After dinner at the Khumbu Lodge with Nima's friends, we headed off to bed not sure what the next morning would hold. The snow threatened to keep us in Namche for another day.
The town was blanketed in snow when we woke, but not enough snow to cancel the next leg of our journey from Namche to Tengboche. We decided to leave a little later than originally planned, to give the snow some time to melt. Nima also got a call from Chindi in Kathmandu saying that Chindi’s mother (Nima's mother-in-law) was hitching a ride to Namche on a helicopter that was heading in to pick up an ill trekker. Nima's 73-year-old mother-in-law had been in Kathmandu for four months or so recuperating from illness and was ready to come back to her home in Namche. After breakfast, we hiked up to the helipad on the far side of town arriving just in time to watch the helicopter soar in through the jagged mountains and land in Namche. We greeted Nima's mother-in-law and walked with her down to the Shangri-La.
I'd be concerned too if I was sandwiched between two giants.
Spinning the prayer wheels before heading off on our journey
Yaks... a cute hazard on the trail
Fried noodle lunch break
We made it to Tengboche!
Nima and the lodge keeper, another friend
Tengboche and the Tengboche monastery
We were completely worn out and perhaps a bit dehydrated. We gulped down some tea and noodle soup before heading to our rooms for a hard nap.
It was important to wake up for some dinner to avoid altitude sickness, so we dragged our tired bodies out of our snuggly sleeping bags and hobbled into the restaurant for a meal. A large trekking group of about twenty people were already hanging out playing games after dinner. Walking into an enclosed space chock-full of stinky, dirty trekkers was an assault to my delicate sensibilities, to put it mildly. I lost my appetite, but forced myself to eat some soup and momos. Gideon was fortunate enough to have a stuffed nosed, so he was not so offended by our odiferous company.
With our eyelids heavy, we wandered to our cold little room to rest up for tomorrow's trek. It was a cold night, indeed, out on top of this windy mountaintop, but sleep came quickly.
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