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Archive >> March 2008

Untagged  30 Mar 2008 2:00 AM
Annapurna Base Camp by Don Bowie
Three weeks after departing the states I finally send my first update; Thuraya (my satellite phone and internet provider) and I are still at odds working out the connection glitches for internet access. I can make calls but cannot access the internet or emails on my computer. Thuraya's customer service dept maintains that I need to download new firmware updates from their website to solve the connection issue. Raise your hand if you see a problem here…
Ergo, my first dispatch comes courtesy my Romanian climbing partner Horia Colibasanu and his trusty satellite connection. I fear all my future dispatches shall follow suit, or at least until I exhaust his generosity.

My travels to Nepal were long but smooth. Before flying to Delhi, I had a long layover in Chicago where my cousin selflessly shuttled me around the city for nearly all of my 8 hour stay, picking up last minute camera gear, catching up on family news, and stuffing myself with the last American meal I'll enjoy for nearly 8 months. Thanks Chrissy…

After a short stay in Delhi I finally arrived in Nepal, greeted by a generous wafting of thick Kathmandu air - a humid soup of exhaust, dust, and the faint odor of something-somewhere rotting. My initial feeling upon arrival was of a weird sort of comfort, perhaps due to a deep-seated familiarity originating from my communal rugby-house days in Des Moines, Iowa; where upon arriving home, one was greeted to a humid soup of sweat, dust, and the faint odor of something-somewhere rotting. Ask my brother…

Negotiating traffic from the backseat of our trekking company's van, I found myself smiling, happy to be back in the systematic chaos of Kathmandu traffic. Don't try to drive here. Westerners are born without that part of the brain required to decode the traffic rules and protocols. Somehow it all works, but I have no idea how. Consider that pedestrians, livestock, mopeds, motorbikes, rickshaws, open sewers, ditches, buses, school children, trucks, taxis, tractors, horse carts, and cars smoothly negotiate the narrow streets with narry an accident, no apparent hierarchy, through a perpetual rush hour, and without the aid of traffic lights, signs, or (visible) street paint.

Dan Baas (film guy) and Dan Stensland (photographer) arrived a few days later, and after procuring some rope, permits, and last minute supplies, we packed into a small van and were on our way, winding through the canyons and terraced fields toward the Pokara and the Himalayas. Denny and Lauralee, my friends/landlords from Bishop, CA had also joined us, and on March 12th the 5 of us finally began the long trek into base camp.

We've now been at base camp for two weeks. Dan Stensland, Denny, and Laura Lee have since left for other treks and eventually home. During the first week, I climbed alone up the glacier to near the bottom of the south face, establishing and sleeping at a depot camp near 5000m. I remembered the way from 2006 when I attempted the peak with the Polish/Slovak team. This time, the grass traverse below Tharpu Chuli was exceptionally icy and dangerous, requiring the use of crampons on the steep, frozen turf. This section of the approach seems absurdly out of place. I've never worn crampons on frozen grass before, but the conditions and slope angle demand it. As I cross, I tell myself to be extremely vigilant, as it would be more embarrassing than tragic to come to grief on this tilted, overgrown, football field- before even reaching the f ace.

On the 24th my climbing partners Inaki Ochoa (Spain) and Horia Colibasanu (Romania) arrived, excited, fit, and ready to work. Since then we have visited the depot camp twice, dropping loads of gear and supplies, laughing and joking our way across the ridiculous grass traverse, which has now been officially dubbed, "The Mixed Salad Traverse". Tomorrow we plan to move up to the depot camp to work the latter half of the approach through the icefall, and to find the way to the base of the wall.

Our spirits are high and we laugh often - almost continuously. The route up the face below Roc Noir looks in fine condition, with a thick layer of fluted snow and little obvious ice. The daily clouds rise in the sanctuary, but we get morning glimpses of the face, and dream of the adventures ahead.

A special thanks to all who have encouraged, supported, prayed for, assisted, and helped me prepare for this endeavor, especially during the chaotic months before my departure. I think of you often, knowing that without your support I could not aspire to such lofty goals as climbing Annapurna. All of you continue to share in my dreams...I thank you.

More to follow.
Untagged  17 Mar 2008 2:00 AM
2008 Annapurna / Kangchenjunga Expedition by Don Bowie
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