North Expedition Dispatches Satellite phone updates from the north side of Everest CLICK FOR COMPLETE INDEX OF DISPATCHES |
Dave Hahn |
Mount Everest might best be thought of as three mountains which happen to have a common summit. The mountain most people envision is likely to be the one they've heard most about, the South side in Nepal. For a good number of climbers these days, however, Mount Everest is the mountain approached from the North, via Tibet. [Click for map]
The third Everest is the East, or Kangshung Face. That too, is in Tibet, but it is approached altogether differently, and seldomly, as it is a thoroughly difficult aspect of the mountain.
North side of Everest (photo: Art Wolf) |
Travel to the North Side of Mount Everest is radically different from a journey to the South as well. This expedition began in Kathmandu, Nepal [Click for map], as most north side trips do these days. We are a commercial expedition for International Mountain Guides (IMG). The trip was organized by one of the principals of IMG, Eric Simonson, who happens to be climbing the Nepal side of the mountain this season with 1998 American Everest Expedition. Perhaps we'll see him on top.
To say that our trip is commercial may imply that it is some grand business venture, but the reality is that one could probably count on greater, certainly safer, financial returns by staying home mowing lawns, selling lemonade and working down at the local McDonalds.
This is a climbing trip. There are six guides and two clients, and an associated trek helps to make the trip possible. We met our Sherpa partners in Kathmandu back at the start of April. For the climbers, this was a reunion as we are well aquatinted with the four climbing Sherpas and two sherpa cooks provided by Great Escapes Trekking. In my own case, this makes six 8000 meter expeditions, and happily they have all been in the company of many of these same Sherpas, guides and clients. That made things easier when it came to wrestling with logistics in K-du.
Dave Hahn, International Mountain Guides' Expedition Leader
DISPATCHES | |