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Clairesj


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Clairesj's Travel Blog

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The Arc of Asia 2009-2010. Bring on the climbing!


the good and the bad and a random naked man!

Yangshuo, China


A good day following a bad day- i climbed a total of one route yesterday and felt quite rubbish becasue it wasnt going my way! but today we got up early- left the camp by 7.30 to get to a crag that comes into the sun at 1pm. when i had cycled there i discovered i had no rock shoes- so i cycled to the crag we were at yesterday, but they werent there. i eventually got back to the campsite and found one of the other guys had picked them up from the last crag. few! they woulod not be easy to replace here! then i cycled back to the first crag and started climbing! i led a 2 pitch climb with a 6a pitch that i top roped on my first day in Yangshuo and had found it really hard and sustained. i did take on the rope but got up it no problem. so i thought i would try a 6b+ as it had bolts only about 2 metres apart for a lot of it. i got two thirds up but got stuck on a scary move on small crimps that i eventually backed off. i was really happy to get that far so i want to go back and try leading to the top before we leave Yangshuo. this afternoon we did 3 pitches of a 5 pitch multipitch before it got dark. on the way to the crag we saw a man completely naked walking towards us down the side of the road, which was a bit of a shock. he didnt seem embarrassed that he was naked, so was a little odd! rich thuoght he was covered in melon juice..? you never know what you will see next here!
we have ventured into town which is very epic. the bad drivers/cyclists,pedestrians who never look when pulling out or overtaking or crossing the road are even worse than usual and there is much more traffic. it feels like a victory whenever you arrive at a destination unscathed! cycling back in the dark is good too, at least i have remembered my headtorch tonight! the festival has made the town very busy but doesnt seem to have any particular event on so we have come to the bar (i am writting this in the bar on their internet!).
i am venturing to the river tomorrow for a 'shower', but bush camping has been fine otherwise. it actually gets cold in the early hours of the morning which is refreshing and stays in the shade so its ok to sleep in without waking up at 7 sweating!
i have security duty tomorrow afternoon, then Matts birthday the next day. he wants to get a group of us to do a 5 pitch 4+ multipitch which is easy but gets you to the top of the crag and has a nice freehanging absail back down. hes never done a multipitch before. we will take cake for the top!
only 3 days left in Yangshuo so i am trying to climb lots! then a couple of drive days to Kunming and more climbing!! i have been in Yangshuo for a month now which has been great to relax and be ready to keep travelling again. i would like to come back here when i climb in the 7s and do some awesome looking routes...but so many places to explore!!...


permalink written by  Clairesj on October 3, 2009 from Yangshuo, China
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Goodbye air conditioning, goodbye hot shower.. i will miss you!

Yangshuo, China


I have just come back from an interesting experience at the local private hospital. its nothing serious, although im glad i decided not to take a hot air balloon ride in Yangshuo as a westerner did not look too good as he was wheeled into another ambulance with a neck brace on- the result of a crash according to Jimmy. I have had stomach issues for quite a long time now, and when it stopped me climbing the other day because i had no energy, i thought i should get it checked out while Jimmy could act as my interpretor and i was near a good hospital.
we walked in there yesterday morning and jimmy walked into a partitioned room and started talking to the doctor even though he appeared to be dealing with another patient. the patient left however and i relayed my symptoms through jimmy to the doctor. the doctor suggested a blood test and stool test and gave me various receipts which i then took to a desk to pay for this delight in advance. jimmy then ushered me into the blood room which was full of patients sitting there in rows with drips in their hands, the drips hanging on metal hooks from the ceiling. the hooks reminded me of a butchers, but i shook that thought from my mind as the nurse told me to sit down right there and got her needles ready- in front of everyone! luckily i didnt embarrass myself and faint! i was handed the tubes of blood and then had to go to the labratory (as they spelt it!) to hand them over. lots more of jimmy running around like a headless chicken and shouting at various desks and we were done! (its often hard to tell if the Ch!nese are having an argument or just a friendly chat becasue of the intonations they use!). the stool test i put off until today, and we went there first thing. i was pointed towards a little plastic cup and a stick. the normal squat toilet with no lock on the door, no soap or toilet paper did not feel the most hygenic. neither did walking out of the toilet with the stick in my hand for the man behind the desk! the whole thing felt very embarrassing!! the verdict was that im eating too much oily, fatty food. which doesnt solve a lot! but i got to have a nosy around a Ch!nese hospital which was facinating!
Chinaclimb opened their bar yesterday after a revamp they worked flat out on for 4 days. it was nicely done, and we went along for their opening to celebrate Sarahs birthday.
we are moving to bush camp tomorrow as Yangshuo suddenly gets very expensive becasue there is a national festival- 60 years of the peoples republic of Ch!na, and another festival of some kind. lots of flowers and decorations have appeared around the streets and in the park. we are moving near the river to camp, in the centre of most of the climbing. danny has been feeling generous and aloud us to not cook for the rest of yangshuo. there is a nearby restaurant so we have been given normal food money to eat where we want. we will have regular trips into town anyway i expect and its only for 6 days. im off climbing when the guys get back from their big breakfast.
P.S. anyone who has messaged me on facebook- facebook is blocked throughout Ch!na so i cant access it until we move on to Laos in a couple of weeks time.


permalink written by  Clairesj on September 29, 2009 from Yangshuo, China
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cycling, beaches and moon hill

Yangshuo, China


The newbies have arrived- all 12 of them. it was a surprise when they all turned up a day before we expected them. their first night was Hannahs last night, sao we all went to a western restaurant, then a roof top bar for the rest of the night. it was a great place to get to know everyone, and the night ended going back to the hostel via macdonalds! not that i wanted any! i had a rest day the following day, then went6 climbing with the new guys the following day. they are all very relaxed and a bit crazy- a perfect climbing combination! they are also mostly climbing 5s and easy routes which makes a nice change from climbing with the others who all climb harder than me. im not the worst climber now but one of the better ones! it also helps take the pressure off needing to lead immediately becasue its not a big deal if i do back off the odd 5!
we had a rest day yesterday and cycled down to the river to an area that had a beach. me and cat swam in the river but the boys thought it looked a bit suspect- they may have had a point but i havent grown any extra arms yet so it couldnt have been that bad! we also watched a 2 Japanese tourists take out a bamboo raft and almost fall in quite a lot! they tried to paddle backwards so all the water was going into the bamboo sinking the raft!
today i persuaded the guys to hire bikes and cycle to moon hill. we all regretted this when we had to walk up millions of steps to get to the climbing, climbed some really hard routes then had to go all the way down the steps and cycle back again! all that and a party tonight!! i got on a 7a on toprope there and actually got on ok on it. it got frustrating when i kept swinging right out when i fell off (it was quite overhanging, and we forgot to put any quickdraws in when putting the toprope on) then had to try and swing back to the rock and grab the really bad holds to get back on again!
tonight is an official HotRock party at the bar we have been going to a lot- Bar 98. i think some of the guys may be dressing up in dresses as is traditional hotrock style! only a couple o0f days until we will be bush camping so making thew most of it!!


permalink written by  Clairesj on September 27, 2009 from Yangshuo, China
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Kailash and naked Everest!

Lhasa, China


Finally i have the old Mount Kailash and Everest blog. sorry for the delay!

Mount Kailash 22nd August
We arrived in Darchen- a bit of a grotty village next to the holy mountain. The amount of people wanting to do the trek got smaller to 7 people. Gareth soon went off ahead of us and ended up doing the trek in one day which was very impressive. The rest of us were Jill, Anna, Chris, ‘Mum’ (Hannahs mum who is also called Claire so she is nicknamed mum!), DAJ and me. Tensing (also known as Tintin!) came with us as our guide. Hannah really wanted to come but was still hallucinating from altitude sickness!
I was very nervous about the trek as I didn’t know how I would cope with all the uphills and my asthma. We set off at 8am with backpacks as light as possible. The first day was nice- the path meandered up and down for around 22km, past a fewtents and pilgrims who were going to do the whole circuit prostrating every few steps- it must take them weeks and be exhausting and painful, especially as the paths get worse. for each prostration the pilgrims put their hands in a prayer position then raised them above their head, which represented body, lowered them to infront of their face, which was mind, and then infront of their chest, which represented soul. Then they got on their hands and knees to lie flat on the floor. Then start again..
We stopped at an area that was covered in prayer flags attached to a pole. There were also regular piles of stones with engravings on them that were holy although im not sure how. We took regular breaks on the first day including a stop at a dabba for lunch- pot noodles. We took 8 hours and reached the camp spot at 4pm. I found the last bit really hard and collapsed into the tent with no energy to move at all and a head-ache. Im not sure if it was altitude or dehydration or both! I felt better after eating more packaged noodles but none of us had the energy to cross the river to the monastery as it involved a hill! We had reached about 4700m, and the south side of Kailash was infront of us- stunning!
A good night sleep and we got up at 7 as it was still dark. The second day we knew was the hardest- it involved the 5660m highpass (cant remember its name!). the day started up the hill and didn’t stop until we reached the top. It was a long old slog, and I really struggled as it got steeper towards the top, until I was taking one step and thinking about the next one, just to keep going! Thanks to DAJ who took my thermarest and sleepingbag for the accent, I had virtually nothing in my bag, which made a huge difference to my getting to the top. Although Tintin is usually quite irritating and not popular in the group, he did well helping me reach the summit. There were loads of prayer flags again at the top of the pass. As the Buddists and Hindus believe- you die half way up and are reborn at the top, shedding all your sins. It certainly felt like it! Most people leave clothes or a lock of hair at the top, so as we only had dirty knickers as an item of clothing we could leave, we thought this perhaps wouldn’t pleased the gods, and left a lock of hair instead!
There were a lot of Indian pilgrims who took horses around the mountain- which I think is cheating!, so we constantly passed horses. At the top we were surrounded by snowy peaks. 400m steep descent was a relief- to the bottom were more tents and we got more noodles! The remaining 4 hours of walking was straightforward, along the river. It was still a relief to get to the next camp area as it was a long day. Potatos and rice were very welcome dinner and we sat in the dabba hoping time would pass quickly so we could go to bed! 8pm in the end! The monastery there was pretty with loads of candles and statues.
The final day was just 3 hours walk back to the town. A total of 52km and all our sins removed! At one point the rock was stunning- it was blue, dark purple and orange going into the bright blue river. The scenery changed so much on the trek, it felt unique and such an experience to see it all. Mount Kailash stood out a mile from its surrounding mountains- its easy to see why it is believed to be so holy.

31st , Lhasa
We have had some epic few days of travelling since Kailash- the truck has got stuck, broken down numerous times, and we had a horrendous journey on the bad roads! The road is being built in sections so it is constantly diverting the truck around an area onto mud then back onto the road, making it very bumpy and likely to getstuck. We had to pay a digger to tow us out eventually after trying to use boards and dig BiRT out with no success! Then we broke down because the brakes weren’t working properly. A bosh job in one town ment it wasn’t long until they stopped working again (especially with the quality of the roads that made BiRT vibrate). It ment some wasted days and lots of hanging around. Because of the time delay, we then got to a long stretch of road that was being built- over 100km, which they closed from 8am-8pm so they would do this work, forcing trucks to drive it through the night. This ment we had to wait until 8pm to drive it, and then started possibly my scariest night in a long time! It sounds exaggerated, but the roads were so bad and BiRT isn’t very balanced, that the truck swung violently from side to side so we had to cling onto the chair and hope BiRT wouldn’t tip over. It would seem that we had gone further to one side, until the next bump in the road when it would go further. Pete had to keep driving through the night to complete the stretch of road before they closed it in the morning. One scary part was when Pete went the wrong way up a steep hill (apparently the steepest hill he had taken BiRT up) only to discover he had to go back down and couldn’t turn round. So he had to reverse not seeing anything, using Dannys guidance, and we stopped mid hill at such an angle- prop about 45 degrees. I heard afterwards that pete made a comment about how he would tell Duncan he had knocked BiRT over and therefore ruined his business! I was hopeing he had more confidence at the time. Needless to say I couldn’t sleep at all and a few of us who didn’t sleep, watched back-to-back films on Suuz’s laptop as a distraction. It was 4.30am when we finally reached tarmac, and I fell asleep instantly after being on edge for so long! We stopped at 6am to throw up tents and get some sleep.
We cooked scrambled eggs and bread for breakfast which improved everyones mood the following day as everyone is so bored of porridge now. We set off for Everest basecamp. The roads were back to normal again, and it was a nice drive up towards Everest. We stopped on the way at some street sellers and bought prayer flags, then up to a village for food and truck repairs to the petrol tank that was leaking. We reached the next village just before Everest basecamp in the evening, and slept in their big tents that had a stove in the room and blanket type mattresses to sleep on. It was the comfiest bed in a long time, so when we were woken at 6am it took everyone a long time to move, especially in the cold and dark! We walked up to basecamp, which is only a half hour walk or so, upto 5100m-ish as it got light. Unfortunately it was so cloudy we couldn’t see any mountains. So after waiting around in the cold for a couple of hours, the sun slowly burnt off the clouds and revealed Everest. It was impressive, but I wasn’t really wowed by it.
One of the guys then had the good idea of posing infront of Everest in nothing but their boxer shorts! Suddenly most of the guys had joined in for the photo! The officials at the military camp then came up and told us all to come down. We all got very told off and he went through everyones cameras to delete the offending photos! Quite a few people were crafty so still have the photos! Tintin, our guide who should have been with us the whole time, but had gone to get breakfast, was then summoned by the officlas and told off because he should have told us not to do it! Whoops! Hotrock does like to get itself into trouble! But I think we were lucky the official wasn’t more brutal because he could have been if he wanted to.
We left soon after to head to Lhasa- yey!


permalink written by  Clairesj on September 25, 2009 from Lhasa, China
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Gong Bao Chicken or Sweet and Sour Pork? place your orders!

Yangshuo, China


I think im beginning to make small gains in my climbing- i led 3 routes yesterday, and one was a 6a that i did by hanging on a few bolts and at one point i climbed up until i could just reach the bolt, but the the last one was below my feet and i was in an unbalanced position to place the quickdraw and clip, so i backed down to the bolt. after doing this about 5 times, i eventually clipped the bolt! i have found some routes quite run out- 5s often have 3 metres or more between bolts so it doesnt make it easy to get confidence!
i took 2 days off in a row a few days ago now, and enjoyed sitting in a restaurant that was on the river, watching the bamboo rafts go past in the comfort of air conditioning, drinking a big pot of ginger and mint tea and reading my book! i realised i couldnt remember the last time i was on my own, so a break from the group was nice. i also went on a chinese cooking course. this was brilliant! there was a group of 8 of us, people from England, Switzerland and Finland, all in their 20s. we had to decide on 3 dishes to make as a group- after resorting to writting our decision down on paper after discusions didnt get anywhere- we decided on sweet and sour pork, Gong Bao Chicken and Braised aubergine with garlic and chili paste. we stood 4 facing 4 with a gas burner and wok infront of us each, various sauces and spices on the table, and our raw ingredients. it was just how i imagined a cookery course would be like! this set up was on the roof of the hotel so we got a great view while we cooked. we donned an apron and chef hat and set to work. cutting all the ingredients involved a huge knife (the square one, like a butcher uses- not sure its name!). we cooked the first 2 meals using a very hot wok, then went down stairs to the restaurant to eat our food, before returning to cook the remaining dish and then eating that too! all the dishes came out really well, apart from my aubergine had too much soy sauce in it so was a bit too salty.
i have the recipes so will test them out if i can remember how to cook them in 4 months time when i return to England! i now have the chopsticks so no excuse!
we had a goodbye party for Dave who has now left, and Hannah is leaving tomorrow so we will have a party tonight. the newbies arrive tomorrow afternoon which is quite exciting!


permalink written by  Clairesj on September 21, 2009 from Yangshuo, China
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is that a bird, a plane? no its BiRT in Yangshuo!!

Yangshuo, China


yes, thats what i thought when we were sitting in the bus after a good day climbing and 2 climbers get on at the next stop. The guy, called Eban, asks us if we are from Hot Rock, and we reply that yes we are. Oh i met the Hot Rockers when they were here last year, he says, and i saw your truck go past earlier heading to the same bush camp. We looked at him questioningly, becasue no, Hot Rock couldnt possibly be here- they are miles away in Siguniang Shan climbing big walls for 8 days. But Eban is sure he saw BiRT, big red truck with a bouldering wall on the back. well you cant argue with that! so then we started to think, well they had 6 days driving to the climbing then about 3 to Chengdu, so if they missed the climbing and drove straight here, then it has been 10 days since we left them, perhaps it is possible....
when we got back we met Shaggy and Ed who had a rest day and they confirmed our suspicions. they had seen some other Hot Rockers in town. The reason was that Siguniang Shan required a permit that had to be paid 2 months in advance, and in typical Hot Rock style, this had been overlooked, so the consensus on the truck was to just drive strasight to Yangshuo. i didnt envy their 10 days straight of driving, but perhaps i wouldnt have spent the extra money on a flight here just to arrive 10 days early. there were a lot of people not happy with Hot Rock yet again. there are too many unhappy customers at the moment and quite a lot of moaning about Hot Rock amoungst us. im hoping that this half of the trip, as it has all been done before, will be better organised and leave all of us still on the truck pleased with the outcome of the trip.
the one story the guys on the truck did have from their drive was going to watch a sky burial. i think it is such a unique, once-in-a-lifetime thing to see that im quite gelous i missed it, but having said that, im not sure i could have watched! so a sky burial is the most popular burial in Tibet, where a body is brought to a holy area and a skilled man makes cuts in the body. the vultures then fly in and eat the body, leaving sinue and bones. the man then grinds the bone with sugar and something else so they are more appitising and the birds come back to eat this. nothing then remains. it sounds quite grusome, but apparently the family of the old woman whose burial it was, were very relaxed, chatting and smoking, rather than the grief you would expect. earleir, they had had 300 monks chant prayers for the old woman and that is when her soul left her body, so they then looked at her body as just esentially meat- it was no longer her. apparently, the quicker the body is eaten by the vultures, the better life the woman had had on earth. the guys saw everything, from the woman being caried from the car boot naked and rapped in plastic, to being cut up, and the vultures.
the other hot rockers camped for the first couple of nights- when it was raining- we didnt envy them! but when a couple of them thought it was worth paying extra to stay in our hostel, everyone moved here. so we are together as a group again, but still climbing as the 2 groups we became. its a slightly strange feeling of us and them, but as the newbies arrive in 5 days, and a coulpe of people leave, im sure everything will change and we will become a group again.
Jill left yesterday to Chengdu, then home, so we went and had a nice meal of burgers and chips in one of the western restaurants- it was really good, and banana cake with chocolate syrup and ice cream for desert. i thought i was spending way too much compared to normal, then thought about the fact i had had a 2 course meal and drink for 4 pound 50! im going to have such a shock with English prices when i go home!
the weather has cooled a little, with rain over the last few days and finally the fog/mist/smog (dont really know what it is) has cleared and you can see beyond the first couple of karsts. the landscape looks much more beautiful now, with the lush green vibrant against the blue sky. i hope it continues like this. i may bike upto Moon Hill, which is a karst that has a perfect hole forming an arch. its a tourist attraction but there is also hard climbing on it, and you can walk easily to the top, getting a great view of the area.
Maria has joined our group climbing recently, and she is an Argentinan who is staying in Yangshuo for a coulpe of months, and has got a job at an English school for 2 hours a day, which gives her free accomodation and food.
rest day today, as i did 2 routes yesterday and was exhausted! even climbing 2 days on, one day off seems to be too much at the moment!


permalink written by  Clairesj on September 17, 2009 from Yangshuo, China
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bolt clipping and slack lining

Yangshuo, China


not much to update apart from more climbing, and a rest day today after only 2 days of climbing, but finger tips have lost a lot of skin and muscles are hurting! we are planning to put a slack line up in the park, then go and get a chinese massage (im a bit scared of what it will be like!). the heat and humidity is still incessant, but i think i am beginning to get used to it a bit. i have done a few more leads on 5s but im hoping to get leading more, even if im falling off the routes, as im finding it so frustrating not leading or having the confidence too. we found some crimpy routes yesterday (rather than thuggy overhanging routes) and i worked my way up a 6c which wasnt too bad, but still feels a long way off until i could climb it in one- especially when all the routes here are 25m +!
Jills birthday was a couple of days ago and we went back to the Karst cafe for pizza and cake!
we also went to the river in between climbing, where traditional hot rock style- the hot rockers got into trouble! the others (i wasnt swimming becasue of my tattoo) found an abandoned bamboo raft and pushed it down the river over a small waterfall- apparently this was not allowed and the security guard told them off and told us all to stay where we were. so we made a quick exit and hid in a cafe incase he had called the police! luckily nothing more happened! so we went to the next crag!!
there are still plenty of crags to explore, and most of them only go into the shade in the afternoon, so we may start going climbing just in the afternoon for most days, im not sure yet. and there is great debate whether climbing 2 days on, 1 day off or 3 days on, or 4+ days on is best! im aiming at 3 days on, 1 day off mainly becasue i dont like staying in the city all day which is what you end up doing on rest days!


permalink written by  Clairesj on September 11, 2009 from Yangshuo, China
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tattoos and limestone karsts

Yangshuo, China


im afraid that my Mount Kailash blog will have to come in a couple of weeks, because as usual i forgot to sort it out before i left, and i left my notebook with it in on BiRT!
Lhasa was a lovely city, very relaxed and nicely touristy. more to come in the other blog.
i got a tattoo while i was in Lhasa. some of the other guys wanted to get one, and having wanted one for a long time, i thought i would go with them to get ideas, but not to get one! the tattoo artist didnt seem amazing so i left it and went off shopping to the barhkor. at 7 in the evening, i bumped into Hannah's mum who told me she had found a really nice tattoo parlor where Danny was getting a tattoo done at that minute. so i went along to talk to the girl for ideas of a design, and she was an amazing artist who ended up spending over 2 hours designing me a tattoo based on chinese art that all related to nature, and she altered it so it had mountains in. i was very fussy but she was also a perfectionist! i was so pleased with it that i had to get it done! its on my leg, just above my ankle. ill put up a photo of it soon. what a great souvineer from T!bet!
I am now in Yangshuo after buying a flight from Lhasa, first to chonqing (not sure if spelling is right), then another flight to Guillin, then a bus to the centre of the town and a further bus to Yangshuo! the trip went quite smoothly- we almost missed our second flight becasue the first was delayed and we had to recheck our luggage in. we just managed to in time, then the second flight was a bit delayed! i have gone ahead of the truck and will join them later, either in Chengdu, or just wait until they reach Yangshuo in just over 2 weeks time. Veronica, Jill, Sebastian and Gareth came with me.
we got a shock when we arrived in Yangshuo- expecting a nice relaxed touristy town, we found a big busy city full of Chinese tourists and crowds. but we searched out the couple of climbing centres that exist right in the middle of the caos! 'Ch!naclimb' is a centre that organises sessions for groups all over Ch!na, and there is a restaurant that is climber freindly called 'Karst Cafe' and also a really small climbing shop called 'Spiderman Climbing'. we found the guys at Ch!naclimb could give us some advice on places to climb and how to get to the crags. we are staying in a youth hostel which is actually pretty nice, even though its on a street with lots of shops full of girls- a bit bizarre!
the limestone karsts are amazing. its about a 15 min taxi ride to the crags, where you are surrounded by karsts as far as you can see, (which isnt really that far becasue of the humid haze!). most are covered with trees and greenery, but some have huge rock faces exposed. this means all the climbing is overhanging becasue it is the areas that cant grow trees that are exposed! so far i have found the climbing hard- i am really out of shape, physically and mentally, and it doesnt help that thuggy overhanging climbing is not really my style! im ashamed to say i have been getting pumped on 5's and failing on 6b's. im hoping my strength and confidence will make a fast reappearance as it is very frustrating at the moment. as i potentially have 5 weeks here, im sure its just a matter of time! the rock is generally very sharp and mottled, some areas have tufas (i tried my first tufa climb today- very strange! and this huge tufa sounded hollow inside!), and some areas are getting polished, especially footholds. but the routes so far have been really nice, with good variety. we have already checked out 5 crags, as it works well to go to one which is in the shade in the morning, then as the sun comes round, move to a different one in the shade in the afternoon. its imposible to climb in the sun as it is so hot and SO humid, that drinking enough water in the shade is almost impossible!
a couple of days ago, it was Sebe's birthday so we went out for a western meal at Karst cafe and had awesome pizza and lasagne. we are now back to cheap chinese noodles and rice and veg, which we have found extra cheap at a restaurant nearby.
Zamora, Shaggy and Ed got the train to Yangshuo which took about 3 days, so they should be arriving tonight.


permalink written by  Clairesj on September 6, 2009 from Yangshuo, China
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blogs will come soon!!

Lhasa, China


just to let you know i have put loads of photos up and i have various blogs to upload, but i wrote them on Suuz's laptop on the journey here and they are on a modern version of word so not compatibule ojn this computer! it would take me ages to write it all out again so i will hopefully save it in a different way then post them up soon. there is a lot to tell- be warned!
im off to Yangshuo tomorrow so sohuld have lots of regualr internet access again-yey!!
updates to follow....


permalink written by  Clairesj on September 3, 2009 from Lhasa, China
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drive days and 5400m

Lhasa, China


Ali, 23rd
I updated all my blog yesterday then came to a different internet cafe today and found that blogabond is blocked. dave couldnt get onto his blog either so i presume its the government controlling it. very annoying! so i am writing this in my email to transfer when i can. at least email is still accessible.
we are now onto our 6th drive day in a row which is hard work! it has been early starts and driving all day until dinner and sometimes beyond. the scenery changed quickly and dramatically into high altitude mountainous desert. its quite stunning, with sand for miles, then colourful mountains and the odd lake in the distance all around us. we come across small villages with restaurants for lunch and dinner, big distances apart. i finally got a shower this morning, which was something after 5 days without sitting in the truck getting covered in sand and dust! we have now been upto 5400m twice in a day and havent been below 4300 for the last few days. so not surprisingly most of the group have been getting altitude sickness symptoms, including me- head ache, tiredness, feeling energyless and sick. hannah has it quite bad and feels really dizzy and not with it. it is a bit scary because usually you could just go back down the mountain and be ok again, but we cant go down! we are driving to mount Kailash today so going back up to 5000m and camping at this height. i am a bit nervous about it, and potentially want to do the 3 day trek around mount Kailash which clenses all your sins aparently and gets upto 5600m so it will prob be quite hard to breath!! i think i will be relieved to get down to normal air! we have been camping by the side of the road, which is actually not allowed by the police for tourists to stop there, so we have been pretenting BiRT has broken down to do this, and we stayed in a little house that had lots of beds crowded into one room- but it was warm! the temperature has got freezing. mostly we sit in BiRT in our down jackets and sleeping bags just to keep warm. when we stop for breakfast- which is porridge made on a small portable stove, it has been particularly bad- when i washed my plate and left it for 5 mins- the remaining water had frozen! it cooled my porridge down a bit!
We found an unknown crag on the way yesterday, so stopped and had the afternoon exploring. i did a nice easy 2 pitch climb with Jill that had the potential to do at least 5 further pitches to reach the top if we had more time. i gear was run out though! we then drove onto Ali that evening and were planning to have a vote whether to miss a trek to have more days at the crag, but then found out we couldnt go back there because there is a check point inbetween Ali and the crag, so we could not explain why we were changing our schedule to the guards, as they are sooooo strict here! so it is onwards with our original plan. we are also not allowed to split from the group, so that limits us all to doing exactly what is on the schedule.
after Kailash is 4 driving days then Mount Everest basecamp trek, then onto Lhasa. So far, i dont feel like we are in T!bet, but i think perhaps tomorrow when i see monks and prayer flags, etc. then it will be how i imagined it here.


permalink written by  Clairesj on September 3, 2009 from Lhasa, China
from the travel blog: Clairesj's Travel Blog
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