| On the walk up |
I spent three days in Manang waiting for the penicillin to evict
that pernicious bacterial infection from my lungs.
It was a relief to sling on my backpack, grab my hiking
stick, and shake the knots and stiffness out of my body. But I was apprehensive
– Thorung-La loomed large, equal parts “I’m going to cross one of the highest
passes in the world!” and “Oh God, that’s high, am I going to be able to
breathe???”
And the air WAS thin. Yuvash and I walked with the Israeli
and Aussie backpackers we’d linked up with in Manang. We made slow progress –
as long as we kept our steps slow and steady, the hiking didn’t pose too much
of a problem. But upwards climbs or a faster pace reduced us into gasping gulps
of air.
The landscape was about as stringent as the air – scrubby, dry views where green patches of grass looked like calm oases.
| From High Camp |
We stopped in Yak Kharka, a couple of hours outside of
Manang. Four men were playing dice on a bedraggled Yak pelt, rattling the dice
in a small bowl and slamming them onto the pelt with a high-pitched yelp.
I devoured some vile, greasy noodles while they played, and
after lunch we made another quick high to Letdar, where we spent the night in a
lodge with some Belgians and Frenchmen. I also ran into a contingent of
adventure skiers on their way back from a trip. One of things that had puzzled
me on my trek was the stubborn lack of Americans, and suddenly I couldn’t
escape the surreal barrage of “Dude!” and Colorado skiing-talk from these boys
from Telluride.
The next morning we set out for Thorung Phedi (4200 meters),
where we started seeing melting piles of snow, and the color palette devolved
to brown, white, gray, and blue. We continued to High Camp, where we would
spend the night before hiking for the pass the next day.
| You can see high camp to the right |
| Crazy, huh? |
The hotel had been planted in cleft high above the river,
which snaked its way south below us. It was a compound of three buildings
surrounded by huge piles of shale which climbers would scale to get a scrap
more altitude and ever more epic and beautiful photos.
I scaled to the top of one, crowned by rock towers other
trekkers had built for good luck, and a series of shrines adorned with streams
of Tibetan prayer flags, the once vibrant colors fading beneath the harsh
mountain sunlight.
The whole valley spread out below. A scattering of mountains
on my left looked like a series of craggy spikes. In front, a whole shelf of
peaks wreathed in clouds. And all around, the brown and black scree, like
unroasted coffee beans.
I spent the night buried under two blankets (which seemed to
have more dust than stuff, but no matter).
| Headed to the Pass |
The next morning Yuvash and I headed for the pass. We
started at 5:30 – we’d been warned that if you cross the pass too late, the
winds make the pass almost impossible.
The air was startlingly clear, and the peaks were haloed
with light from the sun that hadn’t yet risen above them. My memory of that
portion of the trek is more scattered flashbacks – the wheezing and gulping in the
paper-thin air, skidding across the icy track, the almost instant transition
from mostly dirt to above the snowline.
A teashop appeared out of nowhere, one of the two way stations
put in place for weary trekkers. Two ponies passed by me, steam shooting out of
their nostrils like geysers, their riders whooping as they charged up the
mountain.
And finally, the sun crested the peaks, puncturing the icy
chill.
After one long last climb (where there always seemed to be
ONE MORE ridge just head, we arrived at the top! It was sort of hard to
believe, a bit of an anti-climax after the 10 days that Yuvash and I had spent
sweating our through to get there. A teahouse (maybe the world’s highest?) was
selling tea at 150 rupees a cup. I stripped off my sweat sodden shirt and
changed into a new one, gulped down some tea, chocolate, and Ibuprofen (the
altitude was giving me a headache that wouldn’t quit) took the required snaps.
| MADE IT! |
| From Whence We Came. |
| Me and Yuvash, my intrepid trekking buddy |
| To Muktinath |
The views, as at High Camp, were unreal. A long line of
prayer flags, and behind us, the icy, snowy peaks. In front, Mustang (Nepal’s
closest region to Tibet), and the nearly 2km drop to Muktinath, hidden in a
rain shadow that left whole mountains devoid even of scrub. There, there were
mountains as well, soaring above a thin line of recently formed clouds.
I started down to Muktinath once my toes started going numb.
My knees started aching almost immediately.
The descent is 1800 meters, most of
it sharp angled switchbacks.
Three hours later, I was in Muktinath, with its hot running
water. Yuvash and I headed for the restaurant – and the bar. I soon found
myself in heaven - slurping down a beer and munching my way through a Yak
burger (an immediate, unbeatable argument against vegetarianism).
Tomorrow: Last entry!
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