Trekking: Buried at the Top of the World In the wake of Nepal’s deadliest disaster, a search for answers It was easily the worst calamity to strike the Himalayas in decades: a series of avalanches and landslides that tore through Nepal’s mountains at the height of trekking season and claimed the lives of at least 65 Nepalese villagers, Sherpa guides, and Western hikers, with many more still unaccounted for at press time. In the aftermath, visitors and local tourism officials First, the facts: On November 10 at least four separate slides, triggered by torrential rain and snow blown ashore from a cyclone in the Bay of Bengal, let loose in the Himalayas. Hardest hit were the Gokyo region near Mount Everest, where 13 Japanese trekkers and 12 Sherpas were buried under eight feet of snow near the village of Pangkha, and the Manang district in western “Fall is usually the safest time to travel in Nepal,” says Narendra Gurung, travel coordinator for Mountain Travel-Sobek, whose three trekking groups in the Himalayas were helicoptered to safety after the avalanches. “There’s been nothing like this for 50 or 60 years.” As is often the case with major disasters, reports of cooperation and heroism flooded the mainstream press: Sherpas leading their clients out of danger by clearing trails with their bare hands, a multinational rescue effort that resulted in the airlifting of more than 500 stranded people. But there was also me-firstism among Westerners and locals alike. According to Australian In subsequent weeks, the trekking community hotly debated whether Nepal’s Department of Meteorology could have put out a warning. The office furnishes most outfitters with their weather forecasts but issued no special report before the storm, even though both the BBC and CNN had been busily churning out bulletins regarding the brewing cyclone. Still, even an accurate report “We’ve got trekkers up there for three and four weeks at a time,” says Mark Van Alstine, director of American-based outfitter Karakoram Experience. “So there’s really not much we can do when a freak storm hits so quickly. It’s still the best weather window for trips to Nepal; we’ll be running our same program, with even a few more trips, next year.” |
Trekking: Buried at the Top of the World
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