Saturday, November 27, 2010

Mountain Flight

After a long debate with my right knee (that gave out climbing stairs yesterday) and my overall state of exhaustion from travelling this country for the last 60 days or so, combined with the punishment of the recent Annapurna Base Camp trek ... I decided that seeing the Everest region was still a high priority for me. I had come to this country with the intent of seeing Everest, Ama Dablam, Lhotse and all their friends so what better way than from the air!


You only live once and living with the images of the majestic, towering, white massifs approaching on the horizon is a pretty amazing feeling. For me, this moment had been years in the making. From the first time I saw the mountains in Alberta as a youngster while visiting family friends on my March break to hearing their stories of expeditions to far away places and mountains with names like Ama Dablam, Annapurna and Everest ... it became clear that I needed to see them for myself. Nepal always seemed reachable but I just needed to get on that plane. So here they are in all their glory. The Bucket List now has one less item,






Mt. Everest

Mt. Everest (29029 ft)
Mt. Everest (29029 ft)


Mt. Everest (29029 ft). So high the top is in the clouds.







Descriptions and names to follow.

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Paragliding in Pokhara

After spending most of my two months in Nepal by both land and river, we decided to take to the skies! Pokhara and more specifically Sarangkot is an absolute paragliding epicenter. The flying conditions and thermals that are created here allow for flying almost year round. A friend I have been travelling with for some weeks now named Evan Bouchier is a solo pilot and he has camped himself out here and flies everyday. There is a real scene here. Flying junkies. You can spot them in town with their gigantic backpacks carrying their wings.


 Again for you Mom! Boots are getting good use. Paragliding from Sarankot over Phewa Tal in Pokhara.
We flew with a company called Blue Sky Paragliding http://www.paragliding-nepal.com/ and I was up in the air for an hour over Phewa Tal and the town of Pokhara. We were able to see the mountains that we had spent the last nine days hiking in and out of and were able to sit back and enjoy the ride.
Perhaps a new hobby on the horizon. Ya never know.

View of the Annapurna Range from the sky.

Suzy in the Sky with Diamonds. Money shot.


Grandpa

This post is titled "Grandpa" because this is who it is for. I learned in an email recently that my Grandpa who has his Sunday dinner every week at my parents place gets his weekly Nepal updates while mowing down on my mom's delicious (and missed!) home-cooking. So this post is for you!! Hi Grandpa! It makes me feel closer to you than half a world away knowing that you are seeing my photos and listening to my blog. Miss you tons and will see you in the new year!
Love your favourite hugger.
A.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Annapurna Base Camp Trek


Hiked from Macchupucchre base camp to Annapurna base camp for sunrise.
Departed on the Annapurna Sanctuary Trek from a place called Phedi and embarked on quite possibly the toughest hike I have ever been on.

This trek is not for the faint of heart but it is definitely one that has people from all walks of life hiking it's trails. It was really inspiring to see people out here that you wouldn't expect, like retirees and young children with their hardcore parents.

The hike took us about 9 days return trip as we took our time and enjoyed being on a personal hiking trip without students or any responsibilities other than to ourselves. The trekking was arduous and physically challenging. My knees are definitely not the same but are fairing better after Mike Crowtz's nugget about the 'Rest Step'. Look it up folks ... it will save your life and knees. The trail is only about 40km's but anyone who has spent time in the mountains or Himalayas knows that it is 40km's of consistent gaining and decreasing elevation which makes for long days and hard work.

The trail takes you from the rice fields and villages of rural Nepal, into the rhododendron forests and monkeys, up into the hills and eventually the mountains. We took our time to make sure that we were acclimatized to the altitude and had a couple of early days due to cold and hard rain. Again, not having students with us allowed us to say ... hello sleeping bag and warm cup of milk tea! As for the altitude, I only felt a slight headache at Base Camp and woke up in the night feeling like I couldn't catch my breath. Nothing serious just very aware of taking our time and not going to high without being ready.

Sharing the 4130m (13,500ft) sunrise with this friendly mountain dog.
The view from the top was breathtaking. We left Macchupucchre Base Camp (MBC) around 4:45am and hiked in the dark with headlamps for about 90 minutes until we reach Annapurna Base Camp (ABC) as the sun was coming up from behind us and welcomed us with the views you will see below. Worth every cold and tiring step. ABC is 4130m or 13,500ft of pure, stunning magic.

Annapurna Base Camp. Approximately 6:20am and -10 degrees.

Annapurna I and memorial in place for climbers who have lost their lives on these mountains.

Suzzers taking in the sights.

This one if for you Mom. Thanks for finding my boots!

Annapurna Base Camp

Macchupucchre (Fishtail) Mountain

                                                                                       Porters hiking to Base Camp.                                                                                   Left side is backside of Annapurna South and the mountain in front of them is Annapurna I

Cheese! This one's for you Mom.

Gangapurna Mountain

Annapurna South, Hinchuli and Macchupucchre Mountains.

The Mighty Macchupuchhre Mountain

6:15am view of Annaourna South and Hinchuli.

Few minutes later ...

6:45am view of Macchupucchre Mountain.

Golden hue of the morning sun. Started walking at 4:45am to get to this spot.

Almost awake and enjoying the -10 weather.


Macchupucchre Mtn.

Another shot for Mom.


Hiked from Macchupucchre base camp to Annapurna base camp for sunrise.

Monday, November 8, 2010

Karnali River and Bardia National Park

My current position on the globe is now 28° 14' 0" N / 83° 59' 0" E in a place called Pokhara located northeast from Kathmandu. Depending on what day of the week it is, what Hindu or Buddhist festival is currently being celebrated or the lower the ratio of cow:people:vehicles there is on the road, the journey overland is about six to twelve hours from Kathmandu and about fifteen to twenty four hours from Chisopani in the far west. Pokhara is a lakeside town and is the start and finish post for all things trekking. I am camped out here waiting on Suzy Pollard's arrival in the next few days. Let the debauchery begin.

The road to Pokhara was a long and amazing one. I headed to the Karnali River again with the hilarious Drift Nepal boys and a much larger crew then the previous trip.

File:Mansarovar.jpg
Lake Mansarovar in Tibet.
The Karnali or Ghaghara is a trans-boundary perennial river originating on the Tibetan plateau near Lake Mansarovar. It cuts through the Himalayas in Nepal and joins the Sarda River at Brahmaghat in India. Together they form the Ghaghra River, a major left bank tributary of the Ganges. With a length of 507 km it is the largest river in Nepal and one of the largest tributaries of the Ganges. The total length of Ghaghara River up to its confluence with the Ganges at Doriganj in Bihar is 1080 km. In Chinese it is called K'ung-ch'iao Ho. In Nepali it is called Kauriala, Manchu and Karnali meaning Turquoise River. In Uttarakhand, Pilibhit and Shahjanpur districts of Uttar Pradesh it is spelled Gogra, Ghaghra or Ghagraand Khakra, literally holy water from the sacred mountain. 


Bamboo hut on the bank of the Trisuli River. Lived here for three days until the Karnali River trip.

Butterfly or Leaf?

Terraced rice fields close to the put in for the Karnali River.

First view from the wildest, most death-defying two day bus ride of the Karnali River.

This three year old little man introduced himself by sneaking up to me and playing the game of trying to make you fall over backwards by digging under your shoes. He then practised his English with me in the sand. We were fast pals for about an hour. Fascinated by my camera as most folks out here are.

My tent on the bank of the river at Camp 2.  The walking foliage is a young girl carrying the freshly harvested leaves from a neighbouring treed cut by her brother. The leaves are used to feed the goats.

Family who came down to check out the action.

These bamboo containers delivered yogurt from the local village. The yogurt had been in this containers for five years. It was the best yogurt I had ever tasted.

All together now. The man to the right at the back of the raft is Mongol, one of the raft guides. He has over 25 years experience guiding on rivers in Nepal, Japan and India. Most nights he was severely intoxicated on the local rahksie or rice wine. By day, I trusted his every move. Believe it or not.

Bridge over Karnali waters.

Amrit surfing some of that turquiose water under the bridge.

There are four kayakers in this photo. Should represent the scale and size of this enormous river.




Traditional long boat. This one took 45 days to fell, hollow and make water ready. This one is about 35 ft long.


Hoodoos.

View from my tent.

Last sunset on the Karnali river. 
This river trip was unreal. Having had the opportunity to travel so far to the west this time into areas that really only paddlers get to see is a great gift. I felt honoured to be there and to be able to breathe in the clean air, swim in the frigid waters, sleep under the stars, eat fresh, local meat, share in local customs like the large hookah packed with locally harvested ganga (don't read this part Mom and Dad ... too late!) and to revel in the beauty and hardship that is life in rural Nepal.

There are no roads, there is no access to proper let alone basic health care, women die during childbirth, malaria kills on average 22 people per year, people go hungry in order to sell their livestock for clothing and basic supplies, every monsoon season hundreds of people including children are swept away in the swollen and ferocious Karnali river ... yet in all of this there is happiness, smiles and laughter. These people are hardworking people. The river represents life and death in a real way. According to religious tradition bodies are carried by bamboo and cremated by the rivers edge and the remains are washed away.

The hills are different shades of green representing rice, millet, mustard leaf, cabbage and other fruitful crops to feed their families. Goats wander the hillsides herded by young children, water buffalo cool themselves in the river, cows wander sacredly and freely and all the while, the people live cut off from the rest of Nepal. Good or bad? For better or for worse? You need to answer that for yourself. According to some, there is a desperate need for roads. Roads to the bigger cities so that these rural farmers can sell their livestock, fruits, vegetables and other products of living in the Terai or marshy grasslands, savannas, and forests at the base of the Himalaya range. I read Three Cups of Tea and there was a quote by Helena Norberg-Hodge who is an analyst of the impact of the global economy on cultures and agriculture worldwide at the beginning of one of the chapters that read: 

"It may seem absurd to believe that a 'primitive' culture in the Himalaya has anything to teach our industrialized society. But our search for a future that works keeps spiraling back to an ancient connection between ourselves and the earth, an interconnectedness that ancient cultures have never abandoned."

We refer to this part of the world as the 'developing' world. Developing what? What is it that they should be striving for? Our Westernized ways of overconsumption, mass production and non-renewable energy sources. These folks have exactly what they need right outside their doors. People lose their noodles in the west when the power goes out. Here, if you even have access to power you may have a little solar panel on your hut that will generate enough energy to have a single bulb on for a couple hours at night. In most bigger cities like Kathmandu and Pokhara, their is load sharing which means the power goes off or on only during certain times of the day. Access to power is a whole other rant for another day but the basis of that argument is Nepal dams their rivers, sells the power to India who then sells it back to Nepal??? Let us all turn out our lights and light a candle. It's way cooler.
    
 Bardia National Park

Bardia National Park is what the popular Chitwan National Park just south of Kathmandu was 30 years ago before being overrun by mass tourism. Bardia is the largest and most pristine national park in the Terai and has excellent wildlife viewing. It's known as one of the best places in the world to spot a tiger - although spending a day walking the jungle - you need exceptional luck to see them. There are healthy populations of wild elephants, one-horned rhinos and among 30 species of mammals living in the 1550 sq km of sal forest and grssland. Bardia has been one of the hardest hit regions by the Maoist insurgency (topic unto itself).

We visited the park after the Karnali River because it would be a shame not to as we were so far west I was not likely to return this way. Bardia literally borders India and has a very sparse amount of tourists which was its biggest draw for me. Chitwan is a circus of elephant rides, packages and tourists where Bardia is quite, sadly empty but untouched by tourism. It is another world with having the military presence but poaching is a serious and real issue here. The rare one horned rhino is slaughter solely for their horn and sold for millions of rupees on the blackmarket. The tiger population was depleted almost to extinction. A lot of work has been done to replenish the population and to rebuild the park.

I stayed with some people from the river trip at the Tharu Home which is a quiet, family run home with a few rooms, good food and amazing hospitality. When I arrived I had no money so they ensured me I could pay them later. I racked up a bill over the 3 days there and when I arrived in Pokhara, using the owners banking information, I paid my bill. I couldn't get over the trust that this man put in me. For me to not pay this bill, in the land of karma would have seriously messed me up down the road for sure! If only the rest of the world had such faith and trust in each other. I was truly humbled.

Crocodile.

Termite den.

Termite homestead.

Beautiful bridge over the crocodiled waters.

The Army patrols the park. Poaching has been and still is an enormous problem here. There is an Army Base at the entrance to the park. Definitely not Algonquin in these parts.  As they marched by they said 'no camera' so naturally I obliged.

Park Staff. We patrol in boats, here they ride the elepant.

Elephant to Chaco.

Tiger Print.

Our guide, fifteen year old Dhama from the Tharu Home where we stayed. No English. We learned a lot from him. Really cute kid though. He wears a US Parcel uniform most days.

Park staff harvested the elephant sal (grass) and then the elephants would pass the bunches up to be arranged for transport.



Monkey business.