April 18, 2006 - Climbing theKhumbu Icefall
Eat as much as you can and top off your water bottles (not hydration
packs since they freeze) and start heading towards the icefall. Depending
on where your Base Camp is located, this can take 10 to 30 minutes to reach
the last flat section before the climbing actually starts. At this point
you put your harness on (checking yours and your partner's webbing to make
sure it is doubled back for safety). Attach your crampons to your boots
and you can't help but look up.
The first section is pretty much a continuous climb that ungulates
wildly. Sometimes it is a 60 degree climb, others a more gentle
20 degree. After an hour in a "normal" year you reach the first ladder.
For most climbers this is a moment of truth. You can prepare, read, talk
and dream about this moment but when it comes time to actually placing your
cramponed boot on the first rung of a ladder crossing a crevasse that is
100' deep ... well I think you get the idea.
But you did it. And you do it again and again and again since
you will make at least 4 round trips on your summit bid - maybe 6. Your
breathing is heavy and labored the first couple of trips up. Maybe from
the altitude or maybe from the stress but you breath heavily through your
mouth and welcome any stalls up front. Even though there is a thin nylon
rope that is attached to your harness with a metal carabiners, you think
about falling. Most section of the Icefall are not knife-edged. They are
on large expanses of relatively flat snow and ice. But there are these huge
seracs that teeter above you threatening to fall at any moment. And then
you hear it - a loud crash. Instinctively you lower your shoulders and raise
your arms over your head. You just heard an avalanche in the Icefall or
maybe one of those towering seracs falling. More than likely it was off
your route since the Icefall Doctors are careful to avoid the South side
of the Icefall where most of these crashes happen but you just don't know.
Climb, more climbing and then you reach a flat
section known as the football field. A large area of perfectly
flat hard packed snow. Take a break, drink some water, slow your
breathing and eat something. Congratulations you are about a third of the
way up and it has taken at least two hours. You sit on your pack and enjoy
the view. It should be sunrise but you are on the West side of the Icefall
and the sun does not hit this are until 9:00 at the earliest. It is cold.
If the wind is blowing you feel very cold. Pull up your hood, add a down
parka if you have one and focus on eating and drinking. Times up, get going.
More of the same for another two or three hours. Sherpas are now returning
from the previous day of load carrying to the high camps. You have already
been passed like you were standing still by Sherpas making carries to Camp
1 and Camp 2 earlier in the morning. They had loads that made you feel like
a wimp. You struggle with your 20lb load and they scoot pass
you with their 60lbs. Your respect for these special people grow not because
of their strength but because of their completeness.
It took you five or six hours but you made it to the top. The
final section always involves steeper ladders and sharper grades so you
suck it in and make the climb. And you are there. A completely flat expanse
of snow that reveals the Western Cwm. Oh my God, I made it! Camp 1 is another
half to full hour from here but you are through the Icefall. You cannot
help but stop and look back. Even though you can only see a few hundred
yards of the 'Fall you see every step, every ladder, every climb in your
mind.
Congratulations you've just climbed the Khumbu Icefall on the
South side of Mt. Everest. You on your way to the summit!


Comments
Nice story, makes me want to ski from the the ice fall!
Greg
Posted by: greg | April 19, 2006 01:26 PM