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Dispatch Nine: Dear
EverestNews.com, Thanks for your amazing help to Himalayan climbing in letting
us tell our stories of the mountains!
Dear
Everestnews Readers, This is Jay Reilly writing to you from Ama Dablam
Basecamp at 4600m! We had a nice walk up from Pangboche yesterday - albeit in
the snow and rain. Hmmmmm - the weather hasn't quite been up to scratch yet,
but we hope for nicer days ahead. Right now, the sun is shining and the solar
panels are charging the big car batteries used for this computer system.
Everyone is
happy and healthy here in Basecamp, and at the moment are under the close
supervision of our fantastic Leaders in Training, Phil Austin and Doug Sandok,
about 100m above Basecamp, practicing climbing on some fixed lines which our
Sherpa Staff set up earlier today. Being able to climb on fixed rope correctly
and safely is crucial on Ama Dablam. The route is very steep in parts, and
there are some narrow ridges. We ensure all the ropes on the mountain are safe
and securely fixed, and members are sure of their
climbing
technique before we begin the ascent.
Tomorrow,
some members will plan to carry equipment to Advanced Basecamp at 5300m, while
others will choose to stay and relax in Basecamp. We plan to write dispatches
up until the 16th of October. From then we will be posting direct live voice
dispatches! Kind of like a high altitude Big Brother!
More news
soon.
From Jay
Reilly and all of us SummitClimb.com
ps.
Photocaption. We are just setting up our basecamp at 4600 metres.
Updates
AMA DABLAM: sometimes
spelled: Ama Dablan, or Amadablam, or Amadablan
ASIA'S MOST FAMOUS TECHNICAL
BUT CLIMBABLE ROCK-ICE-SNOW CLIMB
Leader: Daniel Mazur, Ama
Dablam 4 time summiter, climber-leader-organizer of Everest, K2, and 12
"eight-thousand-metre-peaks", leading together with Jay Reilly, two time Ama
Dablam and two time Pumori summiter
Our expedition offers an
opportunity to climb this challenging semi-technical rock-ice-snow climb with
an experienced team, at an affordable price. We have organized five previous
expeditions to Ama Dablam, so our leaders and staff are very familiar with the
climb. In October 2003, fourteen of our members and 5 sherpas reached the
summit in all safety. It was our fifth successful ascent of the mountain. We
were fortunate in that the weather was ideal, the team cooperated together
well, our Sherpa climbing staff worked very hard, our equipment functioned
well, the food and hot drinks were well prepared, and the route was in
excellent condition. Please share in our congratulations to all of the team
members and thanks to everyone who helped and supported us, including our
generous sponsors. Nepal is indeed beautiful now and the pleasant weather and
calm conditions in this very peaceful and happy region made our expedition
especially enjoyable.
SOME FACTS ABOUT AMA DABLAM:
Ama Dablam is in the Khumbu valley, near to Mt. Everest, in the heart of the
Sherpa area of Nepal, and is considered by many to be the most famous
rock-ice-snow climb in all Asia. The name Ama Dablam means Mother’s Charm Box:
the high hanging serac located just below the summit resembling the Dablam or
Charm Box which unmarried Sherpa women used to wear around their necks. The
first ascent of the mountain was by Ed Hillary's Silver Hut expedition in 1961
when Bishop (USA), Gill, Romanes (NZ) and Ward (UK) reached the summit, via
the SW ridge, on 13 March after 20 days working on the route. Since then the
mountain has received about 500 ascents (not including Sherpas) mostly via the
SW ridge.
WHY THE SOUTH WEST RIDGE
Here is what one of our
previous top climb leaders (Jonathan Pratt, from Essex, England) had to say
about the route: “The easiest way to the top of Ama Dablam is via the SW
ridge, a semi-technical route, and considered to be the standard route.
Although there are several other routes on the mountain, they are all very
much harder than the SW ridge. The route has been considered to be a safe
route, free from objective danger, such as avalanche. It is a varied and
interesting route with loads of superb climbing - not just a huge snow slog,
unlike other Himalayan climbs. On Ama Dablam, the rock and ice is not
sustained but tends to come in short manageable sections.”
NOTE: Please don’t
underestimate this climb. Although there is only one 6 metre, 20 foot section
of grade British severe, or North America 5.5, (the rest of the climb is known
as "scrambling" or "4th class") there are complicating factors which you may
not find at home on your local crag and definitely not in the rock-gym. These
may include: ice, snow, high-altitude, temperature, weather, exposure, and
other factors.
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