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To everyone, and thanks for
subscribing/looking. We've been away for 2 1/2 weeks
now, and this is our first entry - apologies for not
being able to let you know we're still alive earlier,
we've had problems with unreliable internet, power cuts
and there are no internet facilities in the Annapurna
mountain range!
But, we should now be able to bring you up to speed with
our trip so far. We've just finished our 11 day trek,
and are currently in Pokhara - a beautiful city next to
a lake with incredible views of the Annapurna range.
Before the trek, we spent a couple of days in Kathmandu
(Nepal's capital). This was quite an experience in
itself; very busy, noisy, dirty and run-down in some
areas. But, the people were great and everything was
very cheap (especially after living in London for 4
months), and we enjoyed the time we had there. On our
second day in Kathmandu we meet our tour leader for the
trek, and the guys who would be joining us. Everyone was
very nice, Raja (meaning king!) was the tour guide and
there were 11 of us in total on the trek - 4 other
Brits, 3 Aussies and a couple of Belgians. We all went
out for a little introductory dinner that night,
sampling some local cuisine and Everest! Beer.
The next day, there was a tour of a couple of
Kathmandu's most popular tourist sights - The Buddhist
Monkey Temple, and Durbar Square. Both were very
interesting and we're going to try and include some
photos in this blog rather than boring you with wordy
descriptions! By the middle of the day James was
starting to have 'tummy troubles', which wasn't a good
sign - more on this later!
The following morning we had an early start (the first
of many) to catch the local bus for a 6 hour drive to
Pokhara. This was quite a hair-raising experience as the
bus was rather 'rustic' and the route followed very
high, winding roads through the mountains - the ominous
sight of a bus wreckage at the bottom of the valley
didn't really help matters! James' personal problems had
also reached their peak by this stage, and even 6
imodium didn't stop the frequent trips to the not so
pleasant on-board toilet (maybe too much information).
As if this wasn't stressful enough we then had a 5 hour
traffic jam that resulted from a hit and run on a young
schoolgirl. But, we survived the first big trip of our
travels, and made it to our hotel in Pokhara. This was
quite a sleepless night however, due to James' poorly
state, and a course of antibiotics was started in the
morning.
Despite the ill-health we began our 11 day trek to
Annapurna Base Camp. What followed was one of the most
incredible experiences either of us have ever had.
Despite little sleep, the same menu daily, very cold
nights, a lack of showers/electricity/drinkable water,
and very hard work everyday (made even tougher by the
fact that nearly everyone in the group - including Raja
- fell ill at some point, and there were more
antibiotics, nurofens, ibroprufens and paracetamols
quaffed than would be needed to OD a herd of cattle) its
safe to say that everyone thoroughly enjoyed themselves.
The highest altitude we reached was 4470m - Annapurna
Base Camp is 4120m - and some of the pictures (and, more
importantly, memories) we have from there are truely
mindblowing! We could quite literally write pages and
pages about this trek, and we may have time to return to
it in a later blog, but the internet here is still very
dodgy (its taken nearly 2 hours to write this much!), so
you'll just have to be satisfied with this short
description and whatever photos (if any) we're able to
upload.
We arrived back in proper civilisation yesterday morning
and, after 10kg! of laundry and a proper shower, we
treated our tour guide and porters (who thoroughly
deserved it) to a big meal in one of Pokhara's many
lakeside restaurants. Most of us also left
clothes/boots/bags and other bits and pieces for the
porters to use, and they greatly appreciated the gesture
(we left Hannahs boots for our Porter who told us many
times 'me too happy' - which can only be a good thing).
Everyone else from the tour group has now returned to
Kathmandu, but the two of us have decided to spend
another 3 nights here in Pokhara. After this we plan to
check out the Royal Chitwan National Park and Lumbini
(the birthplace of Buddha!), before heading into India.
Anyway, as we said earlier, we could easily keep writing
and writing, but we're very lucky to get this far with
the power cuts and antique internet connection, so we're
not going to push our luck. Hopefully we'll be able to
upload some photos (but apologies if this doesn't work!)
and we'll try and write again in the next few days.
Hope everybody is well, and thanks for all your messages
- we really appreciate them, so keep them coming!
Until next time......
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