Saturday, 6 December 2014

Learn to Use a Map and Compass


Nobody should venture into the wild without at least the basic skills to interpret a topographical map
and use a compass. You don’t play hockey without learning how to skate; you don’t go sailing without learning how to sail; and you don’t fire a rifle without learning how to shoot. So don’t venture into the wilderness without learning how to navigate. There are numerous local college courses available on the subject. Take one!

Always carry a map, whether you’re on your own or with a guide. If you’re with a guide but have neglected to bring a map, ask to see your guide’s as often as possible. Familiarize yourself with it, as well as with the route you are traveling. Your guide should not be annoyed by this, but rather pleasantly surprised that someone else on the trip is willing to become knowledgeable in case the worst should happen. After all, what would you do if your guide became incapacitated? 


In preparing yourself by reviewing a route map, you may notice, for example, that a road runs parallel to the river or trail you’re traveling on. This is good to know should you run into trouble: A half day’s walk due east will put me onto a road and into the path of possible rescue. You may also see landmarks such as bridges, buildings, or even small towns. You would never have known that if you hadn’t looked at the map before it got lost or washed down the river.

The Map 
A topographical map improves your chances of survival many times over, but only if you know how to use it and always protect it from damage. Before setting off, check the date of your map. Depending on its age, you may find that some features have changed, which could drastically throw off your perception of where you are. 

Make sure that you can interpret the map’s symbols and identify major terrain features. 
To correctly use any map, you first need to orient it. In simplest terms, a map is oriented when it is placed flat on a horizontal surface, and its north and south markings correspond with north and south on your compass (or at least with your understanding of where north, south, east, and west lie). 

If you’re not sure where north is, you can still orient the map using terrain association. To do this, you must know your approximate location on the map. Seek out the major terrain features in your vicinity (such as hilltops, valleys, and ridges), and identify them on the map. This is more difficult in “close” places such as the jungle and the forest, so you may need to wait until you reach something more easily identified. Some topographic maps also mark different types of vegetation, which may help you to determine your location. 


Knowing your map-based route is noted as a major priority in “Trip Planning and Preparation,” the first chapter of this book. If you are on a charter trip, sit down with your guide on the first day to familiarize yourself with the map. 



The Compass 
The compass course I took during in the army always ended with an orienteering race. It became tradition that those of us who also took survival courses were under big-time peer pressure to win. 

No matter where you stand on Earth, you can hold a compass in your hand and it will point toward the North Pole. What an unbelievably neat and amazing thing! Imagine that you are in the middle of the ocean, and you are looking all around you in every direction and all you can see is water, and it is overcast so you cannot see the sun... How in the world would you know which way to go unless you had a compass to tell you which way is "up"? Long before GPS satellites and other high-tech navigational aids, the compass gave humans an easy and inexpensive way to orient themselves.

In a world where the technosavvy are all too used to having electronic gadgets flash and beep at them, the simple compass sometimes seems almost boring. After all, it just sits there, pointing north. Yet, simple though it may be, the compass is the one instrument above all others that will help you find your way out of the wilderness. Basic compass understanding is vital to your survival. 

If you can comfortably and effectively use a compass, you can stand in the middle of nowhere, pick a destination off in the distance and be confident that no matter how many obstacles lie in your path, you will get there. 


A compass is an essential tool in wilderness survival. Along with a good quality topographical map of the area you're navigating, knowing how to use a compass will ensure that you're never lost. 

Sunday, 30 November 2014

Do your research

PLANNING AND PREPARING FOR YOUR ADVENTURE BEGINS with research, a fairly easy undertaking in today’s information-rich digital age. Between the Internet and the countless books available in public libraries, the foundation is there for anyone to begin to build a location-specific store of knowledge for just about any region on earth. 


Printed publications offer other benefits too, aside from the significant information they can yield. First, you can carry small guidebooks and pamphlets with you and—assuming they haven’t washed down the river with your canoe—refer to them along the way. Second, reading about your destination ahead of time gets you excited about the trip and empowers you with information that might save your life. 


One thing to keep in mind when reading books or online materials, though, is that while they may describe, for example, the types of plants that can be sources of water in a specific area, you cannot be 100 percent sure that you’ll be able to identify a plant unless someone has personally taught you how. In this book, for instance, I note that you can find water in the chevron of the leaves of most banana trees. That’s all well and good, but you may need someone to show you a banana tree, and teach you how to distinguish it from similar-looking plants. 


Ideally, anyone going on a backcountry wilderness trip should take the time to train in that region with a local expert, one who can offer such vital advice as which plants are edible and which ones will kill you. Take the time to find an expert, and try to dedicate at least one day with him or her on the land. The training and teaching may even be available in your own area.  


Although local experts obviously know the best ways to build shelter, make fire, gather food, and locate water. I often find that it’s not the big lessons they teach that ultimately help me the most but the little nuggets of wisdom they throw out in passing. For example, in the Amazon rainforest Stay away from plants with umbrella-shaped flowers. It can be deadly to eat a plant you are unsure of, so it’s better to try and find food elsewhere than to risk eating a toxic plant.  That information can't nowhere to be found in any of the books on the region, but it could have saved my life. Catching small weaver birds by hand by walking up to their nests at night and simply plucking them out of their holes. This is the kind of tip that you can’t find anywhere else, but that may prove invaluable if you’re stranded and starving.



 Most people have only one or two weeks off work and can’t dedicate time for training or education while on vacation. But if you can, it will make you more self-reliant, enhancing your trip in ways you never thought possible, even if you never get caught in a survival situation.


Wednesday, 26 November 2014

To Achieve

“The future was uncertain, absolutely, and there were many hurdles, twists, and turns to come, but as long as I kept moving forward, one foot in front of the other, the voices of fear and shame, the messages from those who wanted me to believe that I wasn't good enough, would be stilled.” 


― Chris GardnerThe Pursuit of Happyness














Pursuit of the Serotonin Molecule; in other words, Pursuit of Happiness


Monday, 24 November 2014

Mount Everest

Climbing the world's highest mountain has long been a metaphor for overcoming apparently impossible odds.

In 1923, a reporter from The New York Times asked the legendary Everest climber George Leigh Mallory - An English mountaineer who took part in the first three British expeditions to Mount Everest in the early 1920s - why he wanted to climb the Mount Everest, his reply was priceless. "Because it's there", he said and the phrase passed in to legend.


Mount Everest, also known in Nepal as Sagarmāthā and in Tibet as Chomolungma (mother of the Universe), is the Earth's highest peak. Mount Everest lies on the border of Nepal and Tibet.It is located in the Mahalangur section of the Himalayas. Its official height is put at 29,035 feet/ 8848 metres although the mountain is thought to be growing by around 4 millimetres a year due to the relentless pressure of tectonic plates in the Earth's mantle which have been pushing the Himalayas steadily higher for the last sixty million years. As soon as it was crowned the world's tallest mountain, people inevitably had to climb it. And just as inevitably, many of them failed. 

Expedition 

Climbing Everest is a bucket list item for many until they realise the great price involved—both monetarily and mentally. Because of the high cost, climbers usually range from the young, sponsored athlete to wealthy men in their late forties trying to battle personal demons, tackle insecurities, or otherwise satisfy some existential urges.

Preparations

Training - Prospective Everest climbers train in a variety of ways. Swimming, running, biking, weight lifting and climbing are all excellent ways to improve physical condition. Endurance, stamina, and strength are all necessary. Be aware that this include hiking days with around 7 to 8 hours of walking every day, so you have to be reasonably fit to be able to complete the trek successfully.


  • Plan ahead: If you want to climb Everest, you're going to have to be in fantastic physical shape. Fitness won't fend off altitude sickness, but will enable more oxygen to reach your body. Basic fitness training should start well in advance with plenty of cardiovascular training in the 12-month run-up to the climb.
  • Running: It is recommended that a programme of running seven to eight miles (or about an hour) per day, on hilly terrain, four days on, one day off would increase the stamina. If based in the city, run on a treadmill with a rucksack.
  • Weight-training: a weight-training programme for developing upper-body strength should be carried out, which you'll require for carrying your 12-15kg pack and clearing ice and snow for tent platforms.
  • Take supplements: Glucosamine Sulphate and Omega 3 and 6 oils for joints are helpful, as well as a mountain of dietary supplements to make up for the vitamins you will miss out on without fresh fruit and vegetables. Boosting the immune system is also vital, and antioxidants help in that department.
  • Practicals: 'The best training to climb a mountain is to go mountain climbing,' says mountaineer Cathy O'Dowd. Expedition leader Gavin Bate likewise recommends regular expeditions to lower altitudes as part of your training. 'Start with lots of hill walking, then Mount Kilimanjaro is a good example of a mountain to start on, because it's high and will get you fit. Then I'd say to climb Mont Blanc or Ebrus would be the next step up. Mix that in with plenty of long-distance running when you're closer to sea level and you have a good training plan to work with,' he says.
  • Gain weight: It's advisable to gain an extra stone in weight, as you can expect to lose up to 20 per cent of body weight on Everest.




Gear - Certain parts of the mountain are technically easier to climb than others, but what makes the peak so dangerous are the extreme winds, cold temperatures, frozen snow, and very little oxygen in places. Obviously, all of these obstacles are going to require that you wear and carry proper equipment if you expect to have half a chance at succeeding in both your ascent and subsequent descent. 

  • The kit : The gear you'll need to tackle the highest mountain in the world.
  • Essential equipment: Oxygen canisters: five to seven 3l bottles; a sack to collect ice and snow, for melting; and wet wipes for washing your body. These freeze, so you need to sleep with them inside your tent if they're going to be of any use. You'll also need a satellite phone, a two-way radio and some foot powder.
  • Food: Mostly boil-in-the-bag meals as well as plenty of biscuits and chocolate. Your body burns up about 6,000 calories a day on the mountain, and, as you climb, your appetite decreases. So there is a great need to consume as many calories as you can. Don't forget cooking equipment and mug. Many mountaineers prefer a non-insulated mug to warm hands.
  • Climbing apparatus: Harness, ice axe, jumar - a clip device that you attach to your harness and the fixed rope. It moves forward but not backwards, and is a great safety development on the mountain. Also essential are a head lamp, carabiners, Alpine climbing harness, rappel device, ski poles, altimeter and crampons. And you'll require a set of 'pigs' nipples' (rubber covers for the spikes so they don't tear your tent apart) as well as goggles for snow conditions.
  • Clothes: Plastic frost-proof climbing boots, a base layer of thermals and a spare set to change into at night. Five to six pairs of socks for the whole trip. On the mountain, you'll have just two pairs: one to walk in, the other to sleep in. The 'wet' pair, that will absorb a wine-glass capacity of sweat each day per foot, will be dried in your sleeping bag at night. Your first fleece layer will include tight fleece trousers and tops. This first layer needs to dry overnight, to be worn the next day. Your second fleece layer will comprise two thicker fleece jackets and one pair of thicker fleece trousers. You'll also need a down suit, or down trousers and jacket. Two bandanas will protect the neck from sunburn. A thin neoprene face mask will be required to cover the face, along with a thick balaclava. Two fleece hats will cover ears, while a baseball cap with a big visor will protect from the sun. Two pairs of thin gloves for dexterity and several pairs of mountain mitts will keep hands warm. Huge Gore-Tex overmitts will go over all the other pairs of gloves.
  • On top of this, you'll need a second set of everything. At the end of a day's climbing, wet clothing is dried inside your sleeping bag while you sleep, to be worn the next day. You don't wash higher than Base Camp, as there are no facilities and it is too cold. The best you might manage is a rubdown of your feet with some snow



Mind - Mental preparation is far more important than physical preparation in moulding fitness to climb. For sure, the mountain takes its physical toll on the body. But, the mind is what keeps you moving in the difficult times. The extreme vertical terrain, the relentless weather, those long and lonely nights in the tent, the sameness of the food, longing for family and friends and fear all conspire to create doubt and temptation to quit and go home. There is no antidote for this malaise in pills or medicine. Mental toughness, fierce determination and iron resolve are the only hope.



The mental preparation

  • Don't rush your build-up. Before an expedition you should be accustomed to spending long periods at high altitudes and in spartan conditions, and be able to cope on your own. Being self sufficient is an important mental leap for the prospective climber to make.
  • Understand it won't be easy. Since the 1996 disaster, terminology has shifted and guides are known as 'facilitators'. This is to dispel the idea that you'll be hauled up the mountain for a fee.
  • Be prepared for lots of 'down time'. Of approximately seven weeks spent on the mountain, only about 21 days are taken up with climbing. The rest are given over to acclimatisation and rest days. Learn to relax while you have the opportunity. You'll need the energy stores. Impatience is a mental obstacle to the climber.
  • Accept that you won't be mentally alert on the mountain. Above 8,000m your mental acuity drops to 30 per cent of normal levels. Basic arithmetic (crucial when negotiating the oxygen flow rate) becomes virtually impossible.
  • Be ready for hallucinations. These can be blamed on the combination of hypoxia and fatigue. In Reinhold Messner's 1980 solo attempt, he imagined an invisible companion climbing beside him. In 1933 Englishman Frank Smythe reported 'two curious looking objects floating in the sky... one possessed what appeared to be squat underdeveloped wings, and the other a protuberance suggestive of a beak. They hovered motionless but seemed slowly to pulsate.'
  • Picture yourself on the mountain, succeeding. Cathy O'Dowd works at visualising herself into the challenge. She says, 'I always try to look around, to look back at the view, rather than focus on the next step. I take pride in what I've achieved already, rather than what I have left to do, and I find that leaves me motivated to keep going.'



Educate -  Expanding your knowledge on Mount Everest's Hazards and prevention. Thousands of climbers have attempted to reach the summit of 8,850-meter (29,000-foot) Mount Everest since the 1920s. Factors most associated with the risk of death were excessive fatigue, a tendency to fall behind other climbers and arriving at the summit later in the day. Many of those who died developed symptoms such as confusion, a loss of physical coordination and unconsciousness, which suggest high-altitude cerebral edema, a swelling of the brain that results from leakage of cerebral blood vessels. Symptoms of high-altitude pulmonary edema, which is involved in most high-altitude-related deaths, were suprisingly rare.


  • The health hazards: A climber's health is paramount, and never more so than in the rarefied atmosphere of Everest. Here are some of the common health concerns you can expect on the mountain:
  • Alpine trench foot: Keeping feet dry is very important. Climbers lose toenails, especially on the descent, if they are not cut short.
  • Coughs: A hacking cough caused by dry air can stick with you the entire expedition. It can be so bad you'll cough up throat tissue.
  • Cuts: Wounds don't heal at altitude, they get worse. You'll see lots of people with plasters holding their fingers together.
  • Altitude sickness: The primary concern of mountaineers. As altitude increases, the number of oxygen molecules per breath is reduced. At 12,000ft (3,658m), there are 40 per cent fewer per breath. To compensate, your breathing rate must increase a great deal, even at rest. The body can also overcompensate by allowing blood vessels to leak in the brain or lungs.
  • Appetite: As the altitude increases, body function is streamlined to preserve vital organs. The stomach is not a necessity, so it ceases to digest food.
  • Acute Mountain Sickness (AMS): is the result of ascending faster than the body can adapt to Hace (High Altitude Cerebral Edema, fluid on the brain) or Hape (High Altitude Pulmonary Edema, fluid in the lungs). Both conditions are caused by the combination of high altitude and low air pressure which leads to fluid leaking from the capillaries.
    Initial signs of AMS are a headache, accompanied by dizziness, nausea, fainting or weakness, difficulty walking or sleeping, and confusion. Pulmonary edema at an advanced stage can be recognised by what's known as the Death Rattle, when breathing rattles at the end of each breath. This is quite literally the fluid in the lungs rumbling, and by this late stage, the sufferer is drowning.
  • Frostbite: An initial sign of frostbite is a cloudy white colour of the skin. This means that the tissue is frozen, but not yet dead. Treatment is no more advanced than the patient removing their boots and shoving bare feet into the armpits of a warm person. Advanced frostbite is when the flesh appears black. At this stage, nothing can be done to restore blood flow.
  • Hypothermia: The core body temperature drops to such a degree that life is endangered. Overwhelming feelings of lethargy encourage a sufferer to fall asleep, resulting in death. Wrapping a patient in blankets is not going to raise body temperature, which is why two bodies will wrap together in a sleeping bag to restore warmth.
  • Broken bones: A climber who is injured on the mountain needs to be capable of getting him or herself down to help. Some medical kits now carry morphine to enable the patient to descend to a level where help can be reached.
  • Sunburn: A real hazard on Everest. The sun's reflection, coupled with excess time spent panting for oxygen, means that a sunburnt roof of the mouth is common. It makes eating almost impossible. Sunburn of the nostrils also occurs.
  • Thrombosis/embolism: Altitude can thicken the blood to a consistency akin to custard. This can further complicate frostbite, due to the inability of thicker blood to flow to fine capillaries. The humble aspirin thins the blood and is a mountaineer's trusted tool.
  • If all else fails... The nearest hospital to Everest is in Pheriche, which is one full day's hike from Base Camp.





Getting there


Distance between Kathmandu and Mt Everest is 160.51 km.

This distance is equal to 99.74 miles, and 86.61 nautical miles.










Nepal
As a normal traveller, with the wish to see the Mount Everest, you can book hikes with a couple of companies in Kathmandu in Nepal. There are a number of organised tours from 11 to 19 days, that take you from Jiri to Everest Base camp and back again. 

If you only want to catch a glimpse of Mount Everest and the Himalayas, you can book flights from Kathmandu, that make a roundtrip of about 2 hours to the Everest region and back to Kathmandu.









Find out more about the cost of the whole expedition here : 






Everest shows you the grace of great dreams, fears overcome and, sometimes, triumph following the most desperate of outlooks. This lesson is  perhaps Everest’s most powerful gift to all of us: whether we are on the summit, or wandering by its foot, or simply at home, gaining the knowledge by the testimony of others.









References:
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2003/mar/30/everest.features3






Integrate












"We build too many walls and not enough bridges."

- Isaac Newton



Thursday, 20 November 2014

Strength

"Your struggles develop your strengths. When you go through hardships and decide not to surrender, that is strength."

- Arnold Schwarzenegger



Wednesday, 19 November 2014

The Mountain


So often that spirit within us gets buried underneath the fluff of life, whether it's status, possessions, jobs or money. But i believe that all such things leave us empty, and it is not until we shake off those ties and allow ourselves to breathe and strive and listen to that voice within that says "why not?" instead of "why?" that we come alive!

Climbing mountains is all about poise and balance, not about brute strength. Mountain climbing is all about understanding the terrain, looking for the smallest lines of weakness hidden among the sheer vertiginous cliff in front of you. It is this kind of weakness that will show you a way up the face.

When you find it and overcome it and roll over the edge onto the top, heaving for breath, that moment is too hard to beat. Why? Because in achieving that goal we are fulfilling our potential.


“People ask me, 'What is the use of climbing Mount Everest?' and my answer must at once be, 'It is of no use.'There is not the slightest prospect of any gain whatsoever. Oh, we may learn a little about the behaviour of the human body at high altitudes, and possibly medical men may turn our observation to some account for the purposes of aviation. But otherwise nothing will come of it. We shall not bring back a single bit of gold or silver, not a gem, nor any coal or iron... If you cannot understand that there is something in man which responds to the challenge of this mountain and goes out to meet it, that the struggle is the struggle of life itself upward and forever upward, then you won't see why we go. What we get from this adventure is just sheer joy. And joy is, after all, the end of life. We do not live to eat and make money. We eat and make money to be able to live. That is what life means and what life is for.”


- George Mallory, Climbing Everest: The Complete Writings of George Mallory







Today, mountains are regarded as places of great strength, beauty, wonderment and God-filled power. Man's quest for knowledge and experience, coupled with a very natural desire for freedom and expression, has opened a whole new world to those who are bold enough to step into their shadows. Mountains cannot be conquered or tamed, The real conquest is in overcoming the fears inside us. Mountain climbing can inspire  great courage, humility and strength in us. And that is what gives mountains their true appeal.