The Himalayas (Part 3) | Dingboche to Lobuche

Dingboche to Lobuche

Distance: 12km

Vertical altitude gain: 500m/1640ft

Price for one liter of water in:

Kathmandu: Rs50 (Nepalese rupees) +-ZAR7

Namche Bazaar: Rs150

Dingboche: Rs200

Lobuche: Rs300

Duration: 1 day

 

Dingboche – Day 6

It’s freezing cold. As I open my eyes the sun has still not risen because Dingboche is caught in the web of Ama Dablam’s morning shadow. As a result our bedroom’s windows are still frosted over. I had a fitful night’s sleep and a nose bleed to boot.

Today we say goodbye to Des, Hein, Chris and one of the guides, Asmit. Dingboche is their turnaround point. Going forward our group now consist of Ryan, Umberto, Wayne, my-self and our guide Nga-wang.

Cholatse Peak
Cholatse rising at impossibly steep angles.
Dingboche
Ryan, Wayne and Umberto taking in the scenery.
Dingboche
Yaks making their way to Dhugla. Lobuche East on the left.
Tabuche & Cholatse
Too big to not take a panorama. Pheriche, bottom left. Peaks from the left: Kangtega (6685m), Thamserku (6608m), Tabuche (6367m) and Cholatse (6335m).
Tabuche & Cholatse
Further up the valley. Ama Dablam far left. Taken from our snack spot.

The Dingboche (14 465 ft) to Lobuche (16 105 ft) trek is 12km long, with a vertical gain of 500 meters and it should take 6 hours to complete. This stretch of the trek is a definite highlight. Soon after leaving Dingboche, the Tabuche and Cholatse peaks rise, to our left, 2 000 vertical meters above us. It is a tremendous sight. Our pace is slow as Wayne and I constantly take photos but a biting cold wind on our backs does hasten us along.

Views for days

As on every other trekking day the hiker traffic is busy at the start of the route. The trail has a gradual upslope and criss-crosses the wide grassland.  Yaks love to graze here. The uphill gradient is agreeable as long as you don’t push too hard. After an hour’s hike we sit down to marvel at the view in front of us and have a snack.

As we get closer to Dughla (4620m) the Chola Tsho glacial lake at the foot of Cholatse comes into view. Unlike anything I’ve seen before, the lake has a unique milk-ish aqua colour. It formed when the Cholatse glacier moraine pushed rocks into the path off the glacial melt water running down from Cho La pass. The colour contrast between the aqua-coloured lake, Cholatse’s pitch black rock interspersed with snow white ice and the cobalt blue sky is glorious.

Cholatse
Chola Tsho with Cholatse towering above.

Dughla

Soon we have to pass through the Dudh Koshi moraine to have lunch at Dhugla. On the far side across the moraine I can see the Thokig pass snaking up towards 4830m. It’s only a 200 meter vertical altitude gain but the sight of it saps my confidence. At this altitude it’s going to be hard work.

Dhugla
Dhugla left, Thokig pass in the middle, Lobuche east in the background.

For lunch I have macaroni and cheese and a steaming hot orange tea. It’s getting colder as mist moves in from the valley below. My strategy for Thokig pass is to go at it relentlessly. I tell myself the less I stop the faster I’ll get to the top. The gradient is brutal. Umberto seems unfazed and very relaxed as he scrambles past me up the rock path. I tell myself it’s because he doesn’t have a camera to carry. The uphill struggle seems never ending but after half an hour of climbing we’re at the top.

Dhugla
Wayne passing over the Dudh Koshi at Dhugla.
Cholatse
One of the longest prayer flag ropes on the EBC trek at Dhugla.
Dhugla
Another group leaving Dhugla towards Thokig pass.
Ama Dablam
Close up of Ama Dablam from Dhugla.
Tabuche
Tabuche and Cholatse from Thokig pass.
Thokig
The top of Thokig pass. Ama Dablam to the left and Dhugla far below. Our guide, Nga-wang approaching in the middle.
Peak
Tabuche surrounded by clouds.

Climbers’ Memorial

A miserable cold wind greets us at the top of the pass. The view back down the valley is wondrous. Only the high peaks peek through the rolling mist clouds. Wayne, who has been here numerous times before, gives us a brief background of the memorial to dead climbers and sherpas. I stumble upon the Kazakhstan climbers’ memorial and see the name of Anatoli Boukreev. He was very much at the centre of the 1996 Everest disaster, to only die a year later in an avalanche on Annapurna.

Climbers' Memorial
Prayer flags at the Climbers’ Memorial.

Climbers' Memorial

Kangtega
Kangtega and Thamserku from the Climbers’ Memorial.
Ama Dablam
Ama Dablam from the Climbers’ Memorial
Chilling
Three dudes just chilling between the clouds. Wayne, Ryan and Umberto.
Climbers' Memorial
Climbers’ Memorial
Climbers' Memorial
Climbers’ Memorial, Thokig Pass.

After resting a while the frigid wind moves us briskly along and we enter a new, breath taking world which consists of rock, water, ice, wind and precious little oxygen. It’s the Khumbu Glacier. The glacier is to our right but we can’t see it due to us walking in a shallow valley on the western side of it. Soon Pumori (7165m), Lingtren (6749m), and Nuptse (7861m) make their appearances. An amphitheatre of rock and chiselled ice eight kilometres ahead signal the turning point of our trek and the border between Nepal and Tibet. We’ve arrived at the top of the world.

Nuptse
Nuptse (7861m)
Khumbu Glacier
Entering the Khumbu Glacier with Pumori, Lingtren and Nuptse from left to right.
Pumori
Pumori (7161m)
Lingtren
Lingtrin to the left. (6749m).
Nuptse
Nuptse from Lobuche.
Khumbu Glacier
Pumori, Lingtren from close to Lobuche.

Lobuche

Two hours later we trudge into Lobuche. Our lodge, the Hotel Peak XV, isn’t brilliant. Our room on the second floor is small. The whole building is constructed from flimsy materials. Each movement and step, wherever it might be in the building, is heard and felt. It’s noisy. It’s easy to follow conversations next door. The toilets are a mess with water spilled all over the cubicles. The tea room is stuffy and crammed. Water is expensive. Maybe I’m not feeling too well? I do feel irritated and restless. I don’t recognise it but the altitude gained affects my mood.

After afternoon tea I go lie on my bed. I’m too tired to even take off my hiking boots or wet clothes. I can’t fall asleep. The moment my body relaxes I suddenly gasp for air, which wakes me up and the whole sequence starts again. Exasperated I finally force myself out of bed to wash before night falls and it becomes too cold to change clothes.  Washing is a dreary affair with wet wipes. It’s too cold and too expensive to take the risk of a cold shower. It’s now five days since I’ve had a proper wash.

Wayne’s World

After sharing a room with Des for the first section of the trek I now share with Wayne. I’m lucky on this trip. Neither he nor Des snores. Wayne is a colourful, affable character. He’s always busy with something, talks a lot, is a bottomless pit of information and has a real passion for the Himalaya because he’s infatuated by its grandeur, mystique and ever changing landscapes. He’s also an avid birder. It’s comforting to have someone like him with so much experience on the team. Very few things get him down and he’s always joking around. A breath of positivity really helps in these trying conditions.

As I lie in bed after dinner I can’t help to pine for my luxuries. First price would be a decent toilet and uninterrupted sleep. Tomorrow it’s upwards and onwards to Gorak Shep and Everest Base Camp. Although I’m surrounded by unsurpassed natural beauty I realise that my body is now in a battle for survival. The next few days will be tough.

EJ

Climbing Legogote

This past Sunday morning I had the pleasure of hiking up the iconic Legogote. “The Legogote mountain is an impressive landmark between Hazyview and White River. To the east stretches the Lowveld and to the west the escarpment foothills in the Peebles area. The pinnacle is huge granite rocks and stands at 1194 meters.” – Peakery.com

My squash buddy Roy volunteered to show me the way up to the summit. We started just after 8AM from the Petra College entrance off the Numbi road. The hike starts with a steep angle for the first hundred meters but becomes then much more tolerable from there onwards.

The path is well trodden and easy to follow. It winds through two forests and after forty five minutes we reached the last section before the summit. There are two tricky rock scrambles before you reach the top. A 360 degree view of the Lowveld greets you once at the top. The summit marker was infested with gnats and we only spent a short while there before moving down to the bottom tier.

Summit
The summit.

There was a bit of haze which meant the view wasn’t crystal clear, but we could still see Crocodile Gorge to the South East, the Barberton mountains to the South, the Kaapschehoop mountains to the South West, Spioenkop close to Sabie and the Graskop escarpment to the North.

Legogote
View towards the south.

 

Snout
Legogote’s Snout.

Hiking

Resting

We also visited the Bushman paintings in the rock overhang just below the summit. This little cave would make the perfect overnight location for some stunning night photography. We hung around a bit longer to enjoy the views and then decided to make our way back as the humidity and temperature were notably rising. We arrived back at the car park before noon.

Legogote

Cave
View from the cave just below the summit.

Words of caution though, don’t underestimate the climb by not taking enough water with you. The humidity of the Lowveld means you expend much more liquid than at the higher altitudes of for instance the Drakensberg. If you’re a Lowvelder this is a hike you absolutely have to do once in your lifetime.

EJ