NEPAL

Nepal’s cabinet meets at the Gorakshep base camp region of Mount Everest December 4, 2009. The cabinet began a meeting close to the base camp to send a message on the impact of global warming on the Himalayas, days before global climate talks start in Copenhagen. REUTERS/Gopal Chitrakar

Covering a Nepalese cabinet meeting at 17,000 ft was an exciting assignment, but challenging as well. Mountaineering teams, expeditions and trekkers normally take 10 days to reach that height to avoid altitude sickness. I was given just two days to achieve it, carrying oxygen bottles along with appropriate shoes and warm clothes!

From Kathmandu I flew in a small twin otter aircraft to Lukla,  gateway to Mt. Everest, the landing a challenge for even experienced pilots as it’s a tiny airstrip. After a night in Lukla, it was a short helicopter ride the next day to Shyamgboche, situated at some 14,000 ft. A night at a luxurious hilltop tourist hotel there provided the chance to shoot some beautiful moonlit pictures of the Everest region.

NEPAL/

A view of Mount Everest is seen at moon rise from Syangboche in Nepal December 3, 2009.   REUTERS/Gopal Chitrakar

Next morning the organizers helped us reach the base camp. Since not all choppers could fly directly to 17,000 ft fully loaded, we were ferried in small numbers. A Russian-made MI 17  helicopter that normally could carry 30 people took just 12 at a time to our first stop to Lobuche. In the last hops to our final destination at Kalapathar, the chopper only took eight, another example of  how the height challenges technology. At the base camp I used my oxygen mask initially to avoid altitude sickness, but some friends who boasted large chests and strong lungs managed to do with out it. This inspired the rest of us to take off our masks too.