First Ascent Team Stays Positive As Storm Pummels Upper Everest
Posted Under: Expeditions, GuidesEverest Dispatch #51
May 11, 2009
ABC…. 21,200 ft.
By Dave Hahn
It is like a ghost town up here at ABC. We don’t mind a bit, having fought half the day to get here from Basecamp. Most others were struggling to get elsewhere. There is a storm sumo wrestling with the exposed summits of Everest and Lhotse today. Since this one is coming out of the west, 25,000 ft Nuptse gives us some protection down here in the Cwm. We still get good strong belts of wind and blowing snow, but we know it could be a lot worse at Camp III and Camp IV in this pattern. Our friends up at the South Col – hoping for a break so as to ring the summit bell – didn’t get a break. They were forced to retreat this morning just as we were tentatively moving up. We were tentatively moving up because that seemed like the smart way to be with a 4 AM sky full of clouds, a couple of inches of new snow on the ground, and untested legs in our crew.
It didn’t take long at all for Erica’s legs to prove they were ready for climbing today. I could hear her crampons digging in just a few steps behind me for all of the first dark hour-she was cruising over the same ice that had defeated her 24 hours earlier. I focused on other problems. The big one was the misbehaving cloud ceiling. It was steadily dropping as we climbed and the morning light came on. The more I could see, the less I could see. When we took the first short break it was snowing, and I polled my team as to whether they thought it would intensify. There were six of us today – the five usual suspects (Seth, Erica, Kent, Ang Kaji and me) plus Maila – the Camp II cook who had been enjoying a brief Basecamp vacation from one of the toughest jobs on the hill. Maila thought-as we all did-that the snow was just getting started, and that there wasn’t much point in going on. None of us wanted to be doing the braille thing through a Khumbu Icefall whiteout. And there definitely weren’t any takers for a stroll in close to the Nuptse avalanche chutes beyond Camp I, with serious snow coming down.
So we very nearly called it quits at 5 AM, before getting into the worst of the Icefall. The retreat plan was sound – and we hated it. This acclimatization round is important – it is our “tryout” for a summit bid. We want the extra strength, skill and confidence that may come from it. We can’t really get that by going an hour out of BC every day. And the calendar is moving on to the phat part of May. We want to be ready. We decided to hedge our bets-pushing onto the middle of the Icefall – another hour along, for a final call on the weather.
In that next hour, the snow quit and the clouds lifted. We knew the storm wasn’t finished, but we saw our little window of opportunity for scampering out of the Icefall and past Nuptse, and we were determined to take full advantage.
Long story short – our little gamble worked. We arrived at ABC at midday excited as kids (even those of us not quite kids anymore). Excited with storm adrenaline, excited to have put things on the line, and to have made correct climbing decisions, and to feel the fitness we didn’t have 5 weeks ago.
We called down to BC to boast – but also to be assured that the rest of our team is coping well with their summit holding pattern. They are not alone in that – as I said, we’ve got ABC pretty much to ourselves – and we barely had to make room for other climbers today on the route. Most are lower. Most are waiting for summit weather.
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Reader Comments
Some fantastic photos!
These long exposures are absolutely stellar. I have to say this blog certainly gives this armchair mountaineer a good fix.
Breathtaking photos. How about capturing the night sky on video?
Love the photos! Night time at Everest is totally cool! Glad to hear that Erica is doing much better with her knees. How is Seth taking the experience? Does the weather window get worse near the end of May? Also, some of my sales team wanted to know what sizes do you start with for base layers, then mid layer, then for outer layers? Stay safe up there and keep the photos and videos coming.
Those photos are awesome, the contrast between light and dark is amazing!! Do you think there will be an opportunity for some kind of book in the future to put all these photos/blogs in one place? My day does not start until I see where you all are and what has happened in the previous 24 hours, continue to be safe and keep us posted! Nancy R0456
http://www.macworld.com/article/140498/2009/05/everest.html?sr=hotnews
This is what is being used to bring us this great video. Think about the great video that is not making if out of the cutting room!