To Summit or Not to Summit - Sent June 3
Hello Adventurers,
First:
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Everest Adventure Journal: (5 of 6) TO SUMMIT OR NOT TO SUMMIT
May 15, 2002
Sean called at 6 AM this morning. The prognosis is NOT good. He is feeling
worse and isn't even sure he can walk. He said he'll call back at 7.
Later
Things still aren't good. For the first time since I talked to Sean a year
ago, I think maybe this is not meant to be. Maybe he should end the
nightmare his dream has become.
Before just a few weeks ago, Sean had never been to extreme altitudes.
14,000 feet was his maximum altitude during training. Base camp was already
3,600 feet above that, and the summit of Everest is more than 10,000 feet
above base camp! Though training for altitude is impossible, it is hard to
imagine what 23,000 feet feels like without having been there. The void of
the unknown is filling with fear. Sean's body is telling him there is
something seriously wrong, and of course Sean is listening.
Sean said he will try to walk and will call back later.
About an hour ago Wongchu, the leader of this expedition, rolled into base
camp. (Thank God!) He arrived in a record two days and two hours from the
airport in Lukla! By 9 AM he was on the radio in National Geographic's tent
with Pemba, Seth and me, talking to Sean, Kami and Gombu on the mountain.
Finally we were all on the same frequency. Wongchu switched from English to
Sherpa language and back.
"We came to climb a mountain," Wongchu said to Sean. "No going down -- only
up." Then he rattled off fifty things, "You drink tea. Eat soup. Drink hot
lemon. Eat oatmeal. Gombu give you massage. Take rest. Relax. You going
up. No talking. Drink tea. Just going up."
And that's it! No talking. Sean is going up. They left camp 3 and are now
headed toward camp 4(!), the "Death Zone" at 26,000 feet. Supposedly humans
cannot acclimatize above 26,000 feet. From there and up brain cells are
dying, one of many factors that makes Everest a difficult mountain. The more
time a climber spends above 26,000 feet, the closer he is to death. I am
waiting with butterflies in my stomach. Should Sean continue?!
I know Wongchu is the most qualified man in Nepal to lead this expedition. I
know Wongchu knows what he was doing. He is right, we came to climb a
mountain. Sean came to inspire cancer patients. I guess Sean is going up.
"No talking," Wongchu says. I am waiting with him and a few other Sherpas at
National Geographic's camp. I am sitting in one of their fold-up metal
chairs just outside their $15,000 yellow geodesic North Face radio tent. It
is HOT in the sunshine. Jamling and others from National Geographic's team
are here chatting. Even a cup of COLD (mmm!) lemonade came around. Most
drinks at base camp are hot because the water has to be boiled. Something
cold was nice!
Later
I heard Sean's voice over the radio in National Geographic's radio tent.
"Sean to base camp," he said. I was closest in position to answer it. As
Sean spoke I heard something I hadn't heard recently. "It sounds like you're
smiling!" I said.
"I think I am," Sean said. He wasn't feeling 100%, but he is climbing toward
camp 4 NOW. He'll call back at 12:30.
It seems Gombu, having climbed Everest 7 times, knew Sean was strong. The
altitude related problems at camp 3 are just part of the territory, the
misery one must submit to when committing to climb Everest. Keep moving, and
the misery doesn't have as much time to catch up. Gombu knew Sean would feel
better once he started moving. With the language barrier and communication
crevasse, it was hard to convince Sean. Good thing Wongchu came when he did!
Later
Sean just called! "I'm 700 meters from camp 4. I'll be there in 20
minutes." And 20 minutes later he called again, "I made it! I'm here! I
made it to 26,000 feet! Woohoo! I made it!"
His familiar confidence is back. From the beginning I knew Sean could do
this. Wongchu was just in time. Things are looking good. It's an emotional
roller coaster. Good, bad, good, bad, and now good again!
Life has flooded back into our camp site. We are alive and awake again. The
Sherpas are rearranging all the rocks and improving all the trails, repairing
the rock walls, carrying rocks, moving rocks. Under the direction of
Wongchu, even a few Sherpas from National Geographic's team came to help.
Wongchu is a super hero among the Nepalese. I will write a book about him
someday!
On the way to the summit, Sean is eating mashed potatoes for breakfast, lunch
and dinner. I learned potatoes are essential for an expedition. In
Kathmandu the room fell silent when I told Wongchu I forgot to bring them.
My mother was kind enough to Federal Express two kilos of dehydrated mashed
potato powder which thankfully arrived just in time for Sean's summit attempt.
Sean will sleep at camp 4 from now (3PM in the afternoon) until 10 PM
tonight. Then he, Kami and Gombu will start for the summit in the dark.
They'll climb all night and hopefully reach the top of Mt. Everest early
tomorrow morning! I am contemplating staying up all night since Seth, Pemba
and Wougchu will be. Sitting by the radio is better than lying wide-eyed in
my tent. It's already cold. The clouds have been moving in for the last
hour. Yuck!"
Wongchu has instructed Pemba to keep juniper burning in the fire by the
Buddhist ceremony altar. "It should burn all night for good luck," Wongchu
said. He also washed his feet. "Everyone must wash their hands and feet,"
he said. "It's good luck. Sean depends the luck." Our camp looks great
after all the repairs and back breaking, rock dozing work the Sherpas have
done. "It depends the luck," Wongchu says. "It depends the gods."
The waiting is torture! Again, tomorrow we will learn more.
May 16, 2002
The waiting is REALLY torture. It's now 7:30 AM. I'm up and listening to
the radio in front of the puja stupa. The juniper is still burning and Pemba
and Seth religiously kept it burning all night. Wongchu says the gods like
the smoke. I'm adding branches now too. He says it's best when the smoke
rises straight in the air without turbulence. He pointed to it when it was
just right. "This is good luck," he said. "It depends the luck."
Wongchu slept on the floor of National Geographic's radio tent all night
waiting for a call. He said he heard static several times and jumped to pick
up the radio and then heard nothing. I didn't stay up. Instead, I slept SO
well, the first sleep I've had in two long days.
We still haven't heard anything from Sean since he left camp 4 last night at
11PM. We think he and his Sherpas are at the end of a long line of climbers.
The last thing Sean said was, "It looks like everyone's gone. I better go!"
It's 8AM. We just heard from Tashi, the grandson of Tenzing! He is with the
Swiss team and Apa Sherpa, the man who holds the record for 11 times
summiting Everest. For him this will be Everest summit number 12! They are
first in line this morning. Apa and 2 other Sherpas are ahead fixing the
ropes. They say the snow is waist deep and it's slow going!
Tashi just called again. It's 8:10. He said he may have to wait another
hour. The Sherpas here say it will be longer. They are at the South Summit
with about 100 people behind them. Tashi said he can see a long line of
climbers moving slowly along the ridge they just came up. Sean is at the
back of that line -- we think. We still haven't heard from him.
Also the third Nepali woman to climb Everest is with Tashi. The climbers
sound out of breath and pause for air between words. They can't talk on the
radio with an oxygen mask on. The Sherpa woman, Pemba Doma, age 34, was
coughing. "There's a lot of snow," she said laughing, excited she is almost
there, sounding very happy. "Maybe two hours and I'll be at the summit!"
We are also overhearing radio conversations from climbers on the North side,
the Tibetan side, who are hoping to summit today too. Before this, the most
climbers to summit in a single day was 34. Today there are at least 60 in
line on the South route with Sean.
Wow! The FIRST climbers have reached the top! 8:42 AM. Tashi is there.
Gombu finally called and said they are doing well! Sean has enough oxygen
and is still strong. Things are looking good. It seems the first Sherpas
fixing the ropes have to take turns because it's tiring work. Gombu is now
helping, meaning Sean is right behind him! He might be up there sooner than
we think. They must have passed 50 people or more!
The waiting is painful. We are predicting Sean will be on the summit within
the hour, maybe 2. We hope he calls, but Wongchu told Gombu to call only if
something goes wrong.
Still around the puja stupa, we hear a few hoots and hollers coming from
around base camp. When the climbers reach the summit, they radio down and
then we hear cheering from various camps. It's great!
9:32 AM! We just heard from the summit. Sean is up there now! Taking
pictures! Wow, what a feeling. It's amazing. He made it! We did it. Sean
did it. He is amazing. The Sherpas are the most amazing!
Sincerely,
Heather O'Neal
Of Global Interest LLC Adventure Travel
Ann Arbor, Michigan
(734) 369-3107
www.ofglobalinterest.com
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