October 12, 2010
Day 42. Back in Camp 2
And then I was resting in the tent and all the fatigue and fear were forgotten. Of course, that was AFTER six hours of hard work and climbing. I have to be honest and tell you that climbing Mt. Everest isn't easy.
The ice fall had changed dramatically since I had last been through. The lower section was considerably more melted out. The top layer of ice was spikey and cupped and crunched beneath our crampons. At random intervals loud cracks radiated outward from our footfalls. Just as I was starting to think this trip might be easier than the last, we entered a section of the ice fall that had completely collapsed. Two ladders were twisted and mangled from the force of ice.
Maybe this closed all the gaps and crevasses I thought to myself. Nope. We crossed one large crack on a ladder placed at 45 degree angle both ends shoved slightly into the snow. Despite the stress of very imminent danger, I could help but gaze in wonder and awe at the many new ice forms.
We made our way through several recent avalanche areas and finally through Camp 1. The dull roar I had been hearing for the past several hours, I realized, was the wind. Soon we were engulfed by swirling spindrift and the once clear trail was blown over with soft snow. It was the first time I had pulled the hood up on my Sierra Designs Mantra jacket the entire expedition.
Eventually, the wind died as we continued to climb reaching Camp 2 after almost six hours of continuous travel. The boys laughed and relaxed in the sun. I, on the other handsome, crawled in the tent and promptly fell asleep - my worries disappearing with my consciousness.
Image: Through the ice fall... again.
The ice fall had changed dramatically since I had last been through. The lower section was considerably more melted out. The top layer of ice was spikey and cupped and crunched beneath our crampons. At random intervals loud cracks radiated outward from our footfalls. Just as I was starting to think this trip might be easier than the last, we entered a section of the ice fall that had completely collapsed. Two ladders were twisted and mangled from the force of ice.
Maybe this closed all the gaps and crevasses I thought to myself. Nope. We crossed one large crack on a ladder placed at 45 degree angle both ends shoved slightly into the snow. Despite the stress of very imminent danger, I could help but gaze in wonder and awe at the many new ice forms.
We made our way through several recent avalanche areas and finally through Camp 1. The dull roar I had been hearing for the past several hours, I realized, was the wind. Soon we were engulfed by swirling spindrift and the once clear trail was blown over with soft snow. It was the first time I had pulled the hood up on my Sierra Designs Mantra jacket the entire expedition.
Eventually, the wind died as we continued to climb reaching Camp 2 after almost six hours of continuous travel. The boys laughed and relaxed in the sun. I, on the other handsome, crawled in the tent and promptly fell asleep - my worries disappearing with my consciousness.
Image: Through the ice fall... again.
Recent Posts
-
May 23rd, 2024
The Process -
May 7th, 2024
Where There's Bad Ice, Good Ice Will Follow -
April 23rd, 2024
Happy Earth Week! -
April 14th, 2024
North Pole Debrief - Part 2 -
April 13th, 2024
North Pole Debrief - Part 1 -
April 12th, 2024
Over before It Started -
April 10th, 2024
More Waiting. Less Ice? -
April 9th, 2024
The Waiting Game -
April 8th, 2024
The System is the System -
April 3rd, 2024
Lets Go Up There and See What Happens -
April 2nd, 2024
New Place. Old Routine. -
March 31st, 2024
Begin with One Step -
March 22nd, 2024
I'm Still Alive! -
October 20th, 2020
It's Been 10 Years! -
July 5th, 2020
KansATHON -
July 3rd, 2020
Day 6 & 7 -
June 28th, 2020
Day 5: KansATHON -
June 27th, 2020
Day 3 & 4: KansATHON -
June 26th, 2020
Day 2: KansATHON -
June 24th, 2020
Day 1: KansATHON