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An exceptional view of the Everest massif. The
Khumbu glacier has carved out the valley. The
Base Camp is located just outside the curve
of the glacier. This panorama can be seen from
Kalapatar, the shoulder of Pumoni.
Photo: Claude Grenier - Martin
Vachon |
Base
Camp. We set up our tents on the glacial
moraine of Khumbu. Using ice axes and and picks,
we manage to carve out a fairly flat space for
ourselves. The stones lie on top of ice. The
Base Camp becomes an international village where
climbers from all over the world live side by
side. At 5 400m,
it is higher than the highest peak in the Alps,
Mont Blanc (4 807m)! There is a constant
buzz of excitement here. Each expedition hangs
out prayer flags.
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Between
the Base Camp and Camp I lies the notorious
Icefall. The glacier
is twisted and crisscrossed with crevasses,
and huge blocks of ice called seracs, some the
size of a building, topple over regularly. All
the climbers are wary of this part of the route.
Bernard had to cross it six times in 1999, and
twelve times in 1997.
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Camp
I. Located at 6 100m,
above the Icefall. The tents are set up on a wide
serac, a huge block of ice that some day will
tumble into the Icefall itself. Camp I moves to
a new site every year. At this altitude, there
is only 50% as much oxygen as at sea level. |
Ladders
are set up to cross the crevasses. If one isn't
enough, a second or third one is tied on. There
a dozen ladders to cross between the Base Camp
and Camp II. Most of the crevasses are deadly,
and it's a slippery and perilous trip across
the ladder, what with metal crampons slipping
and sliding on the metal ladders. Since the
glacier is constantly moving, ladders sometimes
disappear into the bottom of a crevasse.
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Camp
II, 6500 m. Nearly at the end of the valley,
we set up on the moraine beside the glacier, as
at the Base Camp. Above our tents hangs a glacier
that occasionally looses chunks of ice... the
size of a house! You start to feel the effects
of high altitude: headaches, loss of appetite,
etc. Camp II is important for acclimatization,
so we stay there several days. |
One
of the risks up in the high mountains is avalanches.
After a heavy snowfall, the mountain sheds the
excess weight. Avalanches are dangerous and
quite frequent on the Everest massif. Day and
night, the rumbling created by avalanches of
rocks and snow add a certain ambiance to life
in the Base Camp.
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Camp
III. The world's worst campsite! 7 400m.
On the steep slope of Mount Lhotse, we carve out
a place with shovels and picks to create a small
platform for the tent. In the midst of an avalanche
zone and at an altitude close to what is called
the "Death Zone," you don't get much
sleep or relaxation here. Sherpas refuse to sleep
at Camp III... They prefer to leave Camp II during
the night and go directly to Camp IV. Quite a
trip! |
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The
summit pyramid of the Roof of the World.
It is often snow-free because it is constantly
swept by violent winds (the jet stream) and
because its slopes are so steep. No use looking
up when you get to the top--the whole world
is at your feet.
Photo: Claude Grenier
- Martin Vachon
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Camp
IV, 8 000m. The South Col, the highest
col on Earth! By this time we are so breathless
and exhausted, frozen and sleepless, with no appetite...
it's hard to find anything good to say about this
spot! It's in the middle of the "Death Zone,"
where human bodies can no longer adapt because
of the lack of oxygen. People often say the place
is polluted, and it's true that there are always
oxygen bottles and remains of tents. But the ground
is cleaned year after year and soon it will be
back to normal. The bodies of some climbers remain
here, though, for eternity. |
Climbers
use an oxygen mask,
just for the last section, from Camp IV at 8 000m
up to the summit. It doesn't make the climb
any less arduous, but makes things safer, to
avoid cerebral and pulmonary edema. |
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The
summit ridge seen from the South Summit
8 700m. This is a risky part before reaching
the summit, 150m higher. Very powerful gusts sometimes
roar in from the Tibetan side, to remind us that
we are at the height of the jet stream. The snow
is very fragile, and it's terribly cold. Many
climbers turn back when they see the Hillary Step,
in the middle of the route across the ridge: 8
metres straight up, on smooth rock! The step was
named in honour of the first climber to reach
the top of Everest, Sir Edmund Hillary, accompanied
by Sherpa Tenzing Norgay (1953). |
After
setting foot on the summit of Everest, Bernard
was invited to sign the prestigious "Everest
Summiters Club'' board in Kathmandu.
Bernard's and Dorjee's signatures are now inscribed
next to those of Hillary, Rob Hall, Messner... |
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