Mera Peak - Day 3 Nashing Dingma


Today we got our first sighting of Mera Peak and it might be a trekking mountain but it's big, scarily big. For the first time I was grabbed by a challenge of climbing it, both the excitement about getting to the top and concern that I might not be able to do it. I got the same feeling when I started the walk along the E4 last year.
First hazy sight of Mera (the one in the middle!)

Mera Peak - Day 2 Pangkongma

My number 1 tip if you're doing an altitude walk in the Himalayas is hire a sleeping bag rather than bring your own. The ones you get with Exodus are by all accounts excellent and cost £25 for the 17 day trek.  You can hire them at Shona's in Kathmandu for even less.  I've got a four season sleeping bag with a fleece liner which theoretically should be warm enough but isn't.  I'm already feeling the cold and last night was only 2,900 metres - seriously worrying.  If I had hired one I would also have had far more room in by bag to take home loads of goodies from Kathmandu - yak blankets and things - and my previous storage space at home wouldn't be filled up with hanging sleeping bags. 

Mera Peak - Day 1 Puyan

Said goodbye to the last of the Annapurna group and started to get to know the new Mera Peak team. Counting me there are 7 men, all with the same or more experience of altitude trekking than me.  Christine of course left for England yesterday. Started the day feeling just slightly apprehensive.

The trip really began yesterday with inspection and briefing.  Jangbu is a the tour leader again and knowing him already is a big help. He has a nice way with him, good sense of humour, cracks jokes, but happy to act as a leader.  His kit inspection was not a formality and a number of items were politely rejected.

Annapurna Circuit - March 2012


Christine has wanted to walk the Annapurna Circuit ever since we made our first trip to Nepal about 9 years ago.  It's the trek that the guides usually offer up as their favorite and with all the talk of the route being spoilt by a road we thought it would be best to try and enjoy it before it was too late.  The plan involved both of us joining a group for the three week trip, with me joining another group at the end to walk up Mera Peak.  Six weeks in Nepal should be a doddle after six months walking across Europe.
Annapurna Circuit

Annapurna Circuit Day 17 Birethanti


Given the murky weather of the last few days it was well worth the predawn 300 metre climb up to Poon Hill above Ghorepani. By the time we got to the top we could see the whole Annapurna range, Dhaulagiri to the west and Manaslu to the east. Immediately in front of us and dominating the skyline was Annapurna South and to its right, perhaps the most famous mountain in the whole range, the never to be climbed Machhapuchre or Fishtail. I've been to Poon Hill before but, after walking the Circuit, it was much better the second time.  Took the only group photo of the trip at the top, not included is Paul who after yesterday's exertions decided to stay at the tea house.

The group


Annapurna Circuit Day 16 Ghorepani


We all thought that Paul, who had hitched a lift on a yak over Thurang La, would be on some sort of conveyance for the 1800 metre climb up to Ghorepani.  Instead he started an hour earlier than us and, although we thought we would catch him up sometime during the day, had finished his first cup of tea well before we arrived.  Paul has got a lot fitter since he started the trip.

The price of firewood
It's a tough walk, away from the new road, on original paved trails,  from village to village across heavy populated and steeply terraced farmland. After a relatively quite few days post Jonsom the number of trekkers on the trail has increased.

Annapurna Circuit Day 15 Tatopani


Good weather again today but the valley between Ghasa and Tatopani is a deep one and the views of the big Annapurna peaks were limited.  It was a tougher walk than any of us were expecting -Jangbu's hand wave description of the route did have up as well as as down strokes - but was an excellent one none-the-less.

Started the day by speaking to a couple of German sociologists, I think from a charity,  who complained to me that since their last trip 20 years ago tourists had destroyed the valley.  I guess that annoyed me, and I spent the whole day in an imaginary debate with them about the role of tourists in the valley's very obvious transformation.

Our mid-morning tea stop fuelled the internal debate still further.  The woman who prepared our tea ran an immaculate little farm, tiny patches of terrace no bigger than a large garden.  The location, at the side of the old trail and not the new road which was on the other side of the valley, was perfect. Everything was pristine and clean.  She lived in a 25 by 8 foot dwelling made of woven panels of dried grass and a pitched roof made of similar material but with a plastic lining.  The dwelling was in two parts, a living area at the front and a sleeping area at the back.  She prepared hot water for our tea on a fire which was in a hole in the ground in the living area. There was no chimney and smoke from the fire hung in the low space of the hut.  The woman looked after her granddaughter, a four year old.  The woman's husband had left her, a son was working in Kuwait, and another son was down the valley at school. Her little farm, particularly with the sun shining, looked wonderful but given the choice the Nepalese, like everyone else born into such a tough life, seem to want something easier.