Jorsalle (9022’/2750m) – Lukla (9,300'/2,840m Approx 6 hrs 9 miles
Final hike day! We did the water chemistry for the last time
that day! We were so proud at having been very environmentally friendly.
Throughout the trek we hardly bought any bottled water which really adds to the
plastic waste. After breakfast we headed out for Lukla.
We took our final day
picture sitting on the bench beside the river and had all our our fingers and
both our legs out to denote Day 12!! Shachin and I went down to the gorgeous river and enjoyed sitting on the rocks and admiring views we would not be seeing for a long time!
Soon after we set off on the beautiful trek alongside our
lovely river and mostly through the forest. The trail hugged the meandering
river and revealed lovely vistas around river bends with the glistening silvery
water, the rocky beaches, and the stately conifers clustered on the mountain sides! There were brightly colored roofed houses littered along the way!
Gorgeous! I really
wanted to absorb the views and etch them somehow in my mind since this was our
last day in such ethereal beauty! Most of the way we were
singing along with the songs that I was playing on my phone. It was all very
relaxed and enjoyable. We stopped for tea and lunch at a small village just as
the trail was getting ready to leave the Dudh Kosi behind to climb higher
towards Lukla. They took a really long time getting our food. While we were
waiting I went and bought some nice oranges from a shop nearby. Just a little
later to our surprise a herd of jopyuk overturned a bowl of oranges perched outside on a table!
A little ways up we came
across a fresh guava stall! We bought some yummy fresh guava’s and enjoyed
hogging them while walking.
We also met an Indian film director who said he was
shooting a move about the trek. Maybe you will see us on TV ;-) The rest of the hike was uneventful and
mostly uphill.
We finally reached Lukla and our lodge and the End of our 12 day Hike to Everest Base Camp! Quite befittingly the first thing you see as you enter this city is a giant prayer wheel! We danced with
joy and the thrill of having achieved such a major task! We had realized our
dream! We felt such a surge of fulfillment and joy over our accomplishment! We
danced to Cheykyo Cheykyo and another Nepali “thumba” song that Sanjiv had
found. It was also a tad bit depressing L Our Lodge was really
luxurious as compared to the ones we had experienced on the trek. The biggest
luxury was having running hot water showers! It was so refreshing and relaxing!
We took showers and then headed down to Lukla village. The girls went to a
Coffee shop and had really expensive coffee ;-) But the ambience was nice. I
dragged Anisha along to do a bit of shopping. I wanted to get T-shirts that
said Everest Base Camp instead of Kala Pathar. I found some and got some other
trinkets. We then went to “Wave’s Pub” and had a few drinks. Anisha and I
danced a Lot. Sanjiv was not in his usual high spirits. It must be the thought
of it all ending…
A little later at night Revant and Tej also came over to the
bar and we danced some more with them.
We also wrote about the details of our
trip along with the all our names on the wall of the pub! It is now inscribed
on the walls for eternity and for all to see! We were all quite drunk and the walk
back to the hotel was quite crazy!
At the hotel we had dinner
and the famous Thumba drink! The chicken was delicious! The drink was like
nothing we had ever had before and Quite Awesome! It was such a unique
experience. Thumba is an alcoholic beverage (a.k.a. "warm
beer") that was served in a plastic mug with a large straw. The mug was
filled with millet seed. They poured hot water and "Raksi" (a local
millet-based alcohol) into the canister over the millet and let it soak for
awhile. Then it was ready to drink. Once you hit bottom, the waiter would come
and "refresh" your drink with another pot of hot water. This was quite
a social drinking experience! Very enjoyable and a befitting end to a Marvelous
trek!
We met up with the porters and Revant and partied one last
night with them. It was quite heart wrenching cause we had really formed such
strong bonds especially with Revant and Dunbar. We thanked each and every one
of them for all for their great work and support over the last 2 weeks. Dunbar
would be travelling with us to Kathmandu but the others we would leave behind
in Lukla. We drank beer and soda
together for the last time. That night we all slept very well.
The next day we took the
early flight out of Lukla. Saying Good Bye to Revant was the hardest. Seated
inside the plane we saw the last glimpse of him outside and felt very sad. This marked the end of a truly once in a Lifetime experience that was exceptional
and absolutely amazing. Infinitely gorgeous, inordinately challenging, this
adventure will forever be etched in our memories and the bonds formed with the
friends we shared this with will be everlasting!
This was the easiest day of the whole trek. We woke up
lazily and when we came down for Tea I saw Revant’s Down jacket just lying on
one of the benches in the dining room – in plain sight of everyone. It was a
Marmot and must be quite expensive. I could not resist the urge to play a prank
on him ;-) I took it and I hid it in Anisha’s room. Later he came hunting for
it – looking very worried. We said we had not seen it. He went away and checked
with all the other porters and owners! When we came down for breakfast and he
still had not found it he really did look worried! Finally just before starting
off I told him I had been successful in catching the thief and had pay $200 to get it back ;-)
That morning Shachin and I made another trip to the
Sagarmatha National Park Headquarters to watch the views of Everest one last time. It was really
pretty but seemed pale after having watched these same mountains up close and
really magnificent! We came at a lucky time when they were unpacking new
statues of Hillary and Tenzing that would be installed there. We soaked in the
views of Everest and Lhotse and Lhotse Shar and Nuptse and felt sad that this
would be the last time we would be seeing them on this trek. It was lovely!
Some time later we headed to Jorsalle. The first hour was knee
crunching downhill – steep, with many many steps and we were all surprised how
we could possibly have climbed up this torturous path, just on our 2nd day of
hiking? This same path that had killed us as we puffed and panted on the way up was now crushing our knees on the way down!
We
trekked beside the frothy Dudh Kosi and
at one point passed this beautiful lodge that had gorgeous flowers! We reached
the “Friendship Lodge, Restaurant and bar” in time for lunch. The lodge and our
rooms were really charming! We remembered it from our way up.
It was the most delightful
lodge of the entire trek – perched beside the mischievous white waters of the
river and overlooking the forest on the other side of the mountain. We saw some
goats grazing on the banks. Lunch was out on the patio with the river as our
backdrop. The windows in the rooms also had gorgeous views of the river.
That evening at Jorsalle turned out to be one of the most
memorable and fun evenings of the trek! We ordered some beer with our food and
Sanjiv arranged for music and we all danced our hearts out in the small cozy
dining area! We asked the porters Tej, Vijay, Mann and Shyam to join as well as
Revant and Dunbar and the lodge owners and their little kid. The only other
people at the lodge were 3 Russian
trekkers who were not very friendly. We danced to “Theykyo Thekyo” and another dance song that I can’t remember.
Singing and dancing with the whole group was such a great bonding experience!
Tej was unanimously declared the best dancer! What a thoroughly enjoyable
evening!
Pheriche (14,340’/4,371 m) - Namche Bazaar (11,285'/3,440m) Approx 7 hrs 12.5 miles
This was the longest day of the descent. Unfortunately we could not break up our journey down into even hiking days. The days from Gorak Shep to Pheriche and from Pheriche to Namche were very long and then from Namche to Jorsalle would be very short and Jorsalle to Lukla would be relatively short too. The reason was altitude and quality of lodges. We preferred to chug onto Namche rather than spend another night in the miserable guest house in Tengboche. And on the way back you can make these choices.
I woke
up early and got some beautiful pics of the sunrise over Pumori and Labouche
Peak on fire! Very rewarding! After breakfast we started our long hike down. On
this trek nothing was easy. If we weren’t panting on a lung-searing uphill we
were suffering the knee-crunching downhill. Urmi had the most problems in steep
downhill’s but Revant was always by her side to help her down.
The best part
was that the views did not pale or become stale. You enjoy totally different
views going the opposite way because you rarely look back on the way up. We had
Kamtega and Thamserku in front of us dazzling in the October sunshine
as we hiked along Dudh Kosi
river.
As we got closer to Tengboche the mountains started getting greener and we could see some shrubs. It was very picturesque!
This was
also the day we had the run in with a group of Yaks. We realized that while on
the ascent, waiting for a Yak group to pass us gave us a chance to catch our
breath – having to walk behind a group on the descent was downright painful.
We
tried to find a patch of trek where you could run faster than the whole group
of Yaks to get ahead of them. So at one point with Dunbar in the lead followed
by Urmi, Anisha, Sanjiv, me, Shachin and Revant taking the rear, we decided to
do just that. Dunbar led us up a higher path and we had to literally run really
fast past the whole group. Urmi, Anisha and Sanjiv made it past but on the last
bit I just couldn’t catch my breath and had to give up and let the herd pass us
by. Fortunately Revant was with us and
he was on the vigil for another patch. Some time later he spotted one and we
made a second attempt at out running the beatss! This time we were able to
safely cross! Yayyy! Quite an adventure!
We realized the volatility of human memory as we traversed what must have been the steep descent (now ascent) from Tengboche to Deboche that we had covered a few days prior.
It was a reminder that just because we
were retracing our steps we were in no way the master of the terrain or the
altitude. The ascent left me breathless and dazed and by the time we got to Tengboche I was totally exhausted. I
somehow had the impression that we would be stopping for lunch there but was
informed that we had to go another 30-40 mins to Phungi Thanga! I was quite
bummed. Shachin gave me some snacks to keep me going.
At Phungi Thanga
we had a good lunch but the trail became more difficult and draining after that.
This last leg was relentless and never ending – at every switchback we
hoped it would be the last only to find another after it. I did have some
interesting conversations with Revant when he told me about his lovely wife and
kid and life in the village and career choices! We finally got to the now
familiar paved brick road to Namche and our lodge “The Nest”.
At the lodge we were not fortunate enough to get the lovely
rooms we had got on the way up. We had hoped for a good hot water bath but regrettably
there was no running hot water. Upon request we got some buckets of lukewarm
water. At dinner we ordered wine and “Teachers” whiskey. We wanted to treat
Revant and Dunbar and insisted they dine with us at our table. They really
enjoyed the drinks. We also ordered chicken and non veg for the first time! We
were surprised to see the South African couple there. It turned out that beyond
Dingboche the husband developed some Heart issues and they had to turn back.
They seemed disappointed but were happy to see us. We had a good time sharing
some wine and stories! It was a lovely relaxed evening!