I joined a commercial
expedition to Nepal over April and May to climb Cho Oyu (26,906').
We flew to Lukla from Kathmandu, and approached the mountain from the
south via the Lunaq Valley. We established our base camp on April 21
at 17,100' along the Nangpa Glacier, about 4¼ miles south of the Nangpa
La. We then crossed the Nangpa La (18,753'; technically speaking, we
were in Tibet north of this pass), an climbed the classic west ridge
route on the mountain. We established Camps 1, 2, and 3 at 19,000',
20,200', and 22,500' on April 25, April 28, and May 3. Camp 3 was
damaged by high winds on May 5, with the loss of four man-days of food.
This, combined with the apparent theft of ten man-days of food from Camp 2
on May 1 or 2, put a major strain on our high altitude resources.
(For the record, the suspects were either the IMC or DAV Summit Club
expeditions.)
Camp 3 was reestablished on May 6, and Camp 4 (in reality, a bivouac with
a tent and stove, but no sleeping bags) was placed at 24,000' on May 7.
The next day, our leader Mal Duff (Scotland), Dave Horrex (England), José
Delgado (Venezuela), Clive Jones (New Zealand) and Pasang Gombu Sherpa
(Nepal) reached the summit. This party returned to Camp 4 in
deteriorating weather that night, and sometime during this period, Clive
frostbit the toes on his right foot.
On May 8 Neil Lindsey
(England), Rick Nowack (a fellow Californian!) and I set out from Camp 2
with our sleeping bags (but scant other supplies) for our summit bid.
Above Camp 2 the route followed the crest of the west ridge, with some
fixed ropes, to the base of the 300' ice cliff at just below the 22,000'
level. There was a dearth of snow on the mountain this season, and
this cliff consisted of hard, dense blue ice. My highly skilled friends
told me that it was only Scottish 2, an they casually front-pointed
it with their semi-full expedition packs, as if they were spending a
winter afternoon at Lundy Canyon (but the frozen waterfall ice of the
Eastern Sierra is a lot softer than this stuff). I couldn't get
anything to stick, except for the ascender on the fixed rope, of course.
Cutting steps was impossible, and there was no spare rope available for
Neil or Rick to give me an upper belay. After two hours I managed to
drop a mitten and only climb two-thirds of the way up the cliff in rapidly
worsening weather. I was in over my head and I returned to Camp 2.
Our Sherpas there were glad to see me (they attempted to dissuade us from
making our attempt that morning, due to the lack of food). I offered
them a bonus to lead me up the ice cliff the next day, and our sirdar,
Chwang, wisely replied: "Death is up there, life is down here, and we
can't eat money anywhere."
Everyone returned to
either Camp 2 or 1 the next day, and I dined on sunscreen at Camp 2 that
night. Clive's frozen toes were grey, blue, purple and swollen, and
he and I swapped our right boots so he could hike out; he could only wear
my size 11 Jannus without the liners! We were all back at base camp
by May 11, and by Friday the 13th we all assured Clive that his toes
looked a lot better. And on that ominous date we began our return to
that other world.
The other expedition
members were Englishmen Geoff Pierce, David Holl, and Joe Simpson.
Yes, that's right, Joe Simpson the author of Touching the Void, The Water
People, and the forthcoming This Game of Ghosts. (Nick Clinch once said
that name dropping is a sure sign of lack of achievement.) But,
seriously, this was a great trip, with highly skilled, yet personable
climbers (I sometimes felt I was on an CMC trip), and I am glad that I
went. And it was the best organized commercial expedition that I
have ever been on.
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Southern California Mountaineers Association. All Rights Reserved.