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- <text id=89TT1505>
- <title>
- June 05, 1989: Puffing To Hemingway's Peak
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- June 05, 1989 People Power:Beijing-Moscow
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TRAVEL, Page 80
- Puffing to Hemingway's Peak
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Tropical heat and icy fingers dog Kilimanjaro's new conquerors
- </p>
- <p>By David Brand
- </p>
- <p> The masochistic middle-aged climber stands panting into the
- gaping dark, wondering what in God's name he is doing here. He
- is 17,000 ft. up, with 1,650 ft. still to go to the top. The
- temperature is unreasonably far below zero, hands and feet are
- numb, and the air is so thin that a few tentative steps leave
- the body screaming for relief. Perhaps this is how Hans Meyer
- felt when, 100 years ago, the German geologist became the first
- to ascend to the rarefied heights of Mount Kilimanjaro, an
- immense dormant volcano 49 miles long and 24 miles wide that
- straddles the border between Tanzania and Kenya. Or the myriad
- of tourists who have since gasped their way to the roof of
- Africa.
- </p>
- <p> What can the attraction be? It is, after all, a three-day
- uphill trek to the foot of the final peak, and then a predawn
- slog of two practically vertical miles to the top. On the way,
- walkers are alternately roasted by the tropical sun and chilled
- by low alpine temperatures; they sleep in unheated, unlighted
- huts, wash in ice-cold water and, after five days, emerge from
- the mountain dirty, haggard and exhausted. "Maybe the only
- satisfaction comes from looking back on it afterward," suggests
- climber Matt Claman, 29, a lawyer from Juneau.
- </p>
- <p> The largest number of the 10,764 tourists who climbed the
- mountain last year came from the U.S. That can be blamed on
- Hemingway, says Iain Allan, a mountain climber whose Nairobi
- company arranges treks up Kilimanjaro, mostly for Americans.
- "Americans were brought up on his short story The Snows of
- Kilimanjaro, and they simply have to come and see for
- themselves." What they find is not one but two forbidding peaks:
- gaunt, craggy Mawenzi and snowcapped Kibo, the summit that looms
- over Harry, Hemingway's gangrenous protagonist, "wide as all the
- world, great, high, and unbelievably white in the sun."
- </p>
- <p> The most popular route up Kibo, known somewhat
- disparagingly as the tourist route, is, as British climber Ian
- Standbridge wryly observes, "no cheap vacation." Kilimanjaro
- National Park charges an entrance fee of about $150 a person for
- the climb, which begins at park headquarters in Marangu,
- Tanzania. For the guides, porters and food for the five-day
- trek, Marangu's two hotels charge an additional $250 a person.
- And don't forget generous gratuities. Money is constantly on the
- minds of the porters, who see each climb as a test of how large
- a tip they can extract from their clients ("Bwana, give me your
- boots when we finish our safari"). These young members of the
- Wachagga tribe, who spend much of the year working on coffee
- plantations, saunter upward, balancing 30-lb. sacks of climbers'
- gear on their heads. Some haul large green wooden boxes of
- provisions, water jugs -- and even live chickens.
- </p>
- <p> The climbers, a motley assembly of shorts and sneakers,
- knickers and mountain boots, start out with cheerful hearts
- over a gentle, 5 1/2-mile path through rain forest to Mandara,
- a "village" of overnight huts. The second day is a more
- strenuous, 7 1/2-mile upward trudge through moorland to the
- Horombo complex of huts. Both sites were developed by the
- Norwegians as an aid project in the early 1970s. Today they
- could do with a little redevelopment.
- </p>
- <p> The A-frame huts cry out for a broom, and the wood stoves
- in the dining halls have fallen into disuse, probably because
- so much vegetation has been stripped from the mountain that
- there is now a shortage of fuel. The garbage pits brim with
- rusting cans, and primitive toilets discharge raw sewage over
- the mountain. Hikers huddle around trestle tables like prisoners
- of war, bending to their watery soup and leathery wads of beef,
- prepared by the porters in tiny huts that seem perpetually
- enveloped in a fog of smoke.
- </p>
- <p> At Horombo's 12,336 ft., some hikers feel the effects of
- mountain sickness, an inability to adjust to the altitude (even
- though the guides have been urging "Pole, pole" -- Swahili for
- "Slowly, slowly"). The illness inevitably results in violent
- nausea. "I began to get sick at Horombo," says Frank Szymanski,
- 38, a New Yorker. "From there on, it just got worse and worse."
- </p>
- <p> The test of the body stiffens on the third day, when the
- route crosses the saddle between Kibo and Mawenzi, a rock-strewn
- lunar landscape that gradually climbs through intense heat, then
- chilling cold, to 15,550 ft. There is little for climbers to do
- but cower in sleeping bags in the hut at the foot of Kibo peak.
- Recalls Geoff McDonald, 27, a schoolteacher from New Zealand:
- "Everyone was complaining about headaches and stomachaches, and
- some were vomiting."
- </p>
- <p> Shortly after midnight the restless party is pulling on its
- assorted long johns, multiple sweaters and Gore-Tex outer suits
- in readiness for the final ascent of Kibo. In the frigid
- predawn blackness, the climbers assemble like an alpine chain
- gang, led by a guide with a paraffin lamp. Why such a ghastly
- hour for the ascent? "The scree is frozen at this time,"
- explains guide Godliving Sadiki, referring to the volcanic
- gravel that covers the slopes of Kibo and can make climbing as
- difficult as wading through Grapenuts. A more likely explanation
- is that the average climber, confronted in daylight with the
- daunting gradient ahead, would quickly lose heart.
- </p>
- <p> Upward they slog, some stopping every few stumbling steps
- to gulp thin air into agonized lungs. The slowest suffer most
- in the howling, icy air. "The guides had to try to rub life into
- my fingers, they were so numb, and I was crying," recalls
- Frederika Vaupen, 50, of New York City. For Vaupen and her
- husband Burton, 59, it was a "grueling" six-hour clamber to
- Gillman's Point, 18,650 ft., the lowest spot on the almost
- perfectly circular, 1.2-mile-diameter crater.
- </p>
- <p> And what does the victorious climber discover on reaching
- Gillman's? "All we found was a soggy visitors' book and an old
- post with a rusty tin upended on it," says Philip Smith, 28,
- from Sutton Coldfield, England. This is as far as most venture.
- Only the hardiest will spend another hour or two crunching
- through ice and snow around the crater's edge to Uhuru Peak, at
- 19,340 ft., Kibo's highest point.
- </p>
- <p> The 1 1/2-day descent from the mountain is a loping parade
- of the tired but exultant, followed by guides and porters whose
- only suffering is from gratuity anxiety. "Don't forget me,"
- they constantly remind. Across the saddle, a small party of
- descenders comes across a young American woman, undaunted by the
- rigors still ahead, singing a buoyant playground anthem to the
- mountain: "Up in the air, Junior Birdman./ Up in the air upside
- down." Smiling, they trudge on. These birdmen have earned their
- wings.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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