We found a KFC, where we had a very Western lunch experience with a few people from the trekking group. We leave the hotel tomorrow morning at 6:30am for our 9:00am flight to New Delhi, where we will check into a Radisson near the airport to relax until our 11pm flight back to EWR. Since the power is on now, we are just watching some TV and recovering. I am working on the trekking map that is linked to the this blog. I also will be blogging my diary details when I get to it.
Tuesday, April 6, 2010
Monday, April 5, 2010
Photos Posted
http://picasaweb.google.com/martysupple/MartyAndJoeTrekEverest
I will be adding captions and blogging more details as I get time…
Mission Accomplished!!
On 4/1 we summited Kala Patthar (5550m), which was the most difficult part of the trek. At 50% oxygen and 10 days of hiking we ascended a very steep dirt trail then rocks to the peak of this mountain in the Everest region. On 4/2 9:45am we made it to EBC (Everest Base Camp), which was difficult only due to being completely exhausted, low oxygen, and also it was quite rocky/treacherous.But we made it!! Overall the most grueling and challenging thing I have done in my life. Only suffered some scrapes and a bad cold / sinus infection, so I am coughing a lot, as many people on the team are. One person suffered some AMS (Acute Mountain Sickness – Altitude Sickness) as she had very low O2 in her blood when we were all tested at 4200m. Above 4300/4500m things change. I had some pretty bad headaches, and when this cold came on, I had the worse sore throat I have ever had. Coming down was a lot of fun though, we trucked. At one point we were practically running. I am sure I dropped some pounds over the 12 days. The tea houses were bearable, and got more basic as the elevation went up. Above the tree lines they used Kerosene for heating/cooking which sucked. One place our water tasted like Kerosene, gross. I finally took a shower today after 12 days..nice. I also was able to shave away most of the beard I had grown, so feeling a little cleaner :) There were definitely moments where many of us, would have taken the oppt. to press a button to go home. With no heat or hot water as things got colder it was really tough. Luckily we had the right gear, the Sherpas were awesome, and our team helped each other along. We had a group of 11 people from all over the world. I have kept a diary and taken many photos. As I get time I will be posting these! See you all soon!
Tuesday, March 30, 2010
Pheriche 4200m (Alpine Zone)
Monday, March 29, 2010
Pangboche Village 3:15pm 4000m
Friday, March 26, 2010
Namche 10794 feet
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
F Bombs In F’in Kathmandu
Another day stuck in Kathmandu, and nobody is happy about it. Cloud cover over Lukla delayed and then cancelled flights from Kathmandu, including ours. We are learning, that this is not very uncommon. We are back at the Hotel. We are all going to meet at 6pm for dinner and a briefing. We can still make base camp, if we can get up to Lukla tomorrow. We will have to be a little more aggressive on the ascent, as long as everyone is acclimating well. We are trying to stay optimistic. There are a few contingency plans, we will discuss tonight; charter a chopper (about an additional $500+ /person, but not sure if there are guarantees about landing in Lukla, need to find out), trek Annapurna , extend the trip and change our return flights home. We will see what happens, continue to wish us luck. We are all thinking of tossing out Buddhist prayer strings.
Tuesday, March 23, 2010
Flight to Lukla Take 2
Everest Trek Delay
Monday, March 22, 2010
Stranded in Kathmandu Domestic Airport
Religious Temples in Nepal
Nepal has a mix of religions, Hindu and Buddhism being the primary ones, from what I understand. Today the group took a bus from the Hotel to a Hindu Temple, called Pashupatinath, where there were outside Pyres along a murky and polluted body of water, where bodies were cremated when they died. The upper part of the ‘river’ was where upper class persons would be sacrificed and down river would be more common people. There is a general stench in the air in most parts of Kathmandu I have been, but this had a notch up on the small factor with the burning bodies. Morbid indeed, there were also
many monkeys swinging around on the building tops and trees. After this we went to a Buddhist temple, called Boudhanath which was much cleaner and nicer :) Many Tibetan Monks, sportin’ the Dalia Lama look, which is money. We spun prayer wheels and heard prayer chants, pretty cool. Most of us bought Buddhist Prayer Strings that were blesses (see me getting mine here) to wish us well on the mountain. After this cultural emersion we got bussed back to the hotel area where a few of us when to do some last minute gear purchasing (luckily, I did not need to purchase anything due to our diligent and somewhat over preparation before leaving the US). We passed a very American looking eatery (Roadhouse Cafe) that blared American Rock (Alice in Chains, Audioslave..how could we not go in). Joe and I got pizzas (it was a wood fired pizza place) and our
new friend (Nadira from Australia got the pasta. I of course had jalapenos on my pizza. Not bad at all, it was a nice oasis from the Nepal that was outside. I did buy a nose/face mask for 40 rupees (less than $1) that many locals sport to help with the pollution and dust. Also we will be expecting some dust action up on the mountain, so that should help.
Kathmandu Day 2
Still adjusting to time difference, slept until 2:30am then fell asleep after an hour until 5:30am. Got up early to shower (which is literally right in front of the toilet in our tiny bathroom…money, so now when the toilet seat is wet, you don’t know why ;) The hotel includes breakfast, not knowing what to expect, we were delighted with decent eggs, potatoes and even pancakes! The instant coffee was not good, but tea was solid. So we are starting the day with a good breakfast in our bellies for our cultural tour of Kathmandu Valley.
Sunday, March 21, 2010
Wild Boar per favor
Joe and I lied down for a nap (still adjusting to time difference, sleep) and almost missed the 4pm meeting. So there were 9 of us trekkers (2 more are arriving late Sunday night) and it was led by Karma one of our trekking guides. Karma gave us information about the gear we needed and didn’t need. Also on medications, he said the Malaria med did not mix well with Diamox (the altitude sickness med). So Joe and I stopped our Malaria pill intake and will restart after the trek. There is not really a Malaria threat at this altitude in Nepal anyway. We are allowed to bring up 15kg in our duffel (we are using their duffels for the trek, not our own). And then we also have our day packs (35 liters). Drinking a lot of water helps acclimation, Karma recommended 3-4 liters a day. Since we have 2 1 liter Nalgene bottles, we may pick up an extra bottle today before we leave tomorrow morning. We are mostly good on gear though, a few things we didn’t need to bring (gaiters for example).
It is an interesting group of people, 2 other guys close in age to Joe and I from Alberta, Canada. Both are married and they been thinking about this trip for a while and finally did it. They were glad their wives were cool enough to let them go (like mine). Another guy/girl coupe from London, that were in between jobs and are taking 5 months to travel the world. They were in India before Nepal and heading to Thailand after this, as well as many other destinations. Another guy/girl couple from Germany (the girl is at least) that seem to travel a lot and then live somewhere for a year or two. And then a guy from Dubai, India that is in Finance that it taking this trip on his own, and a girl from Australia. The girl from Australia and the guy from the guy/girl nomad pair are actually climbing to one of the summits (Olympic I believe). So they are trekking up with us, and will part ways at some point. They need additional gear like gaiters, ice picks, crampons, etc. Overall a fun and interesting group of people.
After the briefing and receiving our duffel bags, Joe and I ventured out to change some USD to Nepal Rupees, and buy some water. When we returned to the hotel we met our group and walked to a really nice Traditional Nepal restaurant. When we were greeted at the door, we were all ‘dotted’ :)
We received many courses, first was a plate of different little appetizer type foods (including a sardine…ew..but I ate it). Then dumplings (yum), soup and then main course, which was rice and a mix of different meats and veggies. One of the meats was Wild Boar, so of course I tried that. It was pretty fatty, similar to a pork/bacon cut that you might expect. I did not love it. Overall, it was very similar to Indian cuisine/dining. We did get some Everest beer, which was definitely nice. They also served us this alcoholic drink (like a shot in a small clay dish), which was made from rice and tasted like tequila (not good tequila). After the meal and the beverages I was ready for bed. We all came back to our hotel and bid adieu, until 8:30am tomorrow morning when we head out for our cultural tour and Kathmandu Day 2!!
Arrival in Kathmandu (Day 1 of Tour) - 1330m
A person from Mountain Monarch met us at the KTM airport today after we arrived and got through the Visa process ($40) and Baggage Claim. The airport is pretty basic, not as nice as BOM. More people wearing face masks (pollution here and India is pretty bad). It was interesting to see the large number of ‘improvised baggage’ items. Why pay money on a fancy suitcase when you can just wrap some twine around a cardboard box (or around a
blanket), innovative people..these Nepalese. We then were escorted in a small white Nissan to our Hotel (Shakti). The ride was interesting, similar experience of driving through Egypt and India. Lots of dust, pollution, no good street signage and just pure craziness. The hotel is nice and very basic. We met Pradip (who runs Mountain Monarch) at the hotel, to review the itinerary and also settle up our tab. It is now 2:30pm local time
(4:45am Eastern). Apparently we have a very large group, 11 trekkers + porters and guides..adding up to about 20+ people. We will meet the group at 4pm in the hotel lobby for a full Trek Briefing (including getting our kit – sleeping bag, down jacket, etc.) and then a traditional Royal Nepali welcome dinner. So there will be more to
come. I will hopefully get Wi-Fi at some point, apparently here in Nepal the electricity goes on and off at different time, since it is cycled to different parts of the city. Our room is pretty basic, will do the job for these 2 nights before we fly to Lukla to start the trek.
Saturday, March 20, 2010
Hello Mumbai!
We got to Mumbai (BOM) without any problems. The flight was long, but I watched 3 movies (Men Staring at Goats, Precious, and Couples Retreat). The food on the plane was pretty good (Indian food, made in the USA). I chose vegetarian for dinner, and had eggs for breakfast (I guess that was American). It was recommended we use a ‘Prepaid Taxi’ to
get from the airport to the Hyatt Regency hotel (which is very close). This just cost us 190 INR (which is like $4.40). The tax was tiny and our 2 duffel bags didn’t fit properly in the trunk so it had to be tied down with a cable, oh good times. I think Joe caught a snap of that. The driving here seems similar to Egypt, CRAZY. When we just pulled into oncoming traffic to
turn around I almost sh*t. When we got to the Hyatt (which is beautiful), it was a little scary when the 4 security guards at the locked gates did a bomb scan of the taxi we were in. But we made it, and we are in this beautiful hotel, which I think will be the nicest accommodations we will see until I
get back to Hoboken :) Well time for a hot shower, maybe a scotch, and then going to bed for a 5:45am departure (it is about 10:30pm local time here now).
Friday, March 19, 2010
About to get airborne...
Packed and ready...
Thursday, March 18, 2010
da plane, da plane…
Wow, we leave tomorrow. So a few of you have asked about the flights, well here are the deets. Today just finalizing packing, running to CVS for a few last minute toiletries perhaps a massage is in order :)
Continental (Flight CO48)
Depart (EWR) 19-Mar-10 (Fri) 08:20p
Arrive Mumbai, IN (BOM) 20-Mar-10 (Sat) 08:40p
Flight Time 13hr 50min
Jet Airways India (Flight 9W266)
Depart Mumbai, IN (BOM) 21-Mar-10 (Sun) 08:05a
Arrive Kathmandu, NP (KTM) 21-Mar-10 (Sun) 10:55a
Flight Time 03hr 20min
Royal Nepal Airlines (Flight RA205)
Depart Kathmandu, NP (KTM) 07-Apr-10 (Wed) 09:00a
ArriveDelhi, IN (DEL) 07-Apr-10 (Wed) 11:15a
Flight Time 01hr 45min
Continental Airlines (Flight CO83)
Depart Delhi, IN (DEL) 07-Apr-10 (Wed) 10:50p
Arrive (EWR) 08-Apr-10 (Thu) 04:25a
Flight Time 16hr 05min
Sunday, March 14, 2010
I love Joe, but I hate sharing sleeping quarters with him!

Having been on many a ski trip with my boy Joe, I know he is a snoring machine. In fact everyone else in the same condo knows this as well. Since we will be sharing hotel rooms and tea house accommodations, he reminded me I may want to invest in some ear plugs. I was super impressed with CVSs selection of ear plugs. The standard soft disposables seem to be the best call, rated at 30 DB seems to be the max on most. I am sure there are even quieter ones, but these should help me catch some zzz’s.
Saturday, March 13, 2010
A day of shopping in the Garden State
Today Joe and I jumped head first into a day of shopping here in NJ. Joe picked me up here in Hoboken at about 11:30am, and we started with a delicious breakfast at Dunkin Donuts. Our first stop was Sport’s Authority, Joe had taken advantage of their ‘Spend $100 get $25 Gift Card’ special and wanted to cash in. They had some North Face stuff marked down (a find), so picked up an extra pair of hiking pants and a couple of shirts, as well as 1 more pair of light hiking socks. Joe was also good enough to bring me my Passport with India Tourist Visa that he picked up for me earlier this week, as well as an AC/DC 2010 Calendar that he had gotten me for my birthday (not bringing on trip). Another good he brought over was our M-Edge Kindle covers (booya). After Sports Authority we headed to EMS but ended up stopping at Campmor on the way (score). At Campmor I picked up a Kelty Camp Pillow, that coupled with the Coolmax Sleeping Bag Liner I got there, should help ensure a good nights sleep in the tea houses along the trekking route. I also grabbed a North Face sun hat that was marked down to $19, and the most exciting and key purchase of the day…Ex Officio underwear, which is advertised as “17
Countries, 1 Pair of underwear. I went with the Men’s Give-N-Go boxer briefs. I guess these are supposed to be trail friendly and not retain order and are easy to clean/dry. I will let you know how that works out. We finally made it to EMS, I almost bought a new tech fleece, but I really didn’t need it (was a good deal), but I have been spending so much money and things are adding up. I did end up picking up a splash guard for the Nalgene water bottles, because who wants to get splashed when they are just looking for a nice cool drink? It was about 4:30pm at this point, and we had not eaten since our DD visit, so since we were driving south in Rte 17, I thought we should stop at my favorite Mexican chain restaurant in this neck of the woods… On The Border My wife, things I am too sophisticated for this place (god bless her) but I love it. This is the first place I had portabella mushroom fajitas..so good. Tonight I had the carne asada steak tacos, money. After fueling up we headed to Target in Jersey City near my home in Hoboken. The windy and rainy weather had taken its toll by this time, and the flooding in the area was pretty bad. We had to take a few detours around flooded area to eventually make our way to Target. Luckily we made it and the store was open, but not very busy (score). We made a dent at Target, picked up a box of Clif bars, sun screen, lip balm, had sanitizer, sanitizing wipes, margarita mix (not for the trip), trail mix, travel size shampoo (yes I use shampoo). Finally at 8:30pm I got home to my waiting and patient wife. It was a good day with my buddy Joe, and we are pretty much geared up for our Trek. The countdown begins, as we leave on Friday…it’s getting exciting.
Tuesday, March 9, 2010
Something Borrowed...
Saturday, March 6, 2010
Visas and Passports..oh my!
Our layovers in India are about 10 hours in each direction. On the way there we are stopping in Mumbai and Delhi on the way back. As you know we are staying at the Hyatt in Mumbai (see Confusion in Mumbai) On the way back Joe has set us up with extravagant accommodations at the YMCA near downtown Delhi. Since we will be leaving the airport and touring around a bit in Delhi, we are getting Visas for India. We are just getting the Tourist Visa (as opposed to a Transit Visa), since it is more flexible and just an extra $20. We filled out the application online, and have an appointment at 11:00am on Tuesday March 9th at the office at 316 53rd Street. Pradip told us it is easier to get the Nepal visa, when we arrive there. This is what I did when I was in Egypt, the travel company handled it all.
Thursday, March 4, 2010
Gear Talk
Today two new pieces of gear arrived, my North Face XL Base Camp Duffel Bag and the Julba Sherpa glacier glasses.

I went with the yellow/black color scheme. Easy to spot on a luggage belt or on the mountain. And it says “Hey everybody, I am here!!”.
The glacier glasses have the leather covers on the sides to protect your eyes from glare off of the snow/ice in the mountains. They look pretty sick too, I scared my wife last night while wearing these and my pajamas!!
Monday, March 1, 2010
How High can your hard drive go?
Katmandu is about 4,400 ft in elevation, but Everest Base Camp is over 17,000 ft. Apparently hard drives can have problems at higher altitudes, due to low pressure not allowing the drive head to float properly. Devices with solid state storage (e.g.. flash drives) would be fine. A lot of people claim their laptops worked fine at higher altitudes, and up to 14k seems reasonable safe.
Most manufacturers rate their devices to 10k feet. When I get deeper into our trek itinerary, I will see what elevations we will be at each day leading up to base camp. I will just use the net book up to the 10k elevation level to be safe. Here is the little guy we are looking out for, the Seagate Momentus 5400.6 3gb/s 160-gb Hard Drive.
Sunday, February 28, 2010
Confusion in Mumbai
Friday, February 26, 2010
Wear your rubbers!
It has been snowing here in Hoboken (NY/NJ), since yesterday morning. We got dumped on. Commuting to Manhattan today was a joy. Since most of the sidewalks were not cleared, many people were walking the streets. There was huge amounts of slush at intersections, so without the proper foot gear, you were getting some cold and wet feet. Right now I am sitting on the NY/NJ Path train heading back to Hoboken, and I am seated across from a dude, that definitely ruined his leather work shoes (I tried to sneak a pic with my phone, doesn’t quite capture the sadness).
Lucky for me, and my recent ‘gearing up’ my Vasque Breeze GTX’s waterproof hiking boots allowed me to saunter to and from work like a Sherpa. Joe and I have been wearing our hiking boots most days to ‘break them in’ for the big trek. I picked these bad boys up at EMS in Soho, NYC.
On another front, the camera I have been eyeing; the Panasonic Lumix DMC-TS1 has its next gen coming out in March. The DMC-TS2, which is more rugged and freeze proof (jackpot) and 14.1 MP (you can never have enough megapixels). It retails for $399. Joe is also scoping a 2010 Olympus camera scheduled for a March release, wonder if that’s when all the new cameras come out. In time for St Paddy’s I suppose.
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
Gadgets and Gear
Shopping for gear is a huge, and exciting, part of this type of trip. In 2008 when I went to Egypt, I used an old (heavy) Dell
Inspiron laptop to bring with me for blogging. In 2010 I am kicking it up (or down) a notch and going with this little lightweight bad ass. I love this little machine, blogging from it right now. Great battery life (over 10 hours),and zippy enough for basic needs. I am thinking of getting a new camera, as I still have the same 5 MP Canon I had for Egypt (which takes great pics).
My buddy Joe Thomas got this Luminex, which I really like. Waterproof, shockproof, 12 MP, HD Video, Leica lens, and it’s Orange! I will have to see how is South Africa pictures come out. I still have some more gear to get. Probably try to wrap that up this weekend. Good thing I remembered I need to bring my universal plug adapter with me, that I bough for Egypt.
Monday, February 22, 2010
Our Trekking Company Selection
When we had to choose a company to use for the trek, I turned to good old Trip Advisor to see what types of reviews people left for various companies. These guys, seemed to be rated pretty well; they are a local Nepal based company. Nepal based companies are generally less expensive than USA based ones. We have been able to communicate with them (Pradip) via email without much trouble. Here is the Trip Advisor review and the company web site; Mountain Monarch They also offered travel dates hat worked with our personal schedules. They will be meeting us at Kathmandu airport when we arrive.



