egg, beans and bacon for breakfast (although
some of us did detect a few icicles in the beans, no worries.)
We have been adopted by a small bird (sort of fat bullfinch) who hops around
cheekily close. We also get visits from the odd packrat (looks like a small
hamster). I chased one out of the comms. tent the other day - he was looking to
nest amongst the wires. Also whilst passing Jeans tent and closing it up to
prevent snow blowing in, one jumped out of his sleeping bag and shot between my
legs before I could inquire as to its intentions. We all now check out sleeping
bags before thrusting our feet in - not wanting a furry surprise (well not this
early in the expedition anyway!).
The packrats looking for warm places and wastage on our computer gear is all
down to the same thing - its damn cold! In fact its unseasonably cold with
night time temps dropping to more than 20degC below zero. Our latest weather
forecast from the Met. Office in Bracknell, UK tells us the jet stream temps.
on top of the mountain are lower than minus 35degC. The wind is getting up and
the snow is starting to fall hard - it promises to be a cold and buffeted
night.
And we're all here of our own free will. Sane or what?
That's all for now folks
more to follow in the next few days
Tony Kelly
Pinned down in Advance Base Camp @ 6460m.
22nd April - day 26
We're socked in by bad weather. It was very windy overnight and heavy snow fall
has kept us at ABC. Its a day of wrapping up warm in down gear and drinking
lots of tea in the mess tent, telling tall stories of daring do.
Around mid aft. a serious game of minus 10degC (14ºF) Frozen Finger Scrabble
begins aided by excellent English cheese and the remains of a box of wine. The
combatants try to get all sorts of words through the judges depending on their
origin: English (plain outrageous spelling), New Zealand (plain bad), Tibetan
(smart American), etc. The debate raged on into the night.
23rd April - Day 27
It looked like the weather would hold for the morning and then break in the
afternoon so no work was possible in fixing camps on the mountain. But most of
the climbing team took a 3hr. recci. across the Rongbuk glacier to the Rapiu
La, a pass of 6548m at the base of the huge buttress that is the north east
ridge of mount Everest. Although the weather was not brilliant we did get a
flash view between the clouds of the awesome Kangshung Face and the terrifying
corniced ridge line of the N.E. ridge leading up to the Pinnacles (first
climbed by Russell Brice our leader).
24th April - Day 28
Last night was strange. It started off perfectly clear with a thick star soup
of a jet black sky. When we were turning in (which is typically around 9:00pm)
the periodic flash of lightening illuminated the Rapui La pass south east of
ABC. Some time later in the middle of the night all of us (we later agreed) sat
bolt up right in our tents expecting the worst as a awful sound of a rock
avalanche thundered towards us. It was in fact the thunder associated with the
earlier lightening and we were in the middle of a howler of a storm.
Pinned in camp again the plan we had had for the north col. is shelved and the
forecast says more of this for a couple of days. We resign ourselves to a
waiting game and break out the Monopoly board. 3 hours later Russell has wiped
the floor with all comers in a merciless display of the ruthless landlord.
Most folk turn in early this evening. Everyone has their own regime but for me
it includes:-
Straight into the sleeping bag with all the down kit on, drinking water bottle
(filled with hot water from the mess tent earlier) straight into the bottom of
the sleeping bag and warming icy toes, do teeth, take out contacts, take bulk
store of contacts out of fleece and place between legs to continue non freeze
situation, put pee bottle in sleep bag (for use later and better warm than
cold), suntan cream into sleep bag (it'll freeze otherwise), camera into sleep
bag for same reason, head torch is on head at moment but will later join rest
of paraphernalia in sleeping bag. Now peel off down kit top and bottom and
fleeces etc. and zip up and seal sleep bag around neck and then around face.
Prepare for -10degC to -20degC night and wish longingly that you were curled up
with your girlfriend who you miss desperately.
A few hours of sleep later you wake up needing to pee because you've been
drinking like a fish to avoid dehydration which is a real problem at these
altitudes. You battle to find the head torch and sort out the pee bottle. Do
the business and before resealing the sleeping bag wack down a third of litre
of water from the drinking bottle (do not make a bottle ID mistake at this
stage).
25th April - Day 29
Still pinned down in ABC by bad weather. High winds up above the North Col make
it impossible to work on fixing rope and installing camps. We're hopeful the
weather will improve tomorrow. In the meantime the team uses small gaps in the
weather to do short hikes to keep legs and lungs working.
David, Ivan, Chung and Kieron, who had all been held back a little by various
ailments and so have yet to make the North Col are all getting stronger and so
the next plan is to get the entire team to the N. Col. which will be a good
psychological boost.
During the last days of time pinned in ABC Russell has been negotiating with
the other teams here since we have put the route in to the north col. and the
fixed rope on that route is ours. The other teams will want to use it and when
our sherpa's forge ahead on the north ridge the other teams will want to follow
also. Russell takes the lead in pulling together a supply of rope from all the
teams and a combined sherpa force to work together high on the mountain. As the
weather clears over the next few days the results of the these negotiations and
our own climbing team pushing up the north ridge should bear fruit.
more in few days
Tony Kelly
Advanced Base Camp - 6460m
Everest 2000 - North Side
Winnie-the-Pooh Would have been Proud of Us.
April 26, 2000
We had been battered around for the last few days, snow showers and high winds
keeping us close to ABC. Of course we had been keeping ourselves entertained,
but our ambitions were being pushed aside. We wanted to be climbing, not
playing Scrabble. (Can you believe they wouldn't let me play the word
"om," the most universal of words, the essence of all things, the
sound that each object makes as it vibrates? Om is the most sacred word in
Buddhism and here we are in a Buddhist country.)
Needless to say, Scrabble wasn't bonding us and the mountain wasn't being
climbed. We needed a crisp and clear morning.
On April 26th, the sun crested the range of peaks to our east. Sunbeams pierced
the tent walls and the temperature quickly rose from below freezing to nearly
freezing. We dashed about, grabbing crampons and harnesses and slinging our
packs across our shoulders. We were bound for the North Col.
We left in small groups. For some of us it was the first journey to the col.
Others had been there about 5 or 6 days ago. The Sherpas, Andy Lapkass, Russell
Brice and Mark Whetu had been there at least twice before.
The route to the North Col, begins at ABC, following that moraine for 30-45
minutes to the edge of the glacier. Strapping on crampons, we cross a flat
glacier to the base of a thousand foot headwall. Fixed lines guide us up this
steep wall, the route varying from nearly flat to 60 degrees.
We all arrived at the North Col by 1 pm, taking
between 2.5 hours and 5.5 hours. We flattened the snow, and spread a feast upon
a tarp. It was a perfect picnic. Nineteen of us (8 climbers, 4 guides, 6 high
altitude Sherpas, and a Tibetan Yak herder) gathered together in the sun and
snacked on peaches, soup, candy bars and beef jerky.
The most gratifying part was not the picnic, but the accomplishment of getting
all of our team to the 7,100 meter North Col, at the same time. Each of us felt
the message: this is a strong and motivated team.
Karsang, the yak herder, has been dreaming of climbing Everest since he was a
boy. Very few Tibetan yak herders share his dream, they think we are all nuts.
The risks and the discomforts are too great. Karsang lives on a ridge top with
views of both Cho Oyu and Everest.A few years ago, his climbing interests
distinguished him from the other yak men. He soon began working for Himalayan
Experience, assisting at base and advanced base camps. Russell and the Sherpas
are helping Karsang realize his dream. The climb to the North Col was a step
along the way. Karsang and I climbed further along the ridge line today, and I
got some great photos of him looking toward the summit. He was so excited,
perhaps the highest a yak man has ever climbed.
Chris Warner
Screaming Winds
of the North Ridge
27th April to 29th
April 23,000ft plus
27th April - day 30
Yesterday was a raging success of placing the entire Himex Everest 2000 team
(all 19 of us) on the North Col at 7060m (circa. 23,000ft) which, as far as we
know, is a first in expedition mountaineering on Everest.
Today Russ, Andy and the Sherpa's mounted a courageous thrust up the north
ridge from the north col to complete rope placement and establish camp 2. The
wind just rose and rose as we watched on the telescope from ABC as they pushed
up the ridge, dots silhouetted against the skyline and occasionally
disappearing in spindrift (wind blown powder snow). Eventually they were beaten
back only metres from their goal. It was an amazing effort and a great show for
us down in ABC sitting out on mats with scopes and binoculars, drinking tea and
listening to Pink Floyds "wish you were here".
28th April - Day 31
Although the forecast is for high winds above the North Col the ascent to the
col is sheltered from westerly winds and so the team set about 2 activities. A
load carry to the col of all personal high altitude gear (down suits, gloves,
etc.) and some of the team will remain there to sleep and then attempt the
north ridge in the morning.
Kieron, performing very strongly, and Ivan and David all successfully dropped
loads at our camp 1 - the col. Chung got with in some 80m but turned back due
to problems with his jumar
just below the final ice cliff leading to the Col. Tony had down climbed to
assist but Chung called it a day.
Jean had elected to stay in ABC today conserving
energy for later efforts. None of us can dispute the sense of this call. At 62
and aiming to be the oldest summitteer he has all our respect. Chris Warner,
mountain guide and self confessed popcorn addict; Mark Whettu, mountain guide
and high altitude cameraman, Tony and Daniel all settled in for a chilly and
windy night at 23,000ft plus. The high winds have already trashed some poorly
erected tents of other expeditions. We check our own meticulously. The evening
meal is boil in the bag chili and a brew of tea hurriedly prepared as the sun
goes and the temperatures crash to minus 25degC (-13ºF)with the wind chill
reducing that impressive number even further.
29th April - Day 32
At the North Col Chris, Mark, Tony and Daniel reluctantly stir from their
sleeping bags at around 5:30am. The hoar
frost from the condensation on the inside of the tent is a good enough
alarm as it drips in your face.
Several brews of tea are essential or in the case of Chris and Mark's tent some
of the specially blended Everest ground coffee (an inspired addition to the
team stores by Chris) gets them kick started and its not long before the first
smart ass comment floats across the col "pass me one of those doughnuts
Mark". It was getting windy at around 7:30am when we set out in full down
gear up the north ridge. A warning of things to come.
The North ridge is a bleak exposed inhospitable windswept snow field that rises
up 500m and takes around 5hrs of climbing to the rocks of camp 2. Its heavily
corniced on the east side and drops away steeply into the Rongbuk on the west
side. Either way 2000ft drops. The safe area is a few metres wide which would
be fine but for the wind trying to lift you bodily into the East Rongbuk.
The reward it offers is jaw dropping views of Pumori,
Cho Oyu, Gaurishankar, Cholatse, Tawache and others. The wind strength started
to increase the moment we started on the ridge line. Tony had led out of camp
and was soon wrestling with a rope that had got buried in the cornice
overhanging the East Rongbuk by a 2000ft. Chris arrived in a few moments and
with his added strength it was soon clear. Another 30mins. push up the ridge it
increasingly difficult winds making standing upright an issue saw Chris
cresting a small rise and another 10mph rise in wind speed put our estimate at
around 45 to 50mph with gusts to over 60mph. This was no place to be in
increasingly more dangerous conditions and the executive decision was a no
brainer.
Chris called a retreat but not before grabbing some
stunning photo's which we will try and send back with this dispatch to post on
the websites.
The rest of the team had a relatively relaxing day at ABC although at least
some of the time was given over to checking and rechecking the security of our
tents since anything up to 100mph winds are expected over the next 3 days.
more in a few days
Tony Kelly
Advanced Base Camp - 6460m
Everest 2000 - North Side
Dispatch covering 30th April to 2nd May
Days 32 through 34
Correspondent: Tony Kelly - Climber
Tent Destroyed & Blown off North Col & Snow storms sock in Advanced
Base Camp (ABC)
30th April - day 32
Ivan, David, Chung and Kieron all head up early to the North Col to spend a
night for acclimatization. Chris leads them up in this endeavor (it is
suspected that his full pack is due to several kilo's of Everest blend ground
coffee being load carried, in addition to his cravings for popcorn Chris has
come out of the closet regarding his coffee fixation - we're all trying to be
sympathetic and help with his personal battles). (A little side note from
the home web team - The "Everest Blend" ground coffee that you keep
hearing about, has been specially blended by our sponsor Riverside Roastery.)
Soon after they had set off Lhopsang radioed down from the Col saying that one
of our tents had gone. Blown away we suspected in the severe wind of the night
before. After some discussion it was realized that it was the tent that Tony
and Daniel had been using the night before. This was a little disturbing for
them but a more immediate problem was the loss with the tent of all their high
altitude climbing equipment stored in the tent.
A search and rescue would have to be mounted but it could be anywhere from a
local crevasse on the east face of the north col or several miles down the east
rongbuk glacier. Later in the morning as our other climbing members where
reaching the col successfully Lhopsang radioed again to say they had found the
tent and it look like it was smashed up but intact as far as contents. It was
down a difficult to access crevasse some 80m (262.48 ft) down the east face of
the north col. Some extra gear would be needed for extraction and so it was
planned for tomorrow morning.
1st May - Day 33
The climbers at the north col had a reasonable night although a little windy.
Ivan has a severe cough and so it was rough for him and anyone trying to sleep
in the vicinity. As they descended early in the morning they passed the tent
rescue team in the form of Russ and Andy as they set up the rope needed to abseil
into the crevasse. Tony had followed Russ and Andy up the mountain to record
the event with photo's. Daniel was coming up behind to fit in with a plan for
Russ, Andy, Tony, Daniel and the Sherpa's to spend the night at the Col again
and hope for a weather window to get up the North Ridge and tag camp 2 at 7500m
(24,607). Also Graham was on the way up to the Col with a view to another
acclimatization night.
The rescue was a struggle but successful and by late morning the kit was
extracted by Russ and Andy with assistance from Chris from above and Tony lent
a hand in carrying gear back up to the North Col. By late afternoon it was
snowing heavily and the prospects of moving up the North Ridge where beginning
to fade.
Probably the most disturbing discovery of the day was the evidence of the securing
ropes on the tent that had gone into the crevasse being cut. This is an almost
inconceivable occurrence with the potential consequences being horrendous. Russ
thinks he knows who may be behind this grotesque event but of course there is
no proof. Its a difficult enough undertaking climbing the mountain without
having to worry about some headcase loose on the hill.
2nd May - Day 34
The night at the North Col had been relatively windless but the snow had fallen
several feet deep. We awoke at 5:00am to check out the conditions. We hung on
for a couple of hours to see if it stopped. It was falling thick and fast and
the decision to bale out back to ABC was obvious. We needed to make the descent
quite quickly since although the risk of avalanche was slight it was no place
to hang about.
Meantime the crew back at ABC, Kieron, Ivan, Dave, Chung, in addition to a
planned departure to BC for a rest had cooked up a plan to pull out further
than BC and try and organize a 4x4 to Xigatse to get some nights in a comfortable
hotel.
Its snowing heavily at ABC and likely to be snowing at BC. The team that has
just come off the mountain may well go down to BC since the next 4 days are
forecast bad weather. However the way the weather is looking the heavy snow may
well pin us in ABC.
The decision of some of the guys to try and get out to Xigatse (assuming they
can organize the jeep for the 12hr journey, which won't be easy) has caused
some internal debate in the team regarding style, attitude, focus, commitment
etc. and rationale since although a warm bath and bed may be available it is no
significant reduction in altitude which should be the primary driver for any
retreat from ABC. Needless to say there are two distinctly polarized views of
this move.
We have been working closely from the start of the expedition with our good
friends on the UK Territorial Army Expedition Ian Andersen and Dan White and
remarkably it turns out that Anna Powell (a Cap Gemini staff member) is
intimately involved with Dan's brother-in-law. Even more remarkable is that the
TA Expedition would like to record its indebtedness for technical advice on
high altitude mountaineering to Anna who is an expert in this field having
recently returned from scaling Machupichari.
Close of play today is heavily falling snow at ABC. Russell recalls from his 9
expeditions to the North side of Mount Everest that these are the coldest
conditions he can remember. The small team remaining at ABC of Russell, Andy,
Chris, Mark, Tony, Graham and Daniel enjoy a good meal cooked by Latchu who is
back from a spell at BC to recover from a chest infection. We all retire to our
subzero bedrooms to dive into sleeping bags shared with anything we don't want
to freeze with at least our tummies happy - Christmas pudding and Custard was
the desert - mmmm, yummy.
more in a few days
Tony Kelly
Advanced Base Camp - 6460m (21,195 ft)
Everest 2000 - North Side
Dispatch covering May 3
to 5, 2000
Days 35 through 37
Correspondent: Chris Warner
Pushing the route to 7,900 meters (25,920 ft)
3 May - day 35
With the sun shining, Tony, Daniel, Andy, Mark and Graham, set off from ABC for
a few nights of R&R in base camp. In total we are a team of 23 climbers and
support staff. Now there are but 9 of us at ABC and boy is it lonely without
the constant hypoxic comments and debaucherous behavior of our supposedly
educated team mates.
Russell and I set our minds to bigger tasks, like figuring out how to prep the
mountain for our summit attempts. We would like to have camps 2&3 in place
by the time our team returns to ABC. That would allow them to accelerate their
acclimatization and familiarization with the route.
Normally, there is an attempt at sharing the responsibilities of fixing the
ropes, with all of the other teams on the mountain. After all, everyone uses
the ropes. The trouble is that carrying spools of rope (6 kilos- 13 lbs. each)
to the high point and then fixing the ropes, by anchoring them to pitons, rock
outcrops, ice screws or snow pickets, is really exhausting work. It is easier
for everyone to wait for another team to do all of the hard work.
Excepting for three hundred feet, at the very start
of the route, we've put in all of the fixed line on the mountain so far, miles
of it. We've been trying to organize a meeting of all the teams, in an effort
to finish the task of fixing ropes, but so far it has been too easy for teams
to avoid meeting.
Anyway...the hard work will only be done by the most aggressive and ambitious
team. Seems like that's us.
4 May - Day 36
I slept through my alarm, waking to Russ' call at 4:30 a.m. The two of us,
along with our five climbing Sherpas, have agreed to take control of the fixed
line situation. We can't be held back by the 20+ other teams that all mean
well, but can't seem to get anything besides candy bars into their packs.
We set off from ABC (21,500 ft. - 6450 m.) at 5 a.m. It is light enough to
allow us to climb without flashlights and we set off at a record breaking pace.
We arrive at Camp 1 (the North Col) at 7 a.m. and quickly change into our down
suits, One Sport boots, Carrera goggles and bulky mittens. We shove 400 meters
of rope in our packs. And we are off.
From Camp 1 (23,000 ft. - 7060 m.) we clip into the
ropes heading to camp 2 (24,750 ft. - 7500 m.) I struggle to keep up with these
guys. I've never climbed with a faster group. Normally it takes climbers 4 to 5
hours to get to Camp 2 from the col. We do it in just over 2.5 hours, stopping
near the top to fill our packs with gear they've stashed on an earlier attempt
to reach Camp 2.
We've got work to do. Digging a platform for our tents and arranging all of our
gear, before heading even higher. Within 30 minutes of arriving at Camp 2 we
are on our way.
The route from here to Camp 3 is mostly on rock. In our packs are the heavier
11mm static ropes, brought to the peak by the British Army group, but carried
from Camp 1 by us. It is like carrying a lead weight at this altitude. Each
rope is 60 meters long and we stretch them from point to point. It takes about
30 minutes to secure each rope and we are a pretty efficient team. Phurba,
perhaps our strongest Sherpa, leads out with one Sherpa feeding the rope and
the rest of us organizing the route and tying off the mid points. As soon as
the rope is strung, one of us gladly takes a rope from our pack and preps it
for the next section.
By 3 p.m. we made it to our Camp 3 at (26,070 ft. - 7900 m.). We had been
climbing for 11 hours, gaining 4,570 ft - 1450 m. I've got to tell you, it was
an impressive day, climbing that hard, accomplishing that much, at that
altitude. I sat down on a rock, and checked out the summit. It seemed so close,
although it was still a long way away.
It was on the descent that I realized how tired I
was. While it took under two hours to descend to Camp 1 at the North Col, every
part of me was exhausted. Dawa, one of our Sherpas, descended about an hour
before us and had tea waiting. I drank two big bowls worth and crawled into a
tent. While I made a nest for myself with 4 sleeping bags, Russ pushed on to
ABC. I envied him the chance to sleep in his own sleeping bag, but hadn't the
leg strength to descend any further.
The Sherpas, always impressing us, chose to sleep at Camp 1 as well. They
wanted to ferry a load to Camp 2 the next morning.
5th May - Day 37
I slowly came to life, as the sun rose. It was 5 a.m. and my internal alarm
clock was ringing. I was dehydrated, hungry and yearning for a cup of coffee.
Since my night at Camp 1 was unplanned, I didn't bring any of that good old
Everest Blend with me. (An aside: when I showed up in Kathmandu with nearly 25
pounds of the Riverside Roastery's Everest Blend coffee, everyone was a
skeptic: How could we possibly drink that much? Well now that they are all
junkies, the jugs are less than 1/2 full. I think a crisis is looming. For you coffee
lovers: hi altitude Mexican blended with Sumatra and French Roasted. Gets your
faint heart going.)
I crawled out of the tent before 6 a.m. and the Sherpas were already dressed
and organizing loads. It was impressive. Here I was heading to ABC for breakfast
and they were climbing to Camp 2.
Luckily, today was a perfect day, perhaps the best we've had since arriving. I
was back in ABC in 40 minutes, cradling a cup of coffee. The sherpas zoomed up
to Camp 2 and were back in ABC for late lunch.
The last two days have been significant for us. Camp 2 is up. The fixed lines
stretch to Camp 3. The climbers are resting and recuperating at base. Given a
week of good weather, as forecasted, and the help of some other teams with the
fixed rope, and our side of the hill will be prepared for our summit attempts.
Chris Warner
Advanced Base Camp - 6460m (21,195)
Everest 2000 - North Side
Dispatch covering May 6
& 7 Days 38 & 39
Correspondent: Chris Warner (guide)
A little bit of cooperation and she still sings the blues
May 6
The sun rose early and strong, chasing us out of our tents and allowing us to
sip our coffee and tea on the patio in front of our tents. It is the second
glorious day and our aching bones are loving it. Most of the group is still in
base camp, resting up from the early pushes and fattening up for the next
round.
At 10 a.m. the patio fills with leaders of most of the 24 teams and their
climbing sherpas. The meeting is about fixed ropes and garbage, two hot topics.
As I indicated in the last journal entry, fixed ropes are a political nightmare
here. Good climbers think they'll never use them so don't want to put them in
or pay for them. The Sherpas love them, knowing that they make their job much
easier. And the majority of climbers want them desperately, but can't seem to
figure out how to support their placement and upkeep.
In a storm or during a rescue, fixed ropes are critical to saving lives. Tired
climbers use them to maintain control on the steeper sections. Without a doubt,
not one climber on Everest this year will avoid using the ropes. So if everyone
uses them, shouldn't everyone be responsible for them?
The consensus of the meeting was that everyone would pay $25 (US) towards the
ropes. The money is collected by a sirdar of a Japanese team and distributed as
bonuses to the people who carry and anchor the fixed ropes. There is a scale,
in which sections down low get a lower rate then those up high.
With this system, I've earned about $50. I think I'll put it towards a beach
blanket.
This year, a Japanese team is here, collecting garbage. This is a great
addition to the scurrying about that is taking place on the hill. Ken Naguchi,
the leader of the team climbed Everest with Himalayan Experience a few years
back. Now he has raised enough funds to bring 22 Sherpas with him. They'll
clean up to the highest camp, at 8300 meters (27,232 ft).
So they've brought in a huge tent to serve as a garbage collection site for all
of the teams. Unfortunately, they've erected this tent in plain view of our
patio. It ain't easy being an environmentalist!!!!!
We all went to bed, filled with good feelings about the cooperative nature of
the teams gathered on Everest this year.
May 7
I woke up to Chomolungma singing the blues. Stratus clouds, steel gray,
blanketed the skyline. The sun couldn't penetrate. By 7 a.m. the snow was
falling in thick flakes. The wind howled through the seracs on the glacier,
filling the air with the plaintive wailing of a blind sax player.
The day was spent beneath the covers, reading books. Three times I got up. On a
mountain full of dreamers there was little hope.
The climbers are all huddled in their tents. Sherpas are playing cards. A few
brave souls have visited us. When you've got a propane heater, your more popular
than most. Mallory and Irvine, or at least the Spanish climbers playing those
roles on the TV production being filmed here, stopped by for a visit. It was a
cheery cup of tea, shared with the two climbers who died here 76 years ago.
Chomolungma loves her blues.
(Chomolungma is the Tibetan name for Everest.)
more in a few days
Chris Warner
Advanced Base Camp - 6460m
Everest 2000 - North Side
Dispatch covering 3rd May to 11th May
Days 35 through 43
Correspondent: Tony Kelly - Climber
Rest Up at Base Camp - Where zero degrees is luxury compared to the Mountain
note: since Chris was in ABC and I was in BC some of these dispatch dates
overlap but its all part of the story and different perspectives - so here goes
3rd May - day 35
Daniel, Tony, Graham, Andy and Mark all headed out of ABC via a cup of tea at
Interim camp for the 22km hike down the glaciers to BC for a well earned rest.
They were joining Dave, Ivan, Kieron and Chung already there. Although in places the penitentes on the glacier are
spectacular for the most part its a long slog down an undulating boulder and
moraine trail (only beaten in the slog ratings by the slog back up). We decided
to put the heat on and managed it in a creditable 5hrs dead including 40mins
for tea at Interim.
Arrival at interim confirmed the intentions of Kieron, Dave and Ivan to pull
out for Xigatse the following morning. Speculation is rife as to whether the
strategy of resting in BC or going to the fleshpots of Xigatse is the right
plan. Russell's vote is dead against the Xigatse plan. The rest of us decide
that 12hrs each way in the 4x4, a nice bed and a shower, Chinese food and the
worry of tummy bugs with no significant height reduction benefit when weighed
against Ram and Korbadu's Base Camp cooking extravaganza, keeping in touch with
the mountain, staying fit knocking off 6000m peaks - is no contest. Who knows
who is right maybe both.
The other discovery at BC was that the Sat. phone had been the subject of
prying fingers that didn't know what they where doing. The result - a dead
phone. TK will set to the task tomorrow to try and undo the problem. Up to then
we are cut off from comms. at BC.
4th May - Day 36
Kieron, David and Ivan leave early in the jeep to Xigatse. The rest of the team
all plan lazy starts. First task for Graham and Tony is to fix up the
rudimentary shower at BC which is a caravan pump pulling water from one of the
gear barrels filled with water heated in the kitchen tent. This contraption
delivers several minutes of bliss. But since the water has to be carried about
a kilometre on the backs of Ram and Korbardu from a glacial river this is not a
frequent occurrence. Most shave off 4 weeks of growth and Tony even goes for a
haircut. This amounts to looking in a mirror and slicing off everything above
the eyebrows with his Leatherman tool.
On the mountain the sherpas are pushing hard to get ropes in place as high as
7900m. Meantime the Dutch expedition is even considering an early push to the
summit. Our view is this is risky since its still very early and very very cold
and the weather is not stable. In fact the weather is unseasonably cold and
unpredictable which is a worry for us.
Tony arranges assistance on our Sat. Phone by contacting the USA on the British
Army's Sat. phone.
5th May - Day 37
A quiet day in BC with the team doing exactly what is required - Resting,
eating, drinking lots of fluids and sleeping. We need to regain strength, put
back some body mass wasted after 2 weeks or so at ABC and above. The body is
designed to work well at 6000m plus and muscle wastes, fat reserves are eaten
up and various minor running irritations take their toll.
Its also big laundry day today with underwear that's spent the last few weeks
close to its owners vitals under some stressful situations getting a bit of a
shock being exposed to sunlight and then plunged into hot water.
Up on the mountain the sherpa's have been doing some consolidating at Camp 2
but then returned to ABC for rest.
We think we may have been graced with a visit in BC by Fifi (our name) the
incredible climbing dog. Ever since recent claims by Stevie Haston (the self
proclaimed greatest climber in the world) when he said the climbing Mt. Everest
is so easy a dog could climb it, there have been rumours of sightings. I
believe history records that Mr Haston singularly failed to get above the North
Ridge but perhaps the less said about that the better. Whereas Fifi has been
reported as spending a leisurely night acclimatizing at the North Col before
descending to BC for a rest prior to a summit push. As part of her detailed
preparations she knicked off with a large piece of yak meat from our store
tent.
6th May - Day 38
Forty-five years ago today I'm sure that the last thing on the young Kelly's
mind was Mount Everest. But celebrating his 45th at Base Camp in the year 2000
is certainly imprinted on his mind for the rest of his life. The team made a
great effort with a manufactured card, Ram and Korbardu baked a cake which even
had icing and some pretty dodgily spelled greetings, a bottle of scotch was
given a good pasting, ABC radioed down their best wishes and the British Army's
sat. phone provided contact with loved ones at home and and excellent event
slipped into the dispatches.
For the most part that day had been quiet at BC. A few folk took short hikes
but otherwise a day of recharging.
7th May - Day 39
A grey, snowy, windy day and folk in BC are starting to get a bit board and
restless and want to be back up the mountain. Graham and Tony visit an ancient
cave down the valley near the Rongbuk monastery. It is reputed that a monk was
deliberately walled in by his colleagues along with the monasteries treasures
at the time of the Chinese invasion. The trip into the cave was a slightly
unexpected potholing adventure since it winds up and down through narrow
passage ways. There was not much evidence of former habitation other than some
wall writings and an old hearth. Late this evening Kieron, Dave and Ivan
arrived back from Xigatse. The breakdown of activity seems to have been Kieron
got clean, ate and walked a lot, Dave got clean, ate and slept a lot and Ivan
got clean, ate and sauna'd a lot. As far as concerns about focus on the
mountain and splitting the team it would seem worries were unfounded and
certainly no one has returned with a tummy bug which was a major concern.
Indeed Kieron is dead keen and is off up to ABC ahead of the pack tomorrow.
8th May - Day 40
Kieron left early with a plan to stop over at Interim camp half way up the
glacier. Its a grey day but otherwise not too cold at BC (i.e. around zero.).
The rest of the team are getting even more restless and Tony and Daniel put in
place a plan to move up to ABC setting off tomorrow. The mountain is taking its
toll on the expeditions here and already there have been over 30 people gone
home with medical problems ranging from stomach upsets that refuse to respond
to treatment, serious chest infections that won't be budged by antibiotics, retinal
hemorrhaging (which is a fairly common problem but his had seriously affected
his vision), a couple of rabies bites, pulmonary edema (leakage of fluid across
the membranes in the lungs - a killer if not promptly treated by descent) and
cerebral edema (leakage of fluid across the membrane in the brain - a killer if
not promptly treated by descent).
Our own team has had its minor ailments but generally we're holding up very
well. A few chest infections and colds but nothing we couldn't handle with our medical
kit and certainly nothing too serious, even Tony's broken finger is healing
well albeit not pointing in the original direction.
We can put our general well being down to better food in cleaner conditions and
having a healthier infrastructure in our expedition. For example: prior to
every meal we all wash hands in a bucket of hot disinfected water outside the
mess tent. Bugs rip through a team like wild fire so we take the route of
pre-emptive strike.
On the mountain our own sherpa team is consolidating camps and the Dutch have a
man going for an early summit without oxygen.
9th May - Day 41
Yesterday, Kieron, travelling alone got all the way to Interim camp on the east
rongbuk glacier only to have Chuldrim refuse him entrance to the tent and turn
him away. The last time Chuldrim had seen Kieron he was scruffy and unshaven
and now the squeaky clean shaven, sweet smelling version looked unfamiliar and
highly suscpicious. Also Kieron didn't have any expedition ID on him. But after
reciting all 19 members and sherpas names off pat Chuldrim figured he was a
nice chap and invited him in for tea.
Daniel and Tony are ploughing up today through grim grey weather and snow fall.
The debate rages on in BC about the weather, the condition of the mountain and the
right time to go back to ABC. For Graham and Mark the timing is driven by their
BBC Mallory and Irvine Search Project. For the others it probably means a few
more days in BC until the strategy and timing is right.
10th May - Day 42
After a very pleasant night with Chuldrim at Interim Tony and Daniel roll into
ABC in time for a good lunch. The last 11km had been covered in strange
conditions with very bright sunlight and yet falling snow making everything
sparkle like is was jewel encrusted. It couldn't last and the last 2km was just
heavy snow clag. Russ and the Sherpas had just come off the mountain having
been working very hard between 7900m (25,920 ft) and 8300m (27,232 ft) putting
in equipment stashes. They had to battle back down through knee deep fresh snow
and decided that enough was enough and they would pull out for a BC rest that
next day having spent nearly a month above 6000m (19,686 ft).
Hans the Dutch leader who was attempting a solo without oxygen summit bid has
also come down having pulled out at 8500m (27,888). Hans's hands and of course
his toes are all intact thank goodness.
11th May - Day 43
Andy is coming up today from BC to ABC in one 22km hit. While he's on his way
Russ and the Sherpas head down for several days in BC. Tony, Daniel and Kieron
plot their next assault on the mountain. The plan is that whilst Andy is
working up at 7900m (25,920 ft) they will go to the North Col, stay over, then
climb the North Ridge and stay at Camp 2 and then push on to 7900m before
returning to ABC. Of course this is all subject to weather. The weather window
looks ok but not great. The good news is the winds should be light, however
there may be some snow.
more in a few days
Tony Kelly
Advanced Base Camp - 6460m
Everest 2000 - North Side
May, 12-14, 2000 days
44-46
May 12, 2000 day 44
He's looking old, folks!!
Graham Hoyland woke up, wishing this
dream was over. It was his birthday.
Forty three years old and still not smart enough to give up climbing for golf.
This is actually his second birthday on Everest. How foolish can you get?
The rest of us had plenty of fun at his expense. Russell and the Sherpas were
with us in base camp and it didn't take long before the pop tops were pulled on
a few Pabst Blue Ribbons. We pulled the tables into the sun, served hors
d'oeuvres and invited a bunch of British and Dutch climbers over for a party.
Russell gave Graham some pieces of a tent and some kind of old food tin,
excavated from a camp site at 7,900 meters (25,920 ft.). These scraps of canvas
and the sections of tent pole were from the 1924 British Expedition. Graham's
uncle was one of the climbers on that team. We've been kidding Graham for weeks
about setting up a big canvas tent on his front lawn, stocking it with old
climbing gear and calling it a museum. Well, he's on his way to a curatorship
now.
Keiron, Tony and Daniel were climbing from ABC to the North Col, missing the
party. Luckily for them, as the British Army didn't finish drinking our beer
until long after midnight.
High on the mountain, the Japanese clean up expedition pitched in, again,
carrying and fixing ropes from 7900 meters (25,920 ft.) to 8300 meters (27,232
ft). This has really opened the doors to summit, allowing teams laden with gear
to establish their high camps. Still no ropes are fixed above 8300 meters and
the snow is so deep up there, old ropes aren't to be found. It will still take
either a bold or a strong team to push for the top.
May 13 Day 45
Moses would love the walk from base camp to AB |