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OK, so what’s all the fuss about? Nepal is one of those special places in the world where roads, and all the associated evil spin-offs, do not make up the fabric of everyday life. It’s a hard concept for the rest of us living in the “real” world where “no roads” just doesn’t exist. It’s not a park, it’s not wilderness….there are villages, and towns, and houses, and restaurants, and hotels. There are simply no roads, no cars, no motorbikes, no combustion engines tying society together.
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Now, add to that, arguably the most spectacular mountain setting on the planet, and you have a trekking paradise. Where else can you hike unsupported for weeks across glaciers and over mountain passes, then end your day in a trekking lodge and a steamy bowl of yak noodle soup, overlooking a Buddhist monastery and perhaps a glimpse of Everest in the distance? (answer: nowhere else)
Nepal’s trekking network is huge and offers a ton of options from short and easy routes, to long and hard. Having already been to the Annapurna area (the early 90s thing), we decided to focus on the Everest region, AKA the Khumbu region, and specifically on a route called the “Three-Passes Trek”.
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What’s the catch? The catch is that the 3-passes trek is not a cake walk. The most common word to describe it seems to be “challenging”. Not one, or even two, but three 5000-m+ passes back to back. The beauty of that combo though, is that it weeds out the crowds, and very few people do it compared to the EBC trek (we met 3 other couples doing the route, the whole time). Want the trails of the Himilaya to yourself? The Three-Passes Trek is for you.
We saw even less people because our trip dates (which were dictated to us by Amy’s teaching schedule) coincided precisely with the end of the season (late May/early June) – beyond the “shoulder season”, this was shut-down season. In fact, we had lodges to ourselves more times than not – pretty funny actually. More than once we were a bit worried if there would even be a lodge/guesthouse open where we were heading for the day.
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To top that off, we won the weather lottery, and pretty much had clear weather every day (morning at least), and downright amazing blue-sky weather a lot of the time. Again remarkable because June is supposed to be “monsoon season” (and hence the end of season shut-downs), meaning wet rainy weather. Er, that memo didn’t get through obviously, because our weather was fantastic!
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Does it get any better? Yes! Doing the passes forms a loop back to the start and finish of the Khumbu universe: the infamous Namche Bazaar, capital of the Khumbu region.
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The two biggest worries, and the two biggest reasons people don't complete the route are: (1) altitude-sickness related issues, and (2) weather. You need both of these things to go well. Unlike Amy – who seems to have Sherpa genes – I struggle with altitude issues. I spent the first week popping Tylenols like breath mints to deal with throbbing headaches (headaches are the number-1 symptom of altitude-related issues). But after a week or so, and a little help from the drug Diamox, my head was fine and it was all systems go.
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Namaste
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MISSION ACCOMPLISHED! |