Monday 8 November
Pisang to Manang
Itinerary: DAY 8 Manang (3,351m) Passing some prayer wheels we ascend
gradually to a pass from where a wide Manang Valley comes in full view with
peaks of Chhulu East on the north and Gangapurna in the south. After a short
descent from the pass we follow the valley to an airstrip at Hongde (3,322m).
We are now in the alpine zone with scattered scrubs of juniper. Due to the poor
soil here only one crop per year of wheat, barley, buckwheat and potatoes grow.
After lunch we continue to Manang via the
[Diarist: Sue]
It was slightly
below zero when I got out during the night, frost on the tent but a beautiful
starry sky.
At 6 am, the usual routine, and I get out of the 4-season sleeping bag at the last minute. Painful hands resulted from air-drying them after washing them, and rubbing by Mary helped to resolve this.
It was really chilly waiting for breakfast, but while we ate porridge, scrambled eggs and apple pancakes, the sun hit the tent and a gradual thaw began.
This campsite was
quiet, away from the river, and dominated by the snowy peaks of Annapurna II and
IV. Today's is a short walk to Manang, and we start in down jackets, soon to
remove them in the sun. The dirt track rose through shady woods. Quite a few
people on the trail, including porters. On the north facing slopes, the first
patches of snow, which Sanjeev tells us fell on October 17th and 18th. The
waterfalls are now all frozen.
On the hillside the other side of the river is the medieval Tibetan
Dropping down, a frosty path, before the trees are changed for scrub, then a wide level track heads to Hongde. It seems strange to have telegraph poles next to the path!
Mules pass again,
and today horsemen appear for really the first time. They move along at a fast
trot.
The
The next section was stunning - Annapurna III and IV are 'just' to our left, albeit 4000 metres higher. The valley is wide and there are pines and scrub.
Ahead is
Shoes were removed before we stepped through a dark doorway and into a room about 12 metres square, lit by a skylight. It was very colourful, with coloured flags hanging down, painted carved wood near the edges, and walls were cabinets with two rows of statues behind glass - the lower teachers, the upper one gods. A Buddha sits at the front, with the senior monk's chair to one side. In front of the Buddha, a 24-hour flame burns and offerings sit. Thanka paintings line the walls high up, some faded with age. Behind the Buddha, lots of prayer books line the walls.
Despite the morning's gentle walk, lunch was welcome - curried potato, paratha, tuna, carrots in cinnamon, and coleslaw, followed by pomegranate, eaten in a room with a sunken floor, covered in stones, on chairs cut from trunks, with small tables. It resembled a council chamber!
Only 40 minutes walk to Manang remained after lunch. Despite the sun, the wind was cold - no shorts for any of us today. Manang, at 3550 metres, is quite a metropolis, and it is where trekkers stay for a day or so to acclimatise before going higher. So we have a 'rest day' tomorrow. The main street where the hotels are is wide and it looks like there are furrows where it is not paved.
We spot the yellow tents in town at 3:10 pm and enjoy a few minutes sun on the tent before it goes, and clothes are pulled on. We look across at Annapurna III and Gangapurna, and the huge Gangapurna glacier. The tents are pitched on dust, which has blown across the trail at several points today. kicked up by wind, people and horses.
Washing water at 4:00 and tea at 4:30, then Martin and I stroll through darkening streets to the end of town, through stone buildings.
Dinner was at 6:30, with a few surprises. Tomato and garlic soup with poppadoms, then rice, carrot and cucumber salad, beans with cumin, and pizza with cheese, mushrooms and tomato. A warm pudding of custard and peach slices. Hot drinks followed. To our amazement, hot water bottles were produced and were secreted under our down jackets. whilst a few Uno hands were played. Sue won today. 9 pm to bed.
Today's Stats:
Start: 3205 metres
Ascent: 500 metres
Descent: -155
metres
Finish: 3550 metres
Time: 7.5 hours
Stops: 3 hours
Walking time: 4.5
hours
2 comments:
Did you meet anyone heading for (or returning from) Pisang Peak? I've read it's a do-able trekking peak...
So far as I can recall, we didn't meet any peak baggers on this trip.
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