Our third day was our longest and hardest day, by far. We gave all of our extra gear to our porters and after breakfast we departed from Horombo Huts just before 9:00am.
The weather was not cooperating. It was cold and raining.
Fortunately, there were a couple of signs along the way that boosted our spirits because it felt like we were making progress towards are final destination
Here we are along the trail
There was a rock outcropping that was black and white striped and named, Zebra Rocks. So, we took a pee break and snapped a couple of photos, as well.
Risa and me
Girls
Boys
Like I said, we liked the signs that pointed the way!
As we gained elevation, the clouds settled and we hiked the remainder of the day in intense fog. It was so cold that Alison donned her ‘serial killer’ hat.
Here’s Doug hiking in the fog. If you turned left or right you’d have been lost forever!
Just before 3:00pm the clouds lifted a bit and we could see the base of the final peak of Kibo (they don’t call the mountain ‘Kilimanjaro,’ rather the peak is Uhuru Peak on Kibo Mountain).
There is only one hut at Kibo and this was our first glimpse of where we’d be napping prior to our final ascent.
And of course, with every hut picture, here’s the toilet. Special.
We had a late afternoon snack and then got all of our gear ready for our attempt at the summit.
Since it had been cloudly all day, we didn’t have many vista shots; therefore, when the cloud lifted to reveal Mawenzi Peak, I ran out of the hut to get the shot.
After laying out our clothes and packing our day packs, etc. we had an early dinner and were all tucked in for a nap by 6:30pm. Our guides woke us up at 11:00pm and we layered up as the snow was already coming down. We began our climb at 11:45pm.
And so it begins
Because of the weather, we didn’t take many breaks on the 6 hour trek to the first peak, Gilman’s Point. Although, we did stop under this large boulder for a pee/snack break and since it was like 3:00am and dumping snow, I felt the need to try to capture our experience.
At 6:00am we reached Gilman’s Point at 5681m
Risa and Me. Who knew that in middle school when we were sharing headphones in the back of the bus and rocking out to Garth Brooks on the way to a basketball game that one day we'd be in Tanzania on a mountain in the middle of the night and in a blizzard? Not me.
Dave
Our Chief Guide congratulated us all and then said, ‘okay, let’s go down.’ At which point I was like, ‘ummmmmmmmm, Kamili? Can we at least try for Uhuru Peak and the true summit?’ At which point Kamili said, ‘no, the snow is too high.’ At which point I begged. And so, 4 members of our group were battling with altitude sickness and made the choice to descend while the remaining 10 of us made an agreement with Kamili that we would try for Uhuru and if he decided it wasn’t safe that we’d agree to turn around and descend.
Here’s what we were walking into; nothing but white, white, snow…
[N.B. Doug was not a fan of this whole exchange between me and Kamili. But, I’m just going to say that we had come SO FAR and the true summit was only 90 minutes away…and it just seemed like we should at least TRY before throwing in the towel. ]
Happy (or delirious) hikers
Our resident serial killer
Chief Kamili wondering why we were stopping to take pictures! Documentation, Chief. Proof. I wanted it.
Views along the way; here’s the glacier
And finally after climbing 4000 feet UP, Uhuru Peak! 19,298 feet. Giddy-up.
For the record, I know that had something gone wrong, it would have been on me for doing the begging, but fortunately, all 10 of us made it to Uhuru Peak just after 8:00am; snapped a couple of pictures and got the HECK outta there. Seriously. We didn’t even take a group shot. Sad.
And then it was nothing but DOWN. Slip sliding away.
Another peak at Mawenzi
We arrived back at Kibo Hut 12 hours later; just before noon. P.S. I didn’t turn into a vampire. That’s sunscreen all over my face.
Last members of our group to descend. Congratulations one and all!
This is the mean part. We didn’t even get to nap. Our guides made us pack our gear, eat lunch and then we were back on the trail by 1:30pm for another 10km back down to Horombo Huts. I’m not going to lie, I was hurting. At that point, I had been hiking for 18 out of the last 24 hours.
Girls
More Mawenzi
We arrived back at Horombo at 5:00pm and promptly ate dinner and went to bed. I was for sure sound asleep by 6:30pm and that 12 hours with my sleeping bag never felt so good!
No comments:
Post a Comment