Trekking to Everest Base Camp: My Experience PART FOUR

in travel •  7 years ago  (edited)

You can find Part One of this series HERE
You can find Part Two of this series HERE
You can find Part Three of this series HERE

Lobuche to Gorak Shep - Everest Base Camp and Kala Patthar

14940045_10211391804659547_3513670433046260960_o.jpg
Me at the top of Kala Patthar surrounded by prayer flags

Hello, Steemians! I will pick up where I left off in my last post. When I arrived in Lobuche in the early afternoon, I found the smallest village I had seen yet and very few teahouses. I went to all of them and most of them were booked in advance by people with guides and I was starting to get a bit worried. I went to the last teahouse in the village and found that while they had rooms, they had no single rooms, luckily for me there were three other independent hikers there in the same situation as me and we struck up a quick friendship over tea and decided to hike together and share rooms in the smaller villages. I shared a room with a Brazilian guy named Christiano who was back for a second attempt to get to basecamp after his last attempt was halted by the earthquake of 2015. The other two hikers were Gabriel from Sweden and Lauri from Finland, we were all of equal fitness levels so it really worked out well for all of us.

IMG_20161018_085212.jpg
Along the trail to Gorak Shep

The next morning we set off early heading for the final village on the trek, Gorak Shep, it was about a 3-4 hour hike and most of it was over loose rock piles which made a mildly difficult to maneuver. We arrived before noon and had a quick lunch before making the decision of how to spend the rest of the day. The typical schedule for hikers is to arrive and head straight for basecamp and then the following morning head up Kala Patthar to watch sunrise over Mt Everest. However, talking to people in the teahouse we learned that the early morning weather had been hit or miss so we decided to head up Kala Patthar that afternoon and see the tallest mountain in the world surrounded by blue skies and take our chances the next morning at basecamp.

IMG_20161018_140119.jpg
Leaving Gorak Shep

Kala Patthar is a small mountain just to the west of Gorak Shep and Everest which provides amazing views at around 5550m above sea level

IMG_20161018_113217.jpg
Christiano stopping to take a photo on the hike up Kala Patthar

I will be honest here, hiking to the top of Kala Patthar was probably one of the toughest things I have ever done in the mountains, the air was increasingly thin and I had a pounding headache that wouldn't quit the whole time. It took us about 1-1.5 hours to get to the top and by the time we got there I was exhausted and had to sit for a few minutes to get my composure, but once I did I was blown away. The views were completely unbelievable in comparison to anything I had ever seen before, I have spent a lot of time in the Canadian Rockies but this was completely different. We spent about an hour up there basking in the view of the tallest mountain in the world, it was a beautiful day and I am so glad we made the decision to go up there and not to basecamp that day. After taking a bunch of pictures and relaxing a bit we headed back down for a big meal and an early bedtime to get ready for the morning hike to basecamp.

IMG_20161018_121513.jpg
Me in front of Mt Everest

IMG_20161018_123231.jpg
Looking down from the summit

IMG_20161018_130226.jpg
A shot of the peak of Kala Patthar

Everest Base Camp

IMG_20161019_094733.jpg

The next morning we got up and left at 4 am for the 2.5 hour hike to the basecamp itself at the base of the infamous Khumbu Glacier. The hike was difficult because it was quite cold and again the air was thin at altitudes above 5000m but we made it in reasonable time. In the offseason basecamp is deserted but you can spot it by the large amounts of prayer flags and the stones marking it so while it's not as impressive as Kala Patthar it is still quite the experience. To me, the most amazing part is the sense of scale you feel knowing you are standing at the bottom of the tallest mountain in the world, it gave me a great deal of respect for the Sherpas who travel up and down these trails multiple times every year. After spending a few hours watching sunrise and taking pictures we headed back to Gorak Shep for a big breakfast before heading back down to civilization. It had been 9 days since I left Lukla at this point and although I had accomplished what I set out to do, going down was a whole other beast to tackle.

IMG_20161019_075515.jpg
Finally made it!

IMG_20161019_081325.jpg
Sunrise over Mt. Everest

IMG_20161019_080234.jpg
Never been more tired or happier

I will conclude this series with one other post covering the way down from the top, if you like this post or have a story of your own, please comment below. Thanks for reading!

DQmWGd6YRPh2M3rdUSnthQMcGWLUHPsCE5bnRg6zpJBz5Gn.gif

Authors get paid when people like you upvote their post.
If you enjoyed what you read here, create your account today and start earning FREE STEEM!
Sort Order:  

absolutely wonderful!
I'd like to trek there one day!

Hey joy! good t see you here as well, very wonderfull post indeed, hope you can trek it one day

That are some amazing pictures!!! I would love to go for the full experience! Could you reach the base of the glacier or does the last picture fool you about the distance?

My name is @hato and I'm the curator of the @Climbing-Trail. I resteemed this a post. If you like climbing, alpinism, and hiking check it out!

Yes you can reach the glacier from basecamp, it was maybe 60-70m off but the picture is a bit misleading because it isn't as flat as it looks. It took us a while to get over there to put our hands on the ice but it was definitely worth it. I like the posts you are resteeming so I followed your account, thanks for reading!

Thanks for sharing!

Nice that you like them and follow me now :-)

Super Nice, upvoted!
impressive, thanks for sharing such a great experience.
travelled for four years but this something else.
Keep your blogs coming will keep an eye out

I appreciate that! Thanks for reading!

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

Amazing what an adventure. I am so envious and sadly the chance of me ever making a trip like this ended when I broke my back 6 years ago. I will have to enjoy it through the eyes of people like you. It is an inspiring read and the photographs are astonishing. Thank you for posting @travelstheworld. Upvoted, resteemed and followed with pleasure.

Wow, thank you very much! I have lots to tell so I hope I can keep you entertained, I really appreciate the love

Beautiful

Did you suffer at all from the altitude? A friend of mine made it to Base Camp, but was not in a good way.

I did suffer a bit but it was manageable for me. I had dull headaches and had trouble sleeping once I was above 4500m but I just took ibuprofen a few times and it wasn't all that bad. I saw quite a lot of people who had to go down and at least one person per village had to be taken down by helicopter. Something like 11,000 people are on the trail in the month of October and a great deal of them don't make it because they are promised too much from some of the guide services or they have next to no experience at high altitudes. It broke my heart to see people who had traveled so far to have to turn around and not finish what they set out to do. Thanks for reading!

Yes, it would be extremely frustrating to come so far, so close, but...
Glad you made it. =)

I have mad respect for people who attempt Everest.

Be it the easiest path there or whatever, I don't think I ever will. The number of deaths related to it scare me.

Ya walking through the memorial to all the people who died on the mountain was... intense. There are hundreds of small piles of stones made by the families of those who died up there and it is quite surreal to see. Thanks for reading!

Wow man. That's scary.

I also heard of those who reached the top but never made it back down. Ironic.

It is. There are a few documentaries on the sherpas who are working on bringing the bodies down from the mountain as per the Nepal governments instructions. It's very sad but also quite interesting.

Not worth the risk imo.

great post.

Thank you!

That's awesome. Would love to visit Everest one day.

You definitely should! It is very popular these days, the best month to visit is October and there are more than 11,000 people on the trail that month. Thanks for reading!

waw. . .
this must be a very fun and amazing journey @travelstheworld
and certainly not everyone can do it, because the cost would be very expensive and needed a strong physical.

It was an amazing journey! The cost was actually pretty reasonable if you go without a guide/porter but you definitely need to be at a decent fitness level to hike with a full pack at those altitudes. Thanks for reading!

yo're wellcome :-)

Means that the cost is expensive if we use guide/porter ? :-)

Yes, I spoke to quite a few people on the trail about costs for guides and porters and the cheapest I heard was $1000USD for the whole trek for just a porter and the highest was over $6000USD. I chose to skip the guide and porter because of the volume of people on the trail (over 11,000 in October) and the fact that it is a very established trail and my expenses for all the permits, rooms, food and rental jacket/sleeping bag was about $450USD and I had to carry a 9kg pack the whole way. It's not as expensive as a lot of people would lead you to believe!

waw. . .
very expensive, up to 1000 $.
if we can master the field of travel, we can be a guide as well.
for 1 month there are 3 people that we guide, can be very rich.

this is a tremendous opportunity.
but not suitable for me this field, because I'm sure my physical is not strong. Climbing up the short distance alone was my body error. hahahaa

Great post!!

Thank you!

It is sobering to think of how many people have not made it... we lost a friend of the family a few years ago -- his third climb. He started feeling symptoms of altitude sickness and decided to head down. Sadly, he never made it back to base camp.

I'm sorry to hear about that, it quite a somber experience looking at all the memorials for the fallen climbers.

This inspired me and makes me want to travel so that I could travel like you.

I hope you do! Travel is one of the most enriching things we can do and it doesn't have to be expensive. I wish you the best of luck!

Oh thank you dear!

amazing, love all the pictures

Thank you!

Epic!

Awesome article, I am currently in Nepal, going to do the same track, I thought about covering it for Steemit, seems like I have to find another story :) are you in Kathmandu anytime soon? Lets go for a beer!

You should still cover it! I'd love to read another persons experience on the trail, I followed you just in case! I will hopefully be back in Nepal in the next month maybe but right now I am in China for a while, Thanks for reading!

Awesome i love your post

Thanks alot! I appreciate that

That view is amazing! It must have been such an adventure. How far is it from base camp to the peak of Mount Everest?

It was an amazing experience! From basecamp to the South Summit is about 20km that is covered over 4 days with separate camps set up in advance by the sherpas along the way, safe to say that would be the most punishing 20km of your life!

Uff, that does sound like quite a struggle. I bet the journey to base camp is just as worthwhile :)

It's quite an amazing trek. From the start to the actual base camp is close to 45km of hiking and worth every second

Wow, how many days did that take?

Up and down was 12 days total but that's taking a few stops to acclimatize to the altitude. The locals will do that distance in 3 days carrying huge packs (50-60kg) worth of various supplies.

That's a long journey, but I bet you cannot grow tired of the view :P 3 days, wow they must be in such good shape.

That was an amazing experience. :)

It really was! I appreciate you taking the time to read it!

Wow, @travelstheworld! Your pictures are absolutely astonishing, wow!


Your effort really pays off everytime you reached a new point on the route!

  • Great job - thanks for sharing your story 😉


  • I invite you to check out my blog - some of my interests are pictures, IT and all kinds of life related stuff ✴️

I appreciate the kind words! I like your posts and I followed your account, thanks for reading!

Wow, that's incredible!

Thank you. It's really wonderful I want to try too

Well, I will say it's not too expensive if you go independent so best of luck! Thanks for reading

Fabulous! Congratulations. You make it sound actually reasonable and approachable for those of us who are in the habit of exploring/hiking/climbing. The highest I've done is Kilimanjaro, and that doesn't really touch Everest. I appreciate the various conditions and struggles you must have processed. Respect!

It is definitely possible for the majority of people out there, some just take a few days longer than others, but to be honest a few extra days in those surroundings would be quite amazing. Thanks for reading!

Wow. Fantastic job. I don't know if I could suffer a grind like that

Fantastic photography! I hope to see more from you.

Your pictures and journey look amazing. Thank you for sharing these posts here on Steemit. It would be incredible to get to Everest one day! Will Resteem and follow.

Amazing , love your posts !

Thanks alot! I appreciate it!