Friday, March 16, 2012

Kathmandu & Everest!!!


A few days in Pokhara and its time to bus to Kathmandu...the capital of Nepal. Many people hate this place but Lori and I love it...Thamal is a "run down" ramshackle, ancient part of town full of funky stores selling everything one can think of and some great eateries....Nepalese food is fantastic...definately one of the things that have really improved in this country since 2003. We should also mention "power shedding"...another way of saying that there isn't enough electrical output in Nepal to keep the country in power...so every day the power shuts off for up to 10 hours! Imagine trying to run a business etc. without power...but the Nepalese seem to have adapted and have more solar power, independent water generators etc. than any country we have ever been in!


I might as well throw in our overnight visit to Bhaktapur: this city of 80,000 is a World Heritage Site (the entire city) and lies only 15 km from the outskirts of Kathmandu. An absolutely amazing place which consists of the most beautiful old temples and huge rock carvings that date back well over 500 years. What really amazed us is that the entire city is constructed of ancient brick and rock and honestly a good fart would bring down most of the buildings! Given the fact that Nepal has numerous earth quakes it seems inevitable that this city will be destroyed and at a huge cost to the people living in it. In the meantime it is a living legacy to what life must have been like 500 plus years ago...amazing!



EVEREST HIKE

So one of the major reasons we are in Nepal is to torture ourselves with a hike (or trek if your yuppie foreigner!) in the Everest region. The first step is probably the toughest...we decided to fly into Lukla....and this in itself proved to be a tough undertaking. Needless to say after two days of cancelled flights in a very overcrowded KTM (Kathmandu) airport we knew the airport better than we ever wanted to (but it was interesting watching the pigeons fly and shit inside the airport buildings!) The third day proved lucky and we were rewarded with a very bumpy ride in an ancient Canadian twin turbo Otter aircraft into the Lukla air strip. NOW this is an airstrip worthy of note...less than 300 m long, located on the very lip of a 1000 foot cliff and with the strip at a plus 20 percent grade she is interesting to say the least. The pilots put the otter down HARD and uphill you shoot THEN a 90 degree turn (while you are still speeding along!)-slam on the brakes!



Lukla airport




that's Everest in the background with the spindrift

So we are hiking by 11....again there are lots of changes since our Annapurna/Langtang hikes...and in this case we have to say the changes are positive! First of all the lodging is way better quality and same goes for the food! Without going into details we can say that the Everest and Gokyo hikes offer much better mountain scenery that any of the Annapurna hikes (circuit and base camp)....this hike takes in most of the worlds top ten mountains in height. Secondly the hiking is relatively easy with very short days (because of acclimatization) compared to Annapurna. The flip side is that you end up spending much more time at elevations over 4000 meters...not a problem if you can handle elevation but the fact is that any elevations over 4500m are a real bitch (even if you don't get sick, have headaches etc.)...it is really hard to imagine how hard it is to climb even one step at 5000m...literally a 4 inch step every 2 seconds is doing great! Both Lori and I seem to adapt easy to elevation but not so our travelling companions (two very fit young German fellows who had to bail out at 4300m).


Namche Bazaar



lodging on the way

So outside of the elevation issues the other major consideration when hiking is the timing of your hike. We did our hike in late Feb early March...which is out of season. The rewards: virtually no hikers...the downside...insanely cold (minus 25 at 5000m) which truly makes life a bitch after the sun goes down! (Not to mention long drop toilets that are a sheet of ice...enough to make you hold your bladder until your ready to blow! Another down side is that the few, but gorgeous alpine lakes are all frozen over...and not the beautiful picturesque blue shown in all the summer photos. The real downside of hiking during the tourist season is people...literally thousands of people and the resultant dust, traffic, full lodging etc. Bottom line is that you DO NOT want to hike the trails during tourist season (up to 2000 people on the trail at one time.

at the top of Kala Patar

memorial area to Everest climbers

made it!  Everest base camp!