About Alan Stock

An adventurous soul!

Ulleri and Gorepani

Slings are sooo sexy, no?

Day 42: Location – Nepal, Annapurna Base Camp Trek, Ulleri

11/10/12

I was woken a few times by village dogs barking, but slept alright. We were up at 6am, as we needed to do some hard trekking before the sun got too high. As we ate breakfast there were already mule trains and a seemingly never-ending stream of porters carrying supplies in baskets (for the villages), trekker loads or camping gear. We tucked into a mountain breakfast of eggs and Gurung bread,  which is fried salty flat bread, very tasty. By 7:30 we were off and within ten minutes it was already hot going, the weather was sunny and cloudy.

Try to share a bridge with these guys and cry

We set a good pace, overtaking groups of trekkers and advancing along the valley through villages, before crossing the river and starting up the infamous Ulleri steps. This narrow stone staircase goes steeply straight up the side of the valley to Ulleri village taking a few hours. My dad had warned me about this section – it’s how he permanently damaged his knee in his youth.

Drying mushrooms

 

The sun was blaring down with no shade to hide in, but we kept a fast pace, stopping occasionally at traditional rest stops. These are at regular intervals along all the trails, usually no more than twenty minutes apart, and are long stone platforms, just the right height to dismount your basket/backpack without having to bend down. A second step above this provides a seat. Often they’re sited under rocks or trees for shelter. They provide a much needed break spot, especially for the porters, so you often see two or three people at each one. Shiba and Krishna chatted to the other Nepali workers at these stops.

 

The sun was too bright for photos but the views out along the forest and farmland valley towards Naya Pul were really nice. You could see the little villages we’d walked through in the distance.We passed school kids on the steps, a part of daily life for them. They walk for 45 minutes each way up and down the steps to get to and from school. Porters with massive loads trudged past us, incredibly strong and fit.

View from the steps, down the valley we’d climbed up for the past day

We had to make way a few times for fast mule trains –when going downhill they were unstoppable and you sometimes had to jump out the way to avoid getting smashed by their gas canisters. You could see they have a hard time on the steps, it’s not natural for their legs. We saw one baby mule trailing behind a train, being ushered along by the herder, it was in training. Krishna told me a mule costs around 50,000 Rupees each – around 500 quid. Very expensive for this country but a good investment, they can usually work for 10-12 years carrying heavy loads. Porters and mule trains are the only way to get supplies up to the villages up here – some being 5 days walking distance from a road. Of course this makes accommodation, food, and especially drinks expensive up here! For every drinks bottle you buy, someone has got to carry it up and often someone else has to carry the empty bottle back down again!

Along the trail you’d see bins full of plastic water bottles and other rubbish, and little stone furnaces for burning waste. According to the guide books, rubbish is a big problem with such a large amount of trekkers passing through, particularly plastic water bottles. I was drinking water like a fish, sweating constantly with the heat and the hard climb. Where possible on the trek I bought boiled or filtered water for my platypus instead of buying bottles.

We finally reached Ulleri and I thought the climb hadn’t been as bad as people make out. We continued at a lesser incline and stopped at a really nice restaurant for a drink, with a flower-filled garden. The Fishtail and another Annapurna had been revealed from behind the clouds and looked magnificent, towering in the distance over the valley. The Fishtail was glowing so brightly it looked unreal, like a painting. In 4 or 5 days we would be right at its base, I was looking forward to it!

At the top of the hill an hour later we stopped for lunch. Men were hand-washing dishes using a small water hose out on the stone courtyard. These pipes are the main water source for houses and usually come from streams high up the mountain where there’s less risk of contamination. Every lodge and restaurant has one or two, and the water is constantly pouring out. You see people washing dishes, clothes, brushing their teeth and shaving outdoors by these hoses.

A beehive log, harvested for honey

Although it was only 10:30 I was already starving, so I took two dishes and then had a dessert! I really felt fat afterwards! Krishna and Shiba happily tucked into their dahl baht and convinced me that even though I don’t like lentils, I should try it sometime. I’d told them in Bhaktapur I’d been unimpressed by it, but they assured me the quality was much better in the mountains so I agreed to try it tonight.

My porter Krishna and guide Shiba. Happy because they just ate about 50 plates of dahl baht..

We continued up through a forest, where there were far less people. The forest was filled with twisted, moss-covered trees, dangling vines and ferns growing up the trunks.

Into de jungle jungle

Through gaps in the trees I saw big cliffs on the other side of the valley, and I could hear a river rushing below. We crossed rushing streams and passed small waterfalls. The trail flattened out and we passed through a few villages.

Another death defying stunt! INCHES FROM MORTAL PERIL

Shiba takes a break at a man-made rest stop

Cliffs towered above us on the other side of the valley

Breaks in the forest revealed vistas like this

We soon reached our destination, Gorepani. It was only 3pm, we had raced here! Gorepani was a stretched out village, starting at the bottom of a flight of steps leading to a central square at the top.

Steps up to Gorephani

The little square in the middle of Gorephani

There were lots of trekkers here. We stopped at a permit checkpoint and continued into the centre. There were blue roofed lodges all around, jewelry stalls and a little stupa at the junction. As we climbed the steps to the left, we saw out over to the next valley. Spectacular – we were around 3000 meters high and could see out over huge valleys and mountains stretching for what seemed like hundreds of miles. Some of the lodges here had patios overlooking this amazing sight.

We reached the highest hotel in the village where we would stay tonight. It was a big building, though as basic as the others. A cylindrical heating drum sat in the middle of the restaurant downstairs. My bedroom window looked out onto a cabbage field with a scarecrow. Now we were free I changed and went for a walk around the village with Shiba. We followed each of the paths from the central crossroads. In one direction was a school (they have green roofs up here) with a sports court outside. Teenagers were playing volleyball, and hell if it wasn’t a one of the best views in the world from a court with one – the mountains towered behind them, and low cloud started to blow in – we were so high it blew right through the village, creating an amazing atmosphere.

Volleyball at the top of the world

At the village gate we found some men building a new section of path – flattening the soil and laying down big flat stones. A lot of the stones used on the paths is very metallic and shines silver in the light. They’re cut with hammer and chisel, and new slabs were propped around the trees here ready to be used. The men told us they’d been working on this 30 meter section for five days now. It looked like hard work and it made me appreciate that all of these trails has guys like this constantly building and repairing them. During the monsoon and winter seasons the paths take a lot of damage and need repairing every year. When you’re half an hour from a village and walking up a big flight of steps in the middle of nowhere, it’s a sobering thought to think that guys have lugged all these stones and worked up here.

On the way back we saw a mule train finishing for the day. The herder was unsaddling them and the donkeys were rolling around in the dirt and munching everything in sight. Some of them had horrible, weeping, circular red sores where the saddles had been. They’d stay in sheds here for the night and then go down tomorrow with empties like gas canisters, bottles and rubbish.

Back at the hotel the mist was clearing. The wind had blown away some of the cloud in the distance, revealing glimpses of some massive mountains on the horizon, more Annapurnas I hadn’t even known were there. Another layer of scale was added and it was breathtaking, we’d been walking all day up in the mountains, but those were the *real* mountains there, looking down on us. It felt quite humbling.

An Annapurna juts out of the clouds

I took some photos before it got dark and headed inside to the warmth, it was chilly up here. The hotel was full. I stuck to my word and tried their dahl baht, which was actually pretty decent. The free refill afterwards left me stuffed! We reviewed the photos of the day on my laptop, sadly most were terrible due to the harsh lighting conditions and the jungle photos were just a nasty contrast of dark and light. They really didn’t capture the awesome views or the sense of scale, especially the panoramas. Unfortunately my compact camera with its panorama mode was broken too. We turned in around 10pm as we had a very early start tomorrow.

 

Naya Pul – the Trek Begins

Day 41

10/10/12

I spent the morning walking around Lakeside with Krishna and Shiba, arranging trekking permits, withdrawing cash for the trek and making final arrangements. To enter the trekking zone you have to buy two permits. One is a register card called TIMS so they know who’s on the trails, which also insures your guides and porters. The other is the Annapurna Conservation Permit which pays for upkeep of the trails. They’re only valid for one trek which is pretty annoying.

Around midday we caught a local bus from Lakeside to a main bus station in Pokhara. As usual the bus was rammed. Two young Buddhist monks sat next to me at the back, talking on their mobiles.

At one stop at the centre of town a punch-up flared up next to the bus between two young guys, who were pulled apart by passers by. The Nepalese are a fairly peaceful people with a similar “saving face” mentality to Thailand, so it was unexpected to see violence on the street. At the bus station rows of colourful buses lit the place up like a rainbow. It puts our dreary, characterless buses in the UK to shame. We gobbled down chow mein in a local restaurant, then walked around the chaotic station getting directions from the locals, bought tickets and piled onto a bus to Naya Pul, where the trek starts.

Shiba

Krishna

On the outskirts of town vendors came by the windows carrying fruit baskets, cheap watches, and there was an ice cream seller with a splendid moustache who happily presented it for my photo!

The bus was crammed by the time we left the city and we followed the road from yesterday, by the river. After this we entered plains covered with rice and wheat fields, and then climbed a forested hill, winding up hairpins past terrace farming. There was a pee break half way up (people just go on the banks) at the top of ridge we could see for miles over terraced valleys. The sun hid behind the clouds casting glorious god rays into the blue sky.

Down we went through many hairpins through another forested valley, passing buses loaded with trekkers and trekking gear. There was even a bus with a rickety wheelchair tied to the top, and behind that another with a guy sitting on the roof. In this part of Nepal it’s illegal, although it’s actually supposed to be just as safe as being inside considering the transport’s dilapidated condition!

We reached Naya Pul, a tiny village at the bottom of the valley in the mid-afternoon, and literally had to jump off the bus whilst it was still moving. A track led up the valley past a few shops and cafes, packed with trekkers from all over the world. I bought a little bottle of dark rum for the trek (Khukiri is the best here), as up in the mountains it would be expensive. Krishna carried my big bag, stacking his own little rucksack on top, and Shiba had the same setup with my smaller bag. I carried a daypack with water and my camera gear, and wielded my trusty donated walking stick.

We seemed to be the only people heading up the valley, everyone else was coming to the end of their treks, Naya Pul is as an end point for many treks here. A steady trickle of trekkers, guides and porters went by.  Many of these porters, Nepali men of all ages, were carrying ridiculous loads on their backs, usually strapped together with a rope or a cover, and then hauled by a strap around the forehead. Some guys had three big rucksacks bundled into one package. Many trekkers toted  two walking poles, but the porters had none. A big proportion of the trekkers were Asians kitted out in day-glo technical hiking gear.

We soon encountered our first mule train. Ten scrawny mules moved quickly, laden with goods hung from their saddles. Some carried boxes and packages, others a gas canister hanging from each side.  They wore bells around their necks, a concert of rings announced their arrival. Behind them strode a man with a whip, making high pitched noises to keep them moving. We followed the track along the bottom of the wooded valley, terrace farming visible higher up, and reached the first Gurung village. A rocky river raged below and a metal cable suspension bridge hung over it. As we approached a mule train barged over the bridge and we had to stand well aside – the mules don’t give way, and on narrow paths people have been barged off down the slopes!

The village was charming, everywhere paved with stone and basic blue-roofed grey stone buildings lined the path. Little stores displayed their wares of chocolates, drinks, and other trekking snacks. The people here were looked noticeably different to Pokhara’s residents, with wider, Tibetanesque faces and a different clothing syle. Many of the women had long plaited hair and the children had long hair and called Namaste to us. Chickens roamed everywhere. I pointed to a thick round log hanging from a building porch, with a small hole cut into it, asking what it was. Shibu told me to look closer to see the bees coming in and out – it was a hive used for harvesting honey. The nests are taken from trees and housed in these hollow trunk cylinders. The bees weren’t aggressive and you could get really close with no problems. We regularly saw these logs hanging in the villages throughout the trek.

We pressed on, following the stony track uphill above the river. We saw some big monkeys scarper into the woods, and a jeep carrying a big transformer in the back trundled past, bumping over the potholes. Frequently the river below us dropped into impressive waterfalls. The water was a glacial turquoise. We descended into farmland and stopped at a café. Krishna and Shiba were given water from a shared jug. I dived through the simple and dark stone house to the loo at the back, a little stone shack with a squatter and a baaad smell.

We continued up through some dramatic woods and here the track had been blasted out of the rock face, only this year Shiba told me. Wires came up from the river via poles to the next village – they get their electricity from small hydro-power plants. We passed through another village, full of the animals and children and entered dense woods, the track ending and changing to a stone slab footpath. Stone stairs led us into another village full of lodges and restaurants. We stopped for some tea and admired the view. It was getting dark now and half an hour later we arrived in another village where Shiba asked around for rooms. The lodges we passed were full of trekkers in the restaurants, many sitting at tables out on the path downing beer. We reached a lodge with basic, very small rooms with private bathrooms (bit of a luxury for trekking, and even with western loos and hot showers!). The inner walls were made of thin plywood so you could hear everyone else nearby. Shiba got me a double room and he and Krishna took a twin room. As I was on an all-inclusive tour Shiba was responsible for securing accommodation for us.

The temperature dropped fast as the sun vanished and after changing into warm clothes I explored the village before it was too dark. The villages here don’t have side-roads, all the buildings are usually strung along the main path. The lodge restaurant was simply constructed from a wooden frame with glass windows and thin sheet metal walls, standard fare up here. We ordered dinner, in the mountains you have to order as early as possible, usually by 4:30pm (we were late) so all the cooking can be done at the same time. This is to preserve resources; they cook with firewood or gas and so group the cooking where possible. There were only a few other guests inside and the Nepali family who owned the place. There was a funny little boy (who looked remarkably like a girl), about 18 months old who was toddling around playing with a balloon, so we played with him for a bit and chatted to his young father. Most of the family spoke decent English and they were a friendly bunch.

The menu was the same I’d see for the rest of the trek –pasta, noodles, potatoes, rice dishes, pizza and sometimes chicken or pork. You could usually eat fruit pies, cake or popcorn for dessert. Krishna and Shiba as workers had to wait until all the guests had been served before they were dished out a mighty plate of dahl baht – the Nepali staple dish. This is what they’d eat for the whole trek. You get a big plate with baht (rice) surrounded by extras such as fried potatoes, pickled vegetables, chillies, and always accompanied by a bowl of dahl (lentil soup with spices). You mix the ingredients as you see fit. The locals use their right hand to mix it and shovel it into their mouth. It’s a very nutritious meal and very filling. Usually you also get free top-ups until you can’t eat any more! I asked the guys what they thought of dahl baht and they both love it – they eat it at home every day. They told me that no other meal gives them enough energy for trekking. All porters and guides eat this every day, it’s cheap and made in bulk, and usually all the guides and porters in a lodge will eat together on a separate table, swapping stories and catching up with old friends on the trail.

Stuffed after dinner (I was allowed two main courses and a dessert on my package!), we watched some kids’ TV. The toddler was watching inside the neighbouring house and this TV was linked to that one. Bizarrely they had Cbeebies here, which is a BBC kids channel and it was in English. It was very weird watching programs set in the UK considering our remote location on the other side of the world! The kid returned and we played with him. He was fascinated by my photos on the laptop and my camera with all of its moving bits. I tried to show him how to stick his balloon on the ceiling using static electricity, by rubbing it on my head. But the balloon was too old and wouldn’t stick. Brilliantly though he then spent the rest of the evening rubbing it against his head, copying me! He wasn’t happy at all when he had to go to bed, and was carried off screaming by his laughing grandmother. I turned in for the night after a nice hot shower!eaHHHEeasfsdl

Sarangkot

Day 40

09/10/12

At 4:30 in the morning (I wept), I stumbled out of bed and got ready to go. The taxi arrived as arranged and we zoomed along the dark streets of Pokhara towards Sarangkot. Even at 5am people were already up, joggers were out running in the dark, people were walking around, shops were opening and taxis were driving around. Madness. We drove uphill along a narrow, winding road out of Pokhara into the countryside. At each bend the driver honked his horn. Wouldn’t fancy living in the houses on this road! People walked along the side of the road heading upwards, some were jogging. We got stuck in a queue of taxis, buses and motorbikes, all heading for the sunrise view, as the sky got lighter. A guy stopped us on the road for a ticket, I thought it might be a con but the taxi driver swore it was legit – 50 rupees (about 50p) to get into the village. I wonder where the money goes as there are no tourist facilities to speak of up there.

We arrived at the village and I walked in the dim light up a short path following other tourists, whilst Mohan (the taxi driver) waited below. I grabbed a masala tea and surveyed my surroundings. A large, flat topped circular mound offered views of the Annapurnas to the left and the Pokhara valley ahead, though the light was still very dim. There were already around 15 people here and more arriving all the time. To the right of the mound was an open-air restaurant with a roof you could pay 100 rupees to get onto. Christine had been here yesterday and warned that the mound got very crowded, so I tried to negotiate a cheaper price to get into the restaurant, but the man wouldn’t budge. I forked out the cash in the hopes of getting a better photo spot from up there, the roof was higher than the mound.

As the light increased the epic view emerged below, shrouded in haze. I made out Pokhara city, the lake and Lakeside, the Peace Pagoda. Layered hills stretched into the distance. Low fog blanketed parts of the valley. To the left, the silhouettes of the Annapurnas, including the distinctive pointed Fishtail (Machapucchare) towered above us. It was really cold and I cursed my lack of foresight from my zombie-like state – I was only wearing shorts and t-shirt, I was shivering and goosepimples covered my skin.

Unfortunately what should have been a wonderful, peaceful experience was shattered with the arrival of the Chinese tourists. Christine had also warned me about them but it still didn’t prepare me. They were literally shouting at each other (in conversation!), all the time, and kept getting in the way of photos. It destroyed the atmosphere and I felt pretty pissed off. I should point out that I have many Chinese friends and I like China, but the Chinese tourists in Nepal did not do their country proud!

I started taking photos with the tripod but it was quite windy and of course I wasn’t the only person to pay extra to come up here, so there were other people to contend with. The telescope platform was the highest point but as soon as anyone stepped on it, the tripod vibrated and made the photos blurry. There wasn’t much foreground to use in the photos here, and I wished I knew more about the area so I could have had a better place to shoot than the viewing platforms. After fifteen minutes the silhouetted mountains were starting to be shaded with colour, and the glow of pre-dawn light covered the valley. Despite the noise and bustle around me, the view made up for it.

The mound below was now packed solid with tourists and my roof had become photo wars with people constantly getting in the way of each other’s photos. The edges of the Annapurnas lit up, golden. Minutes later, the orange sun peeked up over the hills to audible “awwws” from the audience. It looked great and there was only time to take a few photos before the glowing ball was completely above the horizon. Amazingly, only minutes throngs of people were already leaving, even though it still looked great. Microlights passed overhead and I imagined what an amazing experience it must be to see that sunrise from the air.

Lakeside, you can see the Peace Pagoda up on the ridge

I descended to the mound to see the big river valley below the Annapurnas. There was a big town down there and a wide, turquoise river snaking into the distance. It put the epic scale of the mountains into perspective. It was another great view, and on a ledge just below me, a row of Chinese photographers had filled every bit of available space with their tripods, looking pretty comical.

Sporting my Nepali hairdo

As I took my own photos, I was very entertained by all the ridiculously cheesy poses that the older Chinese and Indian people were acting out for their photos, especially the “game show girl” pose where they held out their arms to the mountains as though showing off the top prize! The younger folks were doing silly jumps on the spot to get mid-air photos. It was all pretty funny!

Half an hour later the sun was too bright for photos and I was starving. Mohan had wandered up and I negotiated a new price with him to take us for breakfast and then to a Tibetan refugee settlement I’d read about. We drove down the hairpins and through sparse terrain in the valley next to the big river I’d seen from the mound. Prayer flags could be seen strung along the shoreline occasionally. We stopped at the Tibetan refugee settlement, which to me looked indistinguishable from any other village.

Mohan

Mohan led me to a local restaurant, just a bare room with a stove and basic wooden tables and benches. Old men were chatting outside and watched us with interest. As we waited for food, one of them got chatting to me in English, asking me about myself. We watched the chef cooking up noodle soup with egg and served it up. Mohan munched on a big green chilli as an extra, “I like spicy”, he smiled with his mouth full.

I chatted to the chef who spoke a little English and watched as he rolled out and then fried chapattis. Outside, we stopped to watch four men playing a Nepali game I’d seen before on the streets. A large flat square, like a high table was dusted with chalk. On it were small coin-sized plastic disks. The object is to flick the disks with your finger, bouncing them off the walls to get them into the corner holes, and disrupting your opponent by bouncing theirs away. It looked fun. There were two teams of two and these guys were pretty skilled, doing some impressive ricochets.

Mohan led me to the Tibetan refugee settlement down the road. It didn’t look much different to the surrounding area, though some of the buildings were white painted cottages which I hadn’t seen before. A row of jewelry and handicraft vendors lined a path leading to a colourful temple. The Tibetan people had noticeably different dress and most of the women had a multitude of nose and ear rings. Through an ornate gate we entered the courtyard of  the Buddhist temple. Inside a side-building was a massive prayer wheel, about 6 meters tall and 3 wide. A dog slept on the floor beneath it. The interior walls were lined with little golden Buddah statues. Despite the wheel’s size it spun fast.

In the main temple the ceiling and walls were colourfully patterned. Big skin drums stood by the entrance and large golden statues stood at the far end. A few monks walked around the complex with their red robes and shaved heads. Around the outside of the complex was a tourist restaurant and the monks quarters, which reminded me of council flats. Colourful flags were hung over each window and we saw monks, young and old, going about their daily business.

Back on the souvenir path I was verbally attacked by the vendors, who insisted I should look at their wares. Some of the women seemed genuinely angry that I wouldn’t stop to look, even when I explained I was alone and travelling for a long time. I hardly ever buy souvenirs. I have no interest in them aside from looking, and there’s no way I’m lugging around souvenirs for months on end. Of course I’m an exception – I’ve met plenty of girls travelling who will stop at any shop to look with glee at all the trinkets on offer and usually walk away with lighter pockets and a full shopping bag! We walked down the main village path past whitewashed buildings but there wasn’t much else to see.

Mohan then drove me back and I got him to stop at the big river for a photo. In his broken English he managed to explain to me that a few years ago a big wave had surged down the river (a result of ice cracking way up in the mountains), and had killed around 20 people who were bathing at the hot springs. Because it happened in the morning the casualties were light, if it had happened later in the day hundreds could have been lost. One of Nepal’s colourful lorries had stopped at the same car park – the drivers were wet from a wash in the river.

On the way back I learned that Mohan, like most guys in their 20s in Nepal, was already married and had kids. He got kicked out of school and then became a taxi driver, which gets his family by. I bid him farewell in Lakeside and went immediately to bed, I was shattered! I slept for about 5 hours. It was nearly dark when I emerged. I grabbed some food and then met the trekking guide from Fantastic Nepal. There seemed to be some miscommunication because the guide, Shiba, was under the impression I would be trekking in the next day or two. However I hadn’t found anyone to join me and share the bill. As I chatted with him about details, I realized that I was just wasting time and money by hanging around hoping to find someone, and I should just go out and do it.

Shiba was 34, Nepali, and lived near Pokhara. He spoke with a high pitched voice and his English was alright. We did have some communication problems, where I couldn’t understand his accent, or I’d have to phrase things in different ways. Despite the language problems his experience couldn’t be faulted, he’d been a guide for 4 years and spent most of it leading treks. He’d done the trek I was interested in over 15 times, he’d also done the big Annapurna circuit and Everest Base Camp many times. He’d had done a degree involving mountain tribal history and had spent plenty of time up there in research.

Accompanying Shiba was a porter – Shiba’s brother in law – an older guy named Krishna who’s 48 and graying. He spoke broken English but understood me well. I had been concerned about my weighty luggage but Shiba lifted it and said it wouldn’t be a problem for Krishna. After I agreed to the trek, we went out to the main strip to buy supplies. Shiba recommended I get a sleeping bag as it gets cold up there, and a raincoat. Although I didn’t want to spend more money, I wasn’t going to ignore the advice of an experienced guide and so bought both (brand fakes of course!). We got trapped at a shop by heavy rain which lasted for half an hour – the first rain I’d seen since I came to Nepal. I took Shiba for a quick coffee and we arranged to meet the next morning to start the trek. We’d be doing the ABC trek – Annapurna Base Camp, an 8-10 day hike up into the mountains, via Poon Hill, another worthwhile destination. It’s one of the best short treks you can do as it has great views and covers a variety of terrain.