T R A V E L O G U E
Trekking out of Lukla Town
Adrian and Melvin wasted no time.
Lunch was over in a jiffy and we started trekking officially at 12:30pm.
We wanted to start earlier to give ourselves more time ahead to ease into the trekking rhythm.
Lukla was a delightful town, kind of a frontier town, if one may like to think of it this way. It had small little shops selling anything from religious trinkets to food, water, clothings, sports-wear and even fake North Face cold wear and trekking poles, whatever you needed as a last minute shopping before your trek.
Of course prices are no longer as cheap as way down there in Kathmandu.
A bottle of boiled water (not mineral water) would cost 60 rupee here while a bottle of mineral water would only cost 10 rupee in Kathmandu.
There were lodges of all klinds, and of all levels of comfort, and yes, to our team members' delight, even a Starbucks Cafe.
Pubs, watering spots and eateries were aplenty, a true reflection of the amount of tourism dollar (rupee) from which the folks here derive their income.
"The walk from Lukla to Phakding is really easy peasy," reassured Adrian. "There will be lots of downslope as you walk, and we will lose about 200m of altitude from where we are here at Lukla to arrive at Phakding which is around 2610m. This trek will take a fast trekker two and a half hours, and a slow trekker about four hours. But remember, this is not a race and I want you all to take your own sweet time and enjoy this easy walk. "
Easy my foot...!
Walking down slope exerted much more strain on our already young knees. And fortunately, vngks, acpical and wkcheah reminded us again and again to bring a pair of knee guards. Otherwise I am sure both mine and SereneXMM's knees would be the first set of casualties on this uneven track.
Right out of Lukla, our first companions that we found trodding alongside us was this pair of
Dropkyos.
Dropkyos were a mix-bred between
Yaks and Cows. They were hardy animals with good endurance and good milk-production. And compared with the Yaks, they were much more tame in their nature and were able to be used for ploughing, something which would be totally impossible with the Yaks. In addition to that, Yaks survive well at altitudes of 3000m and above, whilst their Dropkyo offsprings could do well below that level.
The way to tell Yaks apart from Dropkyos? Yaks have much longer hair that extend to their limbs, compared with the Dropkyos. So usually one look, we could already tell.
We walked to the end of the small town of Lukla and walked under a monument of a famous female climber Lamo Pasang and we were out of Lukla already.
The track turned sharply downwards as we made the first right turn.
And here is that location
A where I saw my fellow team mates already walking waaaayy ahead of me...
Ahead of me here as I rounded the corner and saw to my dismay so many of my mates so far ahead negotiating their first gentle climb...