• Kristin.aroundtheworld
  • Kristin.aroundtheworld

Nepal & India 2024

A 57-day adventure by Kristin.aroundtheworld Read more
  • Trip start
    October 8, 2024
  • Himlung Expedition - Day 1

    October 12, 2024 in Nepal ⋅ ☁️ 21 °C

    Plans for the next 30 days:

    Day 1-2: driving by bus and jeep
    Day 3-8: trekking to the base camp through the beautiful Naar Phu Valley
    Day 9-24: climbing Himlung Himal incl. rotations and summit push
    Day 25-28: trekking out
    Day 29-30: driving back to Kathmandu

    What does it mean?

    Himlung Himal = 7.126m
    Living in a tent for 16 days
    No shower for at least 20 days
    Carrying 1 kg of wet wipes
    In a group of 7 German potatoes and 2 Dutch
    42% of oxygen at the summit
    Temperatures from -20 to -40 degrees depending on the wind chill

    My objective:

    Gaining experience
    Gaining confidence
    Teamwork
    The journey is the reward, the summit is the bonus
    Returning healthy
    Having a looooot of fun

    Am I scared? Yes
    Am I exited? Yes
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  • Himlung Expedition - Day 7

    October 18, 2024 in Nepal ⋅ ☀️ -9 °C

    Another rest day in Phu Gaun. We walked up to the very old monastery on the hill and got a short introduction of the only living monk from the monastery.
    On the way back down we were lucky and could watch how people from the valley slaughtered a yak - a sacred ritual. Vultures were already circling over the place. The yak were killed by people from the lower valley as the people from Phu Gaun, who are the owner of the yak, wouldn’t never kill there own yaks.Read more

  • Himlung Expedition - Day 8

    October 19, 2024 in Nepal ⋅ ☀️ -6 °C

    What a day!!!

    We finally made our way to our basecamp (BC). All of us were quite exited as it is our first time living in a BC. The BC is situated next to the glacier, in the opposite of Himlung at a sea level of 4.800m. Our BC, the BC of Seven Summit Treks, is separated and a bit below of the main one.
    As we arrived we celebrated and danced the famous Dutch song „Links Rechts“.
    One after the other surprise followed. We were surprised with a lot of luxury - a plate with fresh cutted vegetables, a soup as a starter, followed by a fresh made delicious burger (!!!) and a fruit platter. All of us couldn’t believe all of these.
    We walked around the area a bit and arranged our tents (1 member : 1 tent). After the dinner we were surprised another time with a welcome cake - a welcome cake at 4.800m - followed by a party 😅😂
    A day what I never will forget.
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  • Himlung Expedition - Day 9

    October 20, 2024 in Nepal ⋅ 🌙 -14 °C

    As we have quite a lot of time for acclimatization and rotation, we had a rest day in BC, walked around a bit, got used to the new shoes and had a short lesson for how to use a jumar for climbing with a fix rope and how to abseil.Read more

  • Himlung Expedition - Day 11

    October 22, 2024 in Nepal ⋅ ☀️ -12 °C

    1. Rotation: BC - 1 Night in Camp 1 (~5.600m) - Touching Camp 2 (~6.060m) - BC

    Packing started again as we leave the BC for 1 night and already depositing some stuff in Camp 1.
    As we go 2 : 1 (2 members : 1 Sherpa) we had quite a heavy backpack (~14kg) with our sleeping bag, an extra layer, ice axe, snacks and water. Our Sherpas took our summit suits, the big boots, crampons and the harness with all the equipment like jumar, figure of 8, etc. They carried around 30-40kg.

    The way to camp 1 starts with a decent through the big moraine to the other side with a little dirty climb of a 10m wall with 80 degrees, followed by an easy trail to Camp 1 - still quite challenging due to the altitude and heavy backpack. We reached Camp 1 after 4,5h. Did a small hike a little higher to get a better sleep. As soon as the sun went down, we went in our big down stuff, got some noodle soup and a sugared black coffee as a light coffee can help for a better sleep in high altitude. I slept quite well on 5.400m.
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  • Himlung Expedition - Day 12

    October 23, 2024 in Nepal ⋅ ☀️ -19 °C

    1. Rotation: BC - 1 Night in Camp 1 (~5.600m) - Touching Camp 2 (~6.060m) - BC

    I woke up at around 6 a.m. at Camp 1 with a beautiful sunrise. We got noodles for breakfast, packed our stuff and started the ascent to Camp 2. First ~300m through scrambled rocks with our light trekking boots with a climb at the end with fixed ropes. Right after we reached the point for the big boots as the snow started. Another ~300m up through beautiful glacier sculpture and we reached Camp 2 with an altitude of ~6.060m. We all were quite exhausted, rested 30 min, ate snacks, deposited our crampons and started the descent back to BC. 2h down to Camp 1, packing again (sleeping bag, clothes, etc.) and depositing the stuff we wanna leave at Camp 1 (summit suit, big boots, air trim cold air mask, snacks, etc.) and continued to BC what we reached at around 4 p.m.Read more

  • Himlung Expedition - Day 15

    October 26, 2024 in Nepal ⋅ ☀️ -6 °C

    THE day has come… SUMMIT PUSH!!!

    Unfortunately, only 7 out of 10 were able to start on the summit push, as 3 did not feel well and healthy enough.

    How does it work?!
    BC to Camp 1 (1 night rest), early morning to Camp 2, rest in Camp 2 and start for summit at 10 p.m. through the night.
    Sounds like insane hard work?! YES IT IS!

    Before we started at BC, we needed to pack our backpack again:
    Sleeping bag, harness, snacks, dry food, extra layers, etc. (~12kg).
    A little lighter as at the first rotation as we deposited some things in Camp 1 and 2.

    I didn’t feel good that day and wasn’t sure if I can make it to Camp 1. Not sure why. But it got better as we reached ~5.200m and it got cooler. Maybe to much oxygen in the lower part 🤣
    We reached Camp 1, ate our packed lunch, arranged our tents, rested, had a lot of fun, got soup and slept (tried to sleep).

    And no, these sherpas are not gay. In Nepal it’s normal that very good friends of the same sex hold hands or cuddle.
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  • Himlung Expedition - Day 16

    October 27, 2024 in Nepal ⋅ ☀️ -13 °C

    Woken up after a good night at Camp 1. We got vegetable soup with rice, packed our stuff and continued to Camp 2 with quite a heavy backpack (~14kg), still very glad that our Sherpas took a lot of stuff (~30-40kg per backpack). After 4,5h we reached Camp 2. Our Sherpas set up a few more tents, we settled in, ate noodles, rested until 5.30 p.m. and ate soup. I fall very deeply asleep afterwards and slept for 2 hours.
    Wake up call for summit push at 9 p.m.
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  • Himlung Expedition - Day 17 Summit Push

    October 27, 2024 in Nepal ⋅ 🌙 -12 °C

    Wow wow wow!!! None of us expected this:

    We were woken up at 9 p.m., had a cup of tea, got dressed, went to the toilet one last time before putting on our climbing harnesses and set off into the darkness at 9.45 p.m.

    The first two hours were relatively relaxed - a bit up and down, mostly on fixed ropes, good for warming up. Haha... it was far too warm for us!

    After around 2 hours, we arrived at the foot of the dreaded ice wall. An approx. 60m high, approx. 50 degree steep wall with smaller 90 degree steps. Technically feasible, but very demanding and energy-sapping at this height...and felt endless. On the wall, the first few times I thought "How am I supposed to manage this if I'm already reaching my limits here?". But everyone felt the same way. So close your eyes and get through it.
    All of us made it up the wall and we continued to Camp 3 (no tents at that time). The wind came up slightly and we putted on our goggles and cold protection air masks.

    Now the wall stood before us. A wall that is supposedly only 40 degrees steep with a continuous fixed rope, laid out on the shortest route to the summit - no zigzags, no passages to rest - with some shorter steeper sections partly over crevasses in between.

    At the beginning I could do 15 steps, rested and tried to breathe. But we got more tired and it got more harder - 5 steps, fixing the jumar on the highest point, hang in there, rested my upper body on my knee and sometimes fell asleep for a few seconds. „Didi! Come on!“ - a voice from the front from my lovely Sherpa Mingma - such a kind person. He always ask how I am, if I need something, if I have cold feet’s or hands. We continued. The same procedure over and over again. My hope was the sun to get a little energy boost. It was nice when the sun came out. Even though it rose behind the ridge and we didn’t get any rays of sunshine. But we knew that some time had passed.
    The journey continued, the energy dwindled.
    Gabi was starting to giving up at ~6.900m. I tried to motivate her („Beweg jetzt deinen Arsch hier hoch!“) but had the same thoughts as her. We continued.

    15 minutes later she decided to give up again. I was in second position, she was 10-15 meters below me, and behind us the rest of the group. Steffen was already far ahead and almost at the summit.
    Tenzing, her Sherpa, couldn't seem to push her any further, so my Sherpa descended to her, I had to wait and my thoughts began to circle. Everyone else passed me by. Quite a motivational killer. But I was really happy when I heard that Gabi was doing well, that she'd eaten something and that she'd carried on.

    It was sooo hard and exhausting. Every 10 steps we considered giving up. And it didn't get any flatter and there was no end in sight, even though the summit seemed sooo close. I told my Sherpa that I didn't know how much energy I would need for the way back and whether I wasn't too weak. He said: "Didi, worry about that when you get to the summit!". I doubted that.

    I pushed Gabi and myself up to 7.045m. Then we sat there together. Gabi said that she didn't want to put any more strain on her body. It would have been another 80 meters to the summit, about 1-1,5 hours - an enormous ordeal. Everyone else kept going, very slowly with lots of rests.

    We finally decided to give up, after 14 hours of summit push. The 7.000 mark was reached. We were very happy with it, but of course also a little disappointed. Nevertheless, we had to make sure our energy reserves were sufficient for the long descent (5km and 1.400m in altitude).

    It took us 5h back to Camp 2. It was soooo hard and the sun made us melt, even though we were already dehydrated. But we made it back just before sunset after 19,5h. The others followed 0,5-1,5h later. Everyone just fell into their tents, ate soup and slept.
    Most important: Everyone came back healthy!!!
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  • Himlung Expedition - Day 18

    October 29, 2024 in Nepal ⋅ ☀️ -16 °C

    Look at my face and you know how hard it was. The selfie was made after summit push and sleeping one night at Camp 2. We all were sooooo done. But I never slept soooo good at ~6.060m 😅😂

    The descent to BC took the whole day. But with beer and burgers, the exertions were quickly alleviated, but not forgotten.Read more

  • Himlung Expedition - Day 20

    October 30, 2024 in Nepal ⋅ ☀️ -10 °C

    Last full day and rest day in BC:
    Still very crumbled face, aching body and low energy.
    First shower after 20 days (only bucket or wet wipe showers the last days).
    Mingma had fun and ridden a horse.
    We welcomed Mimimimi-Mike and Dieter at the moraine as they attempted for summit 2 days later.
    We distributed our food supplies - sausage and cheese from Germany and Italy.
    We girls had a good time at the Sherpa tent and tried to understand the rules of the Nepalese card game.
    The evening ritual: before dinner, we always had hot towels to put on our faces.
    All crew members got their tip. It was nice to see that Lakpa managed this very openly. Everyone paid 650€ tip (400€ summit bonus even if the summit for the Sherpas (2:1) was not reached and 250€ for the kitchen and BC manager crew).
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  • Himlung Expedition - Day 24

    November 3, 2024 in Nepal ⋅ 🌙 18 °C

    Back to Kathmandu (7,5h for 180km, normal for Nepal) and 200m before the hotel a flat tire - 3rd vehicle that broke 😅😂

    I was very happy and lucky that my good friend from Nepal (Madan, owner of a trekking agency and hotel) asked me if I wanna celebrate the last day of „Tihar“ and get a Tika from him. A very special moment as usually just brothers and sisters giving the Tika.
    Bhai Tika is the final and major day of the Tihar festival. Sisters offer tika to their brothers wishing them happiness, long life and prosperity during this festival.
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