Saturday, June 19, 2021

Grueling Luxury: Summitting Kilimanjaro

 

I do not have a bucket list. Therefore the question "Why does a man climb a mountain?" is pertinent, and the answer "Because it's there" is certainly a necessary, but not an entirely sufficient condition for making the effort. In my case, Rebecca's suggestion of doing it as a way to do something final and unique to Tanzania that will not be affordable after we lose our residence permits, and our desperate need for some time together after nearly four months apart and living in two separate countries during this transition, was probably the reason that pushed us to a decision. There were factors that we had to take into consideration. This is not normally an ideal time of year. It is winter in Tanzania right now and coming to the end of the big rainy season. The prospect of climbing wet in clouds and sub-zero temperatures was a risk we would have to take. 

Preparation was another matter. Our first consideration was what to do with the kids. They had school during the only week we could plan to go and Oren was finishing the last of his 'O' levels. Our kids are day students at a boarding school so a quick inquiry about possible short-term boarding was given a positive reply, and we then psyched (and bribed) them into accepting the idea. They were not thrilled, but since they have been at the school for four years and are well known, they were not entirely traumatized by the prospect. 

Kilimanjaro protea
The next consideration was a tour company. I did some research and found a company that was at the low end in terms of cost. It is called Monkey Adventures and had many good reviews on Trip Advisor. Choosing a route is also an important question. There are about 8 ways to get to the summit and it is important to consider the pros and cons of each. The longer ones are more expensive but are more likely to assure success as there is more time for acclimatization. On the other hand, every day costs money, and there is an exhaustion factor as you hike many miles each day before summiting. I have read that overall success in summiting is about 45%, but routes 7 days and over have a rate around 64%. (Tour companies will always say their success rates are 99%!) 

We decided the 7 day Lemosho route looked the most promising as it offered exquisite views as we started on the west side of the mountain, crossed the Shira plateau then circled the Southern side of Kibo peak before summiting from the Eastern side between Mawenzi and Kibo peaks. It is described as one of the most beautiful routes. It is also a 'camping route' which meant we would be sleeping in tents the whole way rather than staying in a cabin along the way--a bit dicey considering the possibility of rain.

Fortunately, we had a fair number of the items on the long equipment list needed: Oren had tried the ascent the year before with a school group, and we had invested in some gear for him. Our predecessors in Ethiopia also left some awesome daypacks complete with camel water tanks that we brought back for the trek. The tour company rep. insisted that we come up to the town of Moshi the evening before our trek began to go through a final equipment check and to meet our guide. 

Moorland chameleon
After church, a confirmation Sunday for which Rebecca was the worship leader, we dropped the kids off at school and headed to Moshi where we stayed at a nice resort hotel (Lindgren lodge), bereft of tourists because of the devastation of tourism caused by COVID. We met our guide, a very experienced young man named Charles, and a company rep. (Kennedy) who explained the rules and schedule. We also had to leave all of our money in the hotel safe as the national park does not allow tourists to hike with more than $200, to avoid problems of theft (or false accusations!). Rebecca and I turned in early and on Monday morning we boarded a daladala with equipment, 2 guides, a cook, and 7 porters to head to Londorosi gate for check-in. (Rebecca and I were the only non-staff trekkers, so this was all for us.) Just as a note, tour companies generally contract local guides who are specialists in climbing and have special training in sumitting and dealing with medical emergencies. The guide is also responsible for assembling the team including asst. guide, cook, and all porters. The tour company provides the equipment. 

Check-in was an interesting process. There is a weigh-in of every bag to be sure that no porter's bag exceeds 25 kgs. The porters have a union that protects them from abuse. It was interesting to see an intense negotiation as there were about 8 kilos too much weight in our group's baggage (the excess weight lay there in the middle of the circle: 8 kg of maize flour for ugali = the porters' meals!). After about an hour of negotiation, a settlement was reached and the guides took on some more weight. 

From Londorosi gate we drove to Lemosho gate where our trek officially began. 

Day 1:

Day 1 is planned as a relatively short day. For one thing, there is a fair amount of driving and processing at the Londorosi gate, so you don't really get underway until after lunch. The hike is about seven kilometers through a temperate rainforest. The hike starts about 7000 feet so it is not really warm under the shade of the trees. We were fortunate as it was cloudy, and we were hiking through the cloud layer but did not have rain. There is an abundance of beautiful and unusual flora as well as colobus and blue monkeys and many species of birds. We were hoping to see the very rare Hartlaub's turaco, a large bird I have only glimpsed once before from a great distance during our Meru trek last year. Their incredibly loud call belies their ability to completely elude being seen. They tend to hide in thick leafed trees and are completely green except when they fly and reveal bright crimson underwings. 

Black and white colobus monkey
We were thrilled when we heard one in a tree right above us, and Charles was able to spot it and point it out. Then we realized there were 3 in the same tree! In the next 3 to 4 kilometers, to our delight, we spotted nearly a dozen of them feasting on a certain kind of fruit tree that was growing in places along our path. 

Our seven-kilometer hike ended in the evening at a camp called Mti Mkubwa (big tree). Our porters and cook ran ahead of us and already had our tent set up with our mattresses down and gear inside. There was also a mess tent with two chairs and a table, already set with hot beverages and popcorn. It was always amazing to arrive to a completely set-up campsite. Dinner came after we had some water to wash and did some unpacking for the evening. Dinner was always a multicourse meal beginning with soup and always included fresh fruit and vegetables. I felt like I was at very nice restaurant. Our food was also always delivered by one of the porters onto the table, like a waiter. We were not responsible for clean-up either. The paradox of being in a high-end restaurant in a very rustic setting was characteristic of a lot of the experiences we had on the trip--grueling luxury.

Alpine chat
By the time the sun set, it was very cold but not freezing. We found that they provided us with a 'polartech' tent which meant it had a double thick layer of nylon that really kept in heat. I was chagrined to find that the sleeping bag I brought, which was Oren's, was a fiberfill and not down. I worried I would be very cold and stuck my feet in a gortex raincoat and put on a down jacket before climbing in the bag. To my great surprise, I was very toasty warm the whole night!

Day 2

Shira II Camp
Day 2 was a long day with a pretty steep climb to higher altitude. It was at least 17 kilometers of walking as well as an ascent of several thousand feet to get onto the Shira plateau. We went through the top of the cloud line and exited the rain forest as well to find ourselves on a large very slowly ascending plateau. This is the remains of another more ancient volcano that is part of the three peaks that make up Kilimanjaro. All that is left of the Shira peak is some sections of the rim. It was at one time even taller than Kibo peak, which is what we see as Kilimanjaro now. The climactic zone was moorland, and had dozens of fascinating flowers. When we first arrived onto the plateau, Kibo peak was shrouded in cloud, but it blew over as we walked and we ended up walking the whole time on a very clear day (above the cloud line that shrouded the lower plains of Arusha and Moshi). 

Meru above the clouds
We had lunch at Shira 1 camp. By that time we had hiked about 10 Kms and were pretty exhausted. The first part of the hike was also the steepest. Our porters and cook had gone ahead and had set up the mess tent so we could have a hot lunch. After that we proceeded on to Shira 2 camp, several thousand feet higher (about 12,000 feet.) We arrived in the evening and had a great view of Mt. Meru sticking out of the clouds to our West. We enjoyed dinner that night which was another delicious hot meal, and hot beverages. 

Our team: back row Vuvuzela, Enocki, Raimondi, Ola,
Simon, Charles, Me and Paul. 
Front row: Juma, Daniel,Rashidi, Linus
I should note that every evening after dinnr, Charles and Asst. Guide Simon came into the mess tent and did a health check. This involved asking a series of questions about our health and putting a pulse oxymeter on our finger to measure pulse and oxygen saturation (%). Generally we felt well but were warned that we could get headaches and nausea at 12,000 feet. The guide is trained to administer oxygen, give diamox, a diuretic that can prevent pulmonary oedema from altitude sickness. They can also arrange to have the porters carry you down to lower altitude in an emergency where you can get into an emergency vehicle. 

That night when we went to bed, the temperature dropped well below freezing. Our wash water froze solid by the next morning. Once again I was amazed to find that I was toasty warm in the polartech tent in my fiberfill sleeping bag.

Day 3:

Day 3 is an acclimatization day and involves a 12-13 km hike in which we climbed up to a place called Lava Tower Camp, an altitude of 15,200 feet (a bit higher than Mt. Meru). We had lunch there, then hike back down to a camp called Barranco, which is about the same altitude as Shira 2, but continues further around the south side of Kibo peak. 

The hike up to Lava Tower was quite exhausting, and you could feel the air was thinner. Once again, the cook and porters were waiting for us with the mess tent set up and hot tea waiting. After tea they served us some lunch, then while they packed back up, we started back down the other side of the point toward Barranco camp. We were told it was a shorter hike down than up, but it did not feel that way to us. In fact, the descent was very steep and difficult to do quickly. It felt that this day was at least as long as the day before, with less distance but far more work in changing altitude, going up and down about 6000 feet.

One thing we appreciated was the head porter, who, after making sure camp was set up, would come back down the path to meet us, and take Rebecca's backpack. It was very helpful, especially where there was a steep downhill descent that required poles and even hands to go down. The porter's nickname was Vuvuzela (named after those special horns used by South African football fans), and he was quite a character. He often also relieved the guides of the oxygen tank which they must carry with us the entire trek, in case we need it. 

Barranco camp was deep in a valley and felt steep in that none of it was level. This would be true of most camps at this point. It overlooked the valley where Arusha and Moshi were, and that night, the cloud layer disappeared and we could see the lights of the two towns perfectly. It was very cool to see considering that the valley was always shrouded in cloud by day. 

Day 4:

Rebecca was dreading day 4. It began, after breakfast, with a very steep ascent of several thousand feet on a near cliff called the Barranco wall. It is like bouldering for a good distance and while not a technical climb, if you have any vertigo, you are going to have to deal with the fact that you can look down over 1000 feet as you are climbing up. It is very unnerving. With the help of Charles and Simon, Rebecca got up despite her severe vertigo. Thankfully, we felt the benefit of our daily strength training and didn't have difficulty with the actual climbing part. It was just the mental stress that was tough for Rebecca.  (Hard to believe how quickly the porters do it with 25kgs on their backs or heads.) 

The top was a real treat. Some of the best views of Kibo peak we would have the whole trip, with clear views of the glaciers hanging over its rim. The hike over the whole day was only about 6kms, but the steep ascent made the going slow. We started coming out of the moorland but were treated to some very strange flora, namely the giant groundsels, a relative of Euphorbia. They were like trees from another planet, and gave the landscape an otherworldly feel. We ended up doing another steep descent to get into Karanga camp where we would stay the next night, and fortunately Vuvuzela was there to help Rebecca again. 

Barranco wall
Karanga camp feels way off kilter. It is very steep and I found it difficult to get to the outhouses that were around and return to the tent. I felt like I was going to tip over after dark when walking. 

Another change was that we were finding more hikers at the camps were staying at we neared the base camp. Several routes join at Lava Tower and we could see there were a half dozen other groups (mostly small) that were now on the same route as us. I am sure that in seasons when there was no COVID it would have been quite crowded. Weather continued to be miraculously cloudless and dry. 

Day 5 and 6:

Day 5 was not a long walking day in the morning. In fact it was only 4 kilometers between Karango and Barafu camp. Barafu is the basecamp for about 4 routes to summit Kilimanjaro.  It is also 15,000 ft, the same elevation as Lava Tower and Mt. Meru, only this time we were staying up, not descending. Spending the afternoon there is a good test of whether you are going to get altitude sickness. It is also a hard camp to be at because there is no water there, so all water we had, had to be carried from Karanga. At this point we were way above the treeline and it is like volcanic desert, almost looks like you are on the moon. We also got our first view of Mawenzi, the smaller peak on the East side of Kilimanjaro, by this time we were well above it and looking down. We also begin to run short of fresh food at this point, although the meals were still delicious. 

At Barafu, after lunch, Charles told us to go lie down in the tent until we had a 5pm dinner in which he would brief us on the summitting. Then we were to sleep again until 10pm when we would be awakened to eat something before the summit. We followed the routine he laid out. Unfortunately, we had, for the first time during the trip, a real bad turn in the weather--WIND. Wind started whipping up mid afternoon and the intensity became alarming. Many gusts were over 80-100 kms per hour. I felt like our tent was gong to be yanked off the ground and pulled over a cliff with us in it. Fortunately that did not happen, although some tents did get blown down. 

This created a problem in terms of motivation to go out of the tent to the bathroom. At high altitude you really need to pee a lot more if you are drinking enough. As the wind whipped up, I stopped drinking a lot of water in the tent and began to feel dehydrated. Consequently I could not sleep. By 10pm when we got the wake up call, I had laid there for several hours, but no sleep. 

wind at Barafu Camp
We went to the mess tent and had coffee and sweetened porridge. The team that was to ascend was me, Rebecca, Charles, Simon, and Vuvuzela. They packed everything for all of us in 3 backpacks that they carried. One big challenge was that it was freezing and we had a huge amount of gear on. But water freezes, even the camel water bags tubing would freeze, and once that happened you had to wait until morning for any thawing. 

We started ascending at about 11:30pm. It was pitch black, no moon but the stars were abundant as it was clear. Fortunately the wind had died down to occasional gusts or ascending would have been all but impossible. In the first 20 minutes I realized, to my horror, that I was not OK. Not altitude, but I was dehydrated and hypoglycemic from the sweet porridge and sugared coffee. I was extremely weak and jittery and knew we had 7 hours of steep ascent to go. 

I honestly cannot say how I got through it. Climbing endlessly in total darkness (with a headlamp only) is surreal. I know Buddhists are fascinated with 'living in the moment' but if you want to really experience living in a perpetual, relentless 'present' with no awareness of past or future, just trudge up a steep slope behind the lighted boots of a leader, for hours on end. You lose all sense of time. I hummed the Taize song "Within our darkest night, you kindle the fire that never dies away" endlessly. Rebecca reported feeling that there was no reason not to take the next step, but there was no sense of when that would end. 

At one point we did stop for a break. Stopping feels dangerous because you begin freezing as soon as you are not moving. But we chugged some frozen water quickly and ate a few bites of Gorp. I felt we had been hiking about two hours and I knew I had to give up. I had no energy in my legs. I was just about to say "I give up" when Vuvuzela said to Charles "Ni saa Kumi". I could not believe it! Saa Kumi (10th hour) is 4 in the morning! We had already hiked 5 hours. I knew that in an hour I would see the first hints of dawn over the horizon and I knew if I saw the light I could make it. (I often thought of Frodo and Samwise on Mt. Doom).

Inside the crater
One of the curious tricks of light that was quite fascinating was looking high and straight up in front of me toward the stars. I would see bobbing lights almost straight up above me on the switchback. They seemed to be strange stars, then I realized they were other groups of hikers at various stages of the climb. Some were so high, they blended into the stars. (It was a bit disheartening to see how much more there was to go since there was no other point of reference.)

snow on the crater rim
It is always darkest before the dawn, and freezing, but slowly the hypoglycemia worked off, thanks to the gorp, and then I could see a distinct graying in the east. The day was coming, I would make it! We climbed on and then I began to be able to see the gray rock we were walking up. The first ray of sun came just below the first point where you emerge onto the crater rim, called Stella Point. We stopped and had a cup of chai. The day was clear and cold and we could see the top not far off. 

Within the next 15 minutes we arrived at Stella Point, about 6:20am. Stella Point is not the summit, but it does open onto the lip of the crater, so you are on top of the mountain, but not the highest point. It is considered to be 'summitting' as you are able to look onto the shallow crater at the top. But along one side of the crater is a ridge that rises several hundred  more feet where Uhuru Peak is. The true summit of the mountain. 

Although you can see Uhuru from Stella point, distances are deceptive. It looked like a short walk, but Charles said it would take another hour to arrive there. One reason is how slowly you need to walk. At this point you are above 19,000 feet and the air is noticeably thin. You feel breathless pretty quickly and cannot go fast, especially up hill. Fortunately the sun was out in full force and although freezing cold, it did feel warmer and it was cloudless on the peak. (Still the blanket of clouds 9000 feet below.)

Climbing to the peak requires crossing some snow which seems to be sitting on a glacier. There are numerous glaciers on the summit with very strange shapes, quite beautiful. Rebecca, by this time was really exhausted. Despite that we did manage to trudge to Uhuru peak with the encouragement of our guides. There were about a half dozen other sumitters there when we arrived. All were exuberant. Rebecca broke into tears in disbelief at having made it. (Tears also for leaving Tanzania, and for the realization that once you reach the roof of Africa, you also have to get back down in your exhausted state...)

We stayed a few minutes and took pictures. The cold and thin air does not make this an inviting place to hang out, or have a meal. Getting down is also a challenge as the descent path is even steeper than the ascent. Fortunately Vuvuzela held Rebecca by the elbow to keep her from slipping down the snow, and then the miles of scree (small volcanic stones) back to base camp. What we won slowly in 7 hours we descended in less than 3. You can almost ski down the scree, and descending feels much easier, especially as the increase in oxygen is palpable with each foot you go down. 

Descending looking toward Mawenzi peak
We got back to basecamp, and it felt like late afternoon, but was only about 10 in the morning. We ate some breakfast, took a 2 hour nap, then began another leg of our descent. In order to get out of Mweka gate the next day, we had to do several hours more of descending to a place called Millenium camp. It was quite exhausting after having hiked 10 hours already. (It was 5kms to the summit but rose 4000 feet from the base camp.)

Barafu camp from above
Millenium camp felt quite warm and pleasant compared to Barfu, but was still at about 12,000 feet. We enjoyed our last supper in the mess tent. Our cook (Rashidi) never disappointed. 

Day 7:

The last day was no less grueling than any of the others. We still had to descend about 14 kilometers to the Mweka gate where our daladala was waiting. It turned out to be the worst day for Rebecca as the descent was steep and sometimes treacherous. When we went back through the rain forest this time, it had recently rained and we walked for miles in thick, slippery mud. Our boots were caked. Worse for Rebecca were her boots that for some reason did not protect her toes during the descent. At the bottom, when she took her shoes off there were multiple enormous blisters on every toe, some almost entirely engulfing the toe. So it was harder to enjoy the beauties of the cloud forest on the way down.

It was a great relief to finally get to the gate. The total distance of our trek was about 70km (50 miles). We were pretty dead by then. From there we drove back into town for a debrief at the Monkey Adventures office, then back to the hotel where we disbursed the very much appreciated tips. For the most part, like waiters in the US, the team depends on tips to provide a descent wage for the trip. The Monkey Adventures website provides guidelines, but it needs to be factored into the cost of the trip as a whole. It adds about $400 per person to the cost of the trip as a whole. But we felt it was wholehearedly deserved, as we felt we were treated like royalty the whole time. 

One real blessing for us was being able to speak Kiswahili. It is very unusual that tourists sumitting can speak to guides, the cooks, and porters in their native language. We got to know all of their names and learned a lot. Charles drew most of his team from Arusha where he is from, in an area called Ilboro. Like us, they go to a Lutheran church there, and we have actually been to the Lutheran Cathedral in Ilboro where they pray. 

Charles our guide
Charles told us a lot of interesting stories about how tours are organized, the devastation of COVID on tourism and lost income, and a few horror stories of dreadful tourists who refused to pay when they were not able to summit, some even skipped out on the tip by claiming money was stolen (only to confess later that they made it all up.) It was good to get to know him and his crew and I do pray they can start to see an increase again in tourism. 

I remain amazed by the paradox of what is a very expensive safari, in which you pay big bucks to freeze, trudge, and then do what feels like a forced march up a hill in total darkness. And at the same time, at the beginning and end of each day, be treated like a King served delicious hot food and drink before and after the grueling activities of the day. 

Can I recommend this? Cautiously, yes. Although it would be worth considering the wonder of the whole experience rather than making sumitting the entire goal. No one was more surprised than the two of us that we actually made it to the top. We wanted time together, away from all internet, etc. to share an experience. We were not counting on the summit as the 'meaning' of the adventure. We enjoyed seven days of seeing some of the most sublime views on the planet, and we will never forget that. We were beyond lucky as far as weather goes. Endless days of cloudless sky (above the treeline). I don't know if we could have made it if we had had 7 straight days of rain and snow (as happens some times according to Charles.)

Hopefully this account will give others some idea of what such an adventure is like, and a way to preserve the memory for us. 

We are now down to our last 2 weeks in Tanzania and have one more mountain to climb--packing and selling all of the stuff in our house and getting our family to Addis by July 1st. 

Kibo from the Mweka path

Farewell to our team




Sunday, June 6, 2021

Kilimanjaro is not the only mountain we are climbing this month

This is a last-minute blog update. It is about 9pm and Rebecca and I are sitting in a hotel room in Moshi, a town at the foothills of Mt. Kilimanjaro. We have just been debriefed by our guide and we are going to have a last night of sleep in a bed before we begin a 7-day trek to the summit and back. (Lemosho route for those who have been before). We together (Rebecca in italics) want to give a quick preface before our next post which will talk about our trek. 

We are not hiking with the kids this time. We wanted to have a chance to do something as a couple and they are not huge fans of mountain climbing, so they are in boarding at St. Constantine's this week, which makes our plans for climbing less complicated (and cheaper!). In addition, Oren has the last of his O-level exams this Tuesday, so he needs to be there anyway. 

I arrived back in Arusha from Addis about 10 days ago. I was thrilled to be able to travel with my work and residence permits in tow, thanks to the Herculean efforts of our logistics officer Wondweson, who got them both just hours before I left. It will make re-entry to Addis much simpler. 

The last activity before I left was a farewell luncheon for our Food Security Program Manager Sisay. Sisay accepted a position with MCC Zambia and spent quite a lot of time with us in the last month orienting Mesfin, his replacement. We planned a meal with all staff and the cook Yeshi, with the help of an assistant, prepared a fabulous Ethiopian feast for him. There were at least 8 toppings for enjira, to serve about 12 people. Sisay brought his wife and everyone gave a speech, even Yeshi. We gave him some send-off gifts for Zambia, a leather jacket and bag, and had an enjoyable time together in the backyard with the whole MCCE team. I left a day later to return to Addis and will not be back before he leaves for Zambia.

I have become a virtual connoisseur of COVID tests having had over a dozen in the past 4 months due to all of our travel. It is standard practice to present a negative test upon departure on an international flight, and I got one 48 hours before leaving Addis. But this time, I had to have an additional rapid test upon arrival in Arusha (a new policy). Fortunately, all were negative and I was able to leave the airport with only about a 30-minute delay.

I arrived home to our compound potluck that happens once a fortnight on Thursday. It’s been more and more lively to gather with folks on our compound now that we are a group of at least 9 adults. That night, we sat around an outdoor fire and had some pretty interesting debates. It’s great to allow for very different opinions held by committed Christians, and great that we can still enjoy fellowship despite those differences.

It was great to be home and to feel like I had been missed. We have had some really nice family times and bonding with each kid. Despite still having a lot of work, I made time for engaging each of them, in basketball, frisbee, and dodge ball on the trampoline. There were also several family board games.

Our friends from small group, the Taylor's were also part of a number of reunion activities. Mike and I play golf together and it was great to go out for 9 holes at Kili-golf while Rebecca and Katie took a walk around the course. (Taking a month off did not improve my game.)

The Taylors have also agreed to adopt our cat, Tramp. We realize it is a big commitment for anyone to do that. And we are incredibly relieved that he will have a loving home to go to. I had hoped that maybe we could spirit him off to the USA to live with my parents. But it is incredibly difficult to import a cat into another country (Ethiopia)…and then to export and import him in to the US in just a few days? Also, my dad felt there were practical reasons not to bring him there. I do think it will be much better for him if he doesn’t have to endure a transatlantic journey in the hateful cat carrier. But I already miss him viscerally. Adopting Tramp in September 2019 was a symbol for me of putting down roots in Tanzania, making a four-year commitment. It’s still sad to me, to feel that commitment cut short. And he’s been a great cat, affectionate and interesting and his own boss

We also had friends over last Saturday for an excellent ultimate frisbee game. Four teachers at the Joshua School on our compound have been joining regularly, they are young and athletic and have taken the game up a notch in terms of really competitive aggressive play. Rebecca and I were quite sore on Sunday. 

It would be good here to backtrack a bit on activities that happened in Tanzania in my absence: Rebecca provides some details below:

The kids started a one-week break at the end of May, but it wasn’t a great time to do any kind of special outings since Paul was still in Addis. And I still had a fair bit of work to keep up with. Nevertheless, we had a couple of interesting afternoons with friends.

Our housekeeper’s youngest son turned 6 that week. We have a tradition we’ve built up, where I bake a cake and bring it over for each child’s birthday. In turn, Nay makes a nice simple Swahili meal to share. This was to be the last birthday party we could attend so we made a point to get there with both kids. David is always keen to help decorate the cake and this time we decided that there was no reason not to have a blue chocolate cake. It was actually a very nice afternoon. Nay also invited our new American neighbors to come with their boys. Most of the time, our younger kids were all running around the village with Nay’s kids, checking on chickens and rabbits and exploring houses under construction or something! Oren preferred to stay at the house and talk with the adults, but I’m glad he came.

On another few days, David’s friend Sammy came to spend time with us. We played a bunch of board games and the kids jumped on the trampoline a lot. I guess they also were working on vegetable eye patches at one point. On another day, Oren’s longest-term school friend Abraham came over so they could study geography together. They still had to take an exam that week, regardless of holidays, since it was in the international schedule. The studying was so relaxing that Tramp decided to make himself at home on Abraham’s lap.

We have been trying to squeeze in as many 'good-bye' dinners with friends as we can, as many want to have a chance to wish us well. Sadly we are rapidly running out of time, and our days are not vacations. The job continues to be very demanding and we struggle to make time for social activities. Sunday lunch tends to be our best option. 

On Sunday after church last week, we met up with the family of Eric Mbelle, a friend from church, and our dentist.  We’ve sung in the choir together, served on worship committee and evangelism committee, but we haven’t had time until now to sit and visit with all of them. They lived as expats themselves in Malawi for a few years, and it was nice to compare notes about living outside one’s home country.


In the last week leading up to our Kili departure, we were scrambling to think ahead and make sure we had completed as much work as possible, and making preparations for being off-grid for the next week. We also had quite a few online meetings, focused on planning ahead for our programming next year in Ethiopia. And there is still quite a lot of work to prepare for this month. The day after we return from Kilimanjaro, I will be helping to facilitate worship for an online retreat of Christian leaders from the East African region. I’ve been part of the worship team for the GLI Institute 5 times in the past 8 years —but always in person. This pandemic is forcing us to think outside the box and imagine how worship or theological reflection can still be meaningful when we are not together in the flesh. I had to do a lot of hard work on that yesterday. Meanwhile, Paul took David and the neighbor Brian with his sons to go fishing at Lake Duluti. Maybe for the last time. The boys had a blast together and Paul had a good chance to visit with their dad on a beautiful afternoon.


Another big personal milestone came this morning. Since January 2020 I have been part of a team of three, teaching the confirmation class at our church. We had to take a 6-month break while our church was closed last year, but we started up again last October. It has been a truly meaningful and inspiring experience to meet with these young people and seek to encourage and guide their faith. Today, they made their confirmation. I had the joy of leading the service, while another of our teachers preached. The choir sang for the first time since Christmas. And yes, we all kept our masks on throughout, but it was a very joyful service. Many kids had large groups of relatives present to encourage them. There was even a large guest choir from the home village of one kid—they sang for us outside in the courtyard as we received communion. It was beautiful!


Our final hurdle of today was dropping our kids off at the boarding house at school. It’s hard to say how they are feeling—I’m sure they will be fine, but they would of course rather stay home with us. Still, I am growing in the conviction that we need to ask our kids to do hard things sometimes. These are the kinds of mildly difficult experiences that help kids develop resilience little by little so that they can cope with bigger stresses and anxieties later in life. Our friend Vance even preached about that today. A tree in a vacuum might have all the nutrients it needs to grow tall, but at a certain height, it will just topple over—because it has never experienced wind. A younger tree, buffeted by the wind, develops strong roots so that when it grows taller and faces stronger winds, it can bend without breaking. That is our prayer for our kids as we take them into all kinds of winds of change this year. That’s our prayer for ourselves too: that suffering would build perseverance, perseverance would build character, and character would nurture Hope, which does not disappoint

I titled this blog, cheekily, noting that Kilimanjaro is not the only mountain we are climbing this month. The truth is, the daunting task of completely packing up and emptying our house is ahead of us on our return to Arusha. We have to finish that before July 1, as that is our departure date for Addis. Prayers are appreciated.