Sunday, October 25, 2020

Moshi, Tanzania


March 8th and March 9th (2006)


Arrived at Kilimanjaro Airport at 10 pm and realized that my large climbing bag was still in Amsterdam. I was told it would be brought to the hotel tomorrow. Good thing I came one day early. I had to hire a taxi for the 50 kilometer drive because the bus left without me. Not a great way to start my first overseas trip in my life. lol I got to the hotel at 12:30 am. The hotel was beautiful but no air conditioning and electricity cuts off at 6am, so no fan after that. I got up the next day and met other climbers at lunch. People from Germany, Australia, New Zealand, the Netherland, England and every other country imaginable. Also talked with a group who had just been on Kilimanjaro. Some made it, some did not. I was told about 30% make it to summit. Some companies boast a 90% success ration but the guides say that never happens. You just don't know how altitude will affect you.



Friday, October 23, 2020

Machame Hut (3100 meters) to Shira (3840 meters)

 March 11, 2006

The climb was very hard today. We got to camp at 4:30 pm. There were at least 50 spots on the trail where one false step and you would fall 500 feet. You finally get used to the height. The food is not the best. There always seems to be some mystery meat, enough rice for 12 people and some kind of soup which is tasteless. But the scenery is incredible. We have been walking for 2 days and still have not seen the top of the mountain. By the time we summit we will have walked over 30 miles.




Thursday, October 22, 2020

Shira (3840 meters) to Barranco (3950 meters)

 March 12, 2006

Today we climb from 3800 meters to 4500 meters and then back down to 3950 meters. Climb high, sleep low. Best way to acclimate. Did not sleep at all last night. The Lava Tower is 4600 meters high.




KILIMANJARO, Machame Route, Machame Gate (1800 meters)

 Friday, March 10, 2006

We drove to Machame Gate (1800 meters)at 11 am, then hiked to Machame Hut (3100 meters). We climbed 1300 meters and arrived at camp about 4:30pm. We started out in the jungle. By the time we summit we will have climbed through 5 different ecosystems.

"Mountain climbing is extended periods of intense boredom, interrupted by occasional moments of sheer terror.

Anonymous





Wednesday, October 21, 2020

Barranco (3950 meters) to top of Barranco Wall (4200 meters)

 March 13, 2006

Still not eating or sleeping. Today we climb Barranco Wall, almost 900 feet straight up. At one spot, the "kissing point", the ledge is only 8 inches wide and if you are not "kissing" the wall you mightl fall off. Camp will be at 4200 meters. A large group who paid more than $6000 each are at camp. The brought banquet tables, doctors and oxygen.

"Its not your aptitude, but your attitude that determines your altitude."
Thomas Alexander






Tuesday, October 20, 2020

Barranco Wall (4200 meters) to Barafu (4650 meters)

 March 14, 2006


Slept great for the first night and ate well. Hopefully I have finally acclimated. Not sleeping and not eating are signs of altitude sickness. Today the climb was only 700 feet in altitude to get to Barafu Camp. We are at 4600 meters. It is so cold outside and inside the tent is like an oven with the sun beating down at 3pm. Tomorrow we climb 4000 feet to summit Kili.

"He who climbs the highest mountains laughs at all tragedies, real or imaginary."
Friedrich Nietzsche 








Monday, October 19, 2020

SUMMIT OF KILIMANJARO (5895 METERS OR 19, 340 FEET) ROOF OF AFRICA

 March 15-16th, 2006


I left the camp with the guide,Charlie, about midnight. There was a hail storm last night from about 10pm until 11, thankfully it quit about 11:30. The wind was blowing about 20 to 30 mph but the guide said that was usual. We started at 4600 meters and have to make it to Uhuru Point which is 5895 meters. So we have about 4000 feet to climb in the freezing cold at night with 30 mph winds. About half the way up we ran into two young guys who said the altitude got to them and they did not summit. Not the most encouraging of news. Every few steps I would want to rest but Charlie would tell me to keep putting my feet in front of me. My eyes were hurting so bad due to the cold and wind. We had headlamps on due to the darkness but Charlie told me to put on my sunglasses to keep out the wind. So strange to be wearing sunglasses at night. But it helped. I realized that I was taking 2 breaths to every step. What was I thinking when I decided to climb Kilimanjaro. Whenever I thought about quitting, I thought of Gunther, the German who was making his 3rd climb. He was 80 years old and summited one day ahead of us tying the age record. Leaving at midnight accomplishes two purposes, the ground is still frozen and easier to climb and you arrive at the summit at daylight which is incredibly beautiful. Pole.Pole. Which is swahili for slowly, slowly. That is the secret for climbing Kili. After about 5 hours we arrived at Stella Point. My guide said that many people stopped here and considered this their summit. He said it was another 60-70 minutes to Uhuru Point. I told him that I did not climb all this way to stop before the top. I saw my climbing friends , Rob and Caleb, who left without me because they thought I would slow them down, coming down the mountain. They were unhappy because they summited too early and it was too cold to wait for sunrise. I finally made it to the summit and arrived as the sun was coming up. I was the only one there at the time. Charlie took a few pictures and my batteries quit working due to the cold. Luckily I brought a cheap camera which worked fine for a few pictures. There is only 50% of the oxygen that you normally breath at that height and it was about -10 C , so your time at the top is limited. If I go back I will climb for more days and acclimate better so that I can stay on top longer. 9-10 day climbs allow you to sleep right below the crater, acclimate and only have to clim about 1000 feet to summit. The glaciers at the top were spectacular and to be standing on the "Roof of Africa" is an unbelievable feeling.

March 16, 2006

But now you have to get down. You have been climbing for 6 days and not you go down using muscles that you have not been using. Everyone goes up different routes but everyone goes down the same way. By now the sun is up and the ice on the ground is melting. You are slipping and sliding all the way down back to the camp. After several hours of walking you arrive at camp and they let you sleep for 1.5 hours. Then they pack up the camp, eat a quick lunch and you walk down for another 5 hours. We had walked up 4000 feet and down 11,000 feet in one day. We finally made it to the Mweka Hut and had a celebration beer or beers. We tipped our porters and guides who amazing carried all of our supplies up this mountain.






Moshi, Tanzania

March 8th and March 9th (2006) Arrived at Kilimanjaro Airport at 10 pm and realized that my large climbing bag was still in Amsterdam. I was...