January 15th, 2007

Post by Rich Shear

rich_shear_2Audio Post:

Rest day at Plaza Argentina (Base Camp) (elevation 13,790 ft. / 4,203 m.)

(map)
“…less of a ‘rest day’ and more of an ‘anxious day’… “

Click to Play (1 min  22 sec)

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January 14th, 2007

Climb to Plaza Argentina (Base Camp)

plaza_argentina_approach

Audio Post:

Hike to Plaza Argentina (Base Camp) (elevation 13,790 ft. / 4,203 m.)
“…quite a desolate landscape…”

Click to Play (2 min 53 sec)

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January 14th, 2007

Post by Frank Fumich

frank_fumich

Audio Post:

Hike to Casa de Piedra (elevation 10,650 ft. / 3,245 m.)

“…I have never erected a tent in my entire life.”

Click to Play (2 min 13 sec)



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January 13th, 2007

Casa de Piedra

ead9903forigAudio Post:

Hike to Casa de Piedra (elevation 10,650 ft. / 3,245 m.)
“…this huge ridge came into view up the Relinchos Valley.

Click to Play (2 min 40 sec)

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January 12th, 2007

Hike to Pampa de Lenas

mule_trainAudio Post:

Hike to Pampa de Lenas (elevation 9,400 ft. / 2,867 m.)

“…45 mules and 30 campers, and very chaotic…”

Click to Play (2 min 50 sec)

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January 12th, 2007

My boyfriend is leaving me for a mountain

(guest entry by Anjali Kumar, written the eve of Ferris’ departure)

He’s insane and I can’t talk him out of it! I even hid his passport, but he found it. Now he’s leaving and I can’t stop him.

In times of great need, well-educated, self-respecting, wisdom-seeking citizens of the 21st century are left with only one option:

Ask a Ninja!

ask_a_ninja

Dear Ninja:  My crazy boyfriend insists on leaving me for this scary mountain. What should I do?

Ninja:  Yes, Yes. Our brothers – the steep, slippery mountains – like ninjas, they know how to sneak up on their victims and attack!

Dear Ninja:  Ummm… Ninja-san, you’re not helping.

Ninja: Ah, yes. Well, ninjas must be flexible. Let me contort to see the other side. Conquering a dangerous opponent… Your boyfriend has great ninja-like qualities!

Dear Ninja:  Still not helping!

Ninja:  Oh, yes, of course. You need to get into the mind of a ninja. At times of loss, we stoic ninjas carry no personal attachments. Simply find what’s missing and REPLACE it.

So I took the ninja’s advice and arranged for my mom to visit me from Seattle to provide
my daily rations of love and support. But what could ever substitute for the 6’2” warm cuddliness?

bag_loveAs Ferris was packing last night, I found the perfect companion. In fact, it even hugs back!!

He protested – some nonsense about -40˚F, 800+ Eastern European goose down, 7-chamber sculpted hood, with glow-in-the-dark zippers – but as far as I’m concerned, my featherweight boyfriend-substitute is staying with me, even if I have to nunchuck-ninja-fight him for it!

HAI-HOOO-WHAAAH!!

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January 11th, 2007

Puente del Inca

puente_del_incaAudio Post:

Travel from Mendoza to Puente del Inca (elevation 8,900 ft. / 2,725 m.)

(Post cuts off at end)
“…our last indoor lodging kind of smells like diesel.”

Click to Play (1 min 22 sec)

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January 10th, 2007

Off for the Mountain

packingWe leave for the mountain tomorrow morning at 8 am, with the climb starting in earnest on Friday. This is likely my last access to email before the climb (and in the moments before the Internet cafe closes) so…enjoy the audio posts!

However, you should know we have been having glitches with the satellite phone and are not entirely sure it´s going to work. So if you don´t hear from me, it´s not that I´m dead…I´m just incommunicado.

!Andale!

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January 9th, 2007

Hello from Mendoza, Argentina

team_stray_dogs

Marshall, Terri, Louise and Nancy consulting the Aconcagua map in the Santiago airport.

We arrived in Mendoza, Argentina, at 11:30 this morning after a short flight over the Andes. I had my nose and camera pressed to the porthole getting my first view of the Andes. One stood in the distance higher than the others, and I bet it was Aconcagua, but no one around me knew for sure.

We stood for a long time in  line waiting for the lone immigration official while we watched the men unload the luggage from our plane. None of the actors moved with any haste. Here in Argentina things move a little mas despacio.

We had been in transit for 27 hours. I flew from San Francisco to L.A on Monday morning and almost straightaway ran into Terri, Louise and Nancy, who walked right behind me into the security line. We boarded a LAN Chile flight bound for Santiago, Chile via Lima, Peru.

LAN Chile is the national airline of a South American country, and for me that has always conjured up images of a sweaty cabin with stained seats, maybe some chickens, and luggage bins held closed with duct tape. But the LAN plane from L.A. to Santiago was clean and bright, the roomiest cabin I´d ever been in, and my little TV played 30 movies.

andes

A shot of the Andes from the plane.

Just after dawn we landed in Santiago to see the Andes swim into view through the smog.  Our party rounded out when Marshall found us in the Santiago airport. Then it was the half-hour hop to Mendoza.

After clearing customs, we were met by one of our guides, a lanky thirtysomething with a scraggly beard who is named Martin and calls himself Tincho. We threw our bags in the trailer behind a van and drove out of the airport, past the tiny vineyard that stands at the entrance, and toward the Hotel Aconcagua at the city center.  I looked out the windows and tried to be attentive to my first South American city, but I was so sleepy that I nodded off and dropped my water bottle.

Mendoza is blissfully warm (86 degrees on arrival!) after a cold December in San Francisco. The streets, at least those in this part of the city, are cobbled and shaded under a canopy of  broad-leafed trees.

mendoza-1

The five of us in a park near our Mendoza hotel.

After a few hours relaxing in our rooms, the five of us met in the hotel lobby and walked to a little side avenue where there are outdoor cafes and no cars.  We ordered two pizzas (the best had ham, green olives, pineapple and caramelized brown sugar that left our fingers sticky). We also successfully got Louise, at the age of 53, to enjoy the first beer of her life by mixing Andes brand beer with 7Up.

The street remind me of any Mexican city, with smoke-belching buses and stone-lined trenches for storm drains, but the people are different. The Argentinians aren´t as friendly as Mexicans but have better fashion sense. You are hardly a woman here if you´re not wearing delicate sandals and tight jeans.

Tomorrow we will eat some more, walk around and see the sights, visit one of the numerous outdoor stores to buy last-minute supplies, and of course obsessively pack and repack our bags. The last two members of our party, Frank and Rich, arrive tomorrow, and on Thursday we head for the mountain.

mendoza-2

Terri and Louise enjoying dinner.

After dinner, we walked lazily to the town square and browsed the stands selling knickknacks. The air was just right, and, at 9:30 p.m., the light was still draining from the sky and painting it royal purple. We stopped for an ice cream.

As I strolled along, licking at my cherry cone, fingers sticky with sugar, caressed by the humid, warm night air, I thought, “In a few days, I will be colder than the inside of this ice cream.”

There´s something to think about.

Enjoy the frozen dessert now, lads, for tomorrow we´ll be the frozen dessert.

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January 8th, 2007

Why Am I Doing This?

Sometimes I am asked why I am going halfway around the world, at great personal expense, to spend 14 days on a volcanic slag heap where I will freeze, gasp for air, and generally perch like a flea on the flank of an indifferent dog.

When my friend Terri Schneider called to report that Marshall Ulrich was leading a trip up Mt. Aconcagua, I knew immediately that I wanted in, even though I knew almost zero about the mountain, not even how to pronounce it. (It’s ak-con-KA-gwah, by the way.)

I knew it was high and difficult. That’s really all I needed to know.

Now, when I envision Aconcagua, my spine tingles. I will visit a place few other people will ever see. The sun will rise on a foreign metropolis of peaks and bathe them in bronze. My face will prickle and turn numb in an icy wind. I’ll gaze up into a frozen couloir and feel a yearning in my belly so strong it hurts. I will look down from the peak, knowing that the nearest car is two and a half vertical miles below, and know no mere motorist will ever experience this.

My dirtiness and stinkiness will exceed belief. Every evening I will long for the glass of red wine and filet mignon that await in Mendoza, the town where our journey began.

When at last I get that meal, the wine will explode on my tongue, and everything will be a marvel, the beef, the tablecloth, the shiny knife in my hand. When hot water comes out of the shower I will writhe in ecstasy.

When I talk about this climb, some people (my mother and girlfriend come to mind) look puzzled, and it’s not just that they can’t imagine ever wanting to do such a thing.  It’s that when they hear me discuss some miserable part of this endeavor – the storms or the bone-chilling cold, say – they can tell that just underneath my somber tone is a barely contained enthusiasm.

Maybe my life just hasn’t offered quite enough suffering, so instead I go look for it on a remote slope of South America. My day-to-day life in California is so easy. Even when I’m earning a living, my existence isn’t quite my own. Really I owe it to the street sweeper and the grocer and the banker and the repairman.

But when reach the top and look down the flanks of Aconcagua, I will know I earned it. Just look – I can see every step.

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