Day 6: Acclimatization hike to the Lenz Rocks
I liked the dome that we slept in at high camp. Very warm and compared to a tent, it was a lot higher and provided much-needed room to maneuver. For the first time in days I was able to sleep inside a sleeping bag with a single layer of clothing on my body, no glove and glove inners, no sock layers, and no hats.
The first morning at hike camp was the acclimatisation climb to Lenz Rocks at 4600m – a climb of 800 m all on snow. The climb was very hard from the word go. We had to be roped in most of the hike because of the many crevasses along the trail. To walk on a single file for too long and paying attention to the rope is an additional distraction you sometimes do not need. The last 100m of the climb was the most difficult and because we arrived later than the guys, we did not have enough time to recover; we had to get on with the ice-axe and rope training. The views were breathtaking.
It was not as cold as I anticipated, and this was encouraging. After training, we descended to high camp for dinner and much-needed rest. The question from some of the team was how we were going to recover in time for the summit climb in 30 hours. We all resolved to minimise movement during the period, we had no other choice.
![Mount Elbrus Training 4800m](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/8e3ab0_957d797a081a41dba1aa213527c81124~mv2.jpg/v1/fill/w_980,h_364,al_c,q_80,usm_0.66_1.00_0.01,enc_auto/8e3ab0_957d797a081a41dba1aa213527c81124~mv2.jpg)
Day 7 Rest day and preparation for the summit day
The next day was a “lazy” day but there was not much sleeping – our anxiety had peaked and as my mother would say – we suffered from "excitosis". So it was breakfast, sleep (or try to), lunch, sleep (or try to) and then after dinner we had to make sure all gear and equipment were packed and ready. Andrei our chief guide announced that the weather was looking good and that we would be woken up at 12 am as planned. He would wake up at 11 pm for a final check before waking us up at midnight.
Day 8 Summit Day
At 12 midnight on summit say, we were woken up to get ready to leave. We were lined up earlier than anticipated and left shortly before 2am. The first 800m were all too familiar – we completed the same hike two days before. The question was how our legs were going to hold up for another 1000 grueling metres. At around 4800m a decision is made around whether we summit the east peak (5621m) or the west peak (5642m). Although the east peak is a recognised summit normally used when weather is bad, amongst climbers this is seen as a “no-summit”. After a fierce debate that might have lasted for about half an hour, we headed for the west summit. That meant an additional 2 hours of climbing that I personally felt we did not afford. But I was democratically silenced. This decision proved to be costly in a way, and there were regrets. At 5000m the mountain was asking us questions and we were fumbling for answers. I have never been so tried in my life. The weather was great, all our prayers were answered, but we were taking huge strain. We were down to doing about 100m of altitude in an hour and the legs were heavy. The 2pm cut-off at the summit was looking a bit dicey.
![Resting on Mount Elbrus summit day 5100 m](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/8e3ab0_006cf3d557574a7d932957ebe743c25b~mv2.jpg/v1/fill/w_960,h_720,al_c,q_85,enc_auto/8e3ab0_006cf3d557574a7d932957ebe743c25b~mv2.jpg)
We got to this resting point where we could clearly see people coming from the South joining this climb so steep that it reduced movement to slower than snail pace. We could see big strong men resting every few steps, assuming almost foetal position as they hung onto their trekking poles. Our guide afforded us the longest rest to prepare for this climb. We removed our back packs, sat down on the rocks and try to eat some of the sandwiches and chocolates in our packs. There was not much conversation at this point, it was tense and very scary. There was also not much left to offer, we had dug deep and we were asked to dig some more. At no point did I entertain the thought of turning back though – punishing as it was. As an endurance athlete I know the power of visualising the end state. The climb from 5300m to 5642m was the steepest and on fatigued legs, there is no way to describe what it took to make each step.
Mount Elbrus - the great summit
The closer we got to the summit, the worst the weather became. That meant that we literally had to make a run for the summit. After 12.5 hours of climbing that was no mean feat. The adrenalin kicked in though, but for me not nearly enough. I could see the summit but my legs were simply not responding to the frantic call from Natasha the guide to "go-go-go". The weather got so bad that we could not spend even 5 minutes at the summit. What was most scary for me was this electric-current like phenomenon that was attacking every few seconds. When that happened, Natasha’s calls to descend would get loud and more incessant. We made it to the great Mount Elbrus summit, but could only afford a few moments of photographs. After that literally had to run down to safety, to a level where the weather was a lot calmer.
![Summit Photo Mount Elbrus North Climb](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/8e3ab0_978eea42d63b40bb8413e1de6d6ab0c3~mv2.jpg/v1/fill/w_960,h_720,al_c,q_85,enc_auto/8e3ab0_978eea42d63b40bb8413e1de6d6ab0c3~mv2.jpg)
The entire descent took us in excess of 5 hours and at exactly 20:00 on 3 July, we arrived back at high camp. Completely kaput but hugely relieved. We were called super girls for the fight that we put up – but great fight it was.
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