Cold Weather Apparel And Expedition Gear

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 It’s always a pleasure to listen to a mountaineer who also doubles as a professional photographer, talk about the Himalayas. Sankar Sridhar, on this IMF Webinar Series, makes the trip through Ladakh a lot more interesting.

 Using a collection of award-winning shots of frozen rivers and waterfalls, rapids standing still in sub-zero temperatures, beautifully eerie, yet rugged mountains, and lots of wonderful photos, he tells of his solo foray. And, Sankar being the talented story-teller he is, he was so mesmerized by the Changthang region that he went again to explore its magic.

 Listening to him and his adventures, sounds implausible how beautiful Ladakh and its frozen mountains, at a temperature of -48 degrees at night is. But perhaps the most interesting bit is how he discovers how the animals and humans residing in the region survive the freezing conditions.

 You can accompany him as he talks of his escapades traversing a region whose roads are impassable once winter sets in. It is a 12-day trek from Chang La, through the frozen rivers and mountains, the Ladakh wilderness, and the lonely valleys, all the way to Kyon Tso. Watching him, you get to learn lots of unknown mysteries, little secrets, and fun facts about the Changthang region.

 #Ladakh​ #Changthang​ #HimalayanLakes​ #Himalayas​ #Exploring​ #NaturePhotography

 2,800 Kms - Swimming the Ganga : Wg Cdr Paramvir Singh

 Swimming the mighty Ganges River is not news. Nevertheless, when the IMF Webinar Series covers the entire 2,800km Himalayan stretch of the Ganga, courtesy of Wing Commander Paramvir Singh, it definitely has to hit the headlines.

 The presentation is wholly about a serving officer of the Indian air force, whose 43-day, 12-hour a day exploits on water, swimming, and sometimes rafting, are well-documented. He swam from Devprayag in Uttarakhand to the Bay of Bengal, an experience he refers to as a ‘once-in-a-lifetime’ exploration, and a fascinating outing.

 It is a truly exciting tale, especially with the hurdles he faced and conquered, including having to breeze through chilly waters, facing dangerous water animals, and having to swim for 12 hours a day. He talks about the pains of swimming through the unforgiving Ganga, including getting bruised by rocks and having to battle horrendous tides and waves.

 Priceless beauty, amazing sights, hospitable locals, breathtaking wildlife, and much more; most of it beautiful to see. Unfortunately, the clean fresh and unpolluted waters down the Himalayan stretch of the Ganga would soon give way to the toxic and highly polluted waters downstream.

 The best part of this trip is the eye-opening experience and the lessons he shares with whoever would want to attempt a similar feat in the future. He is an ultra-endurance athlete, a highly decorated officer of the Indian Air Force, and a Tenzing Norgay National Adventure awardee.

 Twenty years ago, I left a lucrative career with a fast growing pharmaceutical company with the singular thought of living a life of adventure, of climbing unknown mountains, of discovering glaciers, of traveling to distant lands and making friends with complete strangers.

 However utopian this may have sounded at the outset, the simple realization that I had only one life to live and therefore, I must love the life I live, convinced me to quit the job where I had been doing well for eight years, so that I could live the life I love.

 From then on, I have lived my life on full compass, embracing the inevitability of financial insecurity on one hand, and the pure joy of living a life of adventure on the other.

 Born in a country with no apparent history and culture of seeking adventure as a sport, as a lifestyle, and even more rarely as a philosophy, I knew I was starting with huge disadvantage.

 I always looked at it this way - there are many routes up a mountain, but I should be taking a comparatively challenging one as a value addition to the whole process. Perhaps something of a purist’s approach to life’s challenges helped me stay positive.

 A life of adventure, like a few other noble pursuits, requires a long and devoted apprenticeship, physical, as well as philosophical. While it is true that not all adventurers are born equal but this reality should not stop them from trying.

 We should not, for a moment, stop believing that we too can savour world class adventure, be it in alpinism or in any other manifestation of an adventure pursuit. Each and every adventurer can influence the world for the better, like ripples in a tranquil pond, or worse, like a tsunami which is why it is imperative for adventurers to season themselves before embarking on the dreamy adventure life.

 Nanda Devi East (7434m) Expedition 2014

athleisure active winter sportswear

 In June-July, 2014, a small, lightweight and semi-alpine style expedition succeeded in climbing Nanda Devi East (7434m) in the Kumaun Himalaya, India. On 3 July, 2014, summit was reached by 4 members of the team.

 2014 was the 75th anniversary of the first ascent of this mountain by a Polish team consisting of alpinists Janusz Klarner, Jakub Bujak, Adam Karpinski, Sherpa Dawa Tsering, Dr. JR Foy (British), liaison officer Major S.Blake and Stefan Bernadzikiewicz. The 1939 Polish team had reached the summit on 2 July.

 In May 2013, I had attempted to climb Nanda Devi East with a group of fellow Indian climbers. 4 days of non-stop snowfall resulted in limited climbing days and that in turn caused shortage of food and fuel.

 Despite these limiting factors, we made good progress on the mountain and even could manage one summit attempt from a camp at around 6600m. But during the summit attempt, extremely high wind above 6900m and poor gear conditions of the team added to the agony.

 I decided to turn back from below the summit pyramid, putting safety of the team first. This failure inspired my desire to come back to Nanda Devi East and the 2014 expedition was conceived.

 Beyond BC, the team ferried load for a few days to the foot of Longstaff’s col and established an Advanced Base Camp (4750m). Above ABC, another camp (Intermediate Camp 5000m) was established on a rock step on the lower slopes of the Longstaff’s Col.

 This Intermediate Camp (5000m) was established in an aim to shorten the 1100m plus climb from ABC to Nanda Devi Khal and the idea proved to be very helpful. From the Intermediate Camp (5000m), Longstaff’s Col (5910m) was climbed in only 5 hours and Camp I was made.

 This Intermediate Camp (5000m) was established in an aim to shorten the 1100m plus climb from ABC to Nanda Devi Khal and the idea proved to be very helpful. From the Intermediate Camp (5000m), Longstaff’s Col (5910m) was climbed in only 5 hours and Camp I was made.

 Ahead of Longstaff’s Col, 3 more camps were established respectively in altitudes 6100m (Camp II), 6400m (Camp III) and 6800m (Camp IV). In total we put 4 camps on the south ridge.

 Compared to our attempt in 2013, we found the entire south ridge almost devoid of snow this year. We were stuck in our Camp III (6400m) for 2 extra nights due to bad weather and this in turn resulted in a lot new powder snow on the summit pyramid, making our summit day a slow and struggling affair.

 George Rodway (USA), Thendup Sherpa (India), Anindya Mukherjee (India), Temba Sherpa (High Altitude Supporter), Dup Tsering (High Altitude Supporter), Lhakpa Sherpa (Base Camp Cook) and Himanshu Pandey (Liaison Officer)

 Being a small team and a low budget expedition, we carried a limited amount of static rope to fix. We fixed our ropes en route Longstaff’s Col from Intermediate Camp and on the Pinnacles. Above and beyond the pinnacles, we re-fixed old rope that we found on the mountain itself, in sections. We did load ferries of hardware and food up to Camp II and ascended the rest of the ridge in ‘carry, camp and climb’ style.

 Thendup Sherpa, Anindya Mukherjee, Temba Sherpa and Dup Tsering successfully summited the peak on 3 July 2014. This is the 8th ascent of the peak after 1939 (Polish), 1951 (French), 1975 (Indo-French), 1976 (Indo-Japanese), 1981 (Indian Army), 1994 (British) and 1995 (International Army-HIMEX).

 Time to reconnect

 “In his 1955 book, The Lakers: The Adventures of the First Tourists, Norman Nicholson argues that the industrial revolution brought about a fundamental rupture in man’s relationship with the natural world and he suggests that in one way or another we have been trying to get back to nature ever since. Nicholson describes three post-industrial ‘cults of nature-the Picturesque, the Romantic and the Athletic’ which are all symptoms of our society’s problematic separation from the natural environment.“

 The Himalayas, with their vast expanse and permanence, remain an important symbol for the highest ideals within our imagination. We need to overcome the centuries’ old pang of remorse in our search for a life of security and excess over a life of simplicity and adventure.

 Perhaps one day, everyone will embark on a rich and solitary journey of self-discovery, a path of true adventure, be it mountain climbing, cycling, or any other adventure. We have a long road ahead of us but I’m optimistic about the future looking at the boom in the cycling industry during the pandemic.

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