Home > Vietnam > Vietnam Travel News > Making our way up Mount Fansipan |
Making our way up Mount Fansipan
Mount Fansipan is only half as tall as Mount Everest. Yet this
mountain, perched at the eastern edge of the Himalayan range in Vietnam’s
uppermost Lao Cai province, is hardly an easy climb.
Together with a group of friends, I’ve opted to take the chance.
It takes about two hours to reach the campsite from the clearing where we have
lunch, according to our guide Dung. From there it’s two more hours to the
summit. The mist is thickening.
When we reach the next plateau, it billows around us, covering everything more
than ten feet away in a wispy shroud. We decide to save the final ascent for the
morning. Dung says he’s only seen the sun shine on the summit twice, but we hope
for the best.
The weather is not encouraging. By the time we reach the campsite, a hilly
clearing surrounded by bamboo forest, the wind blows in gusts so hard it sounds
like rain.
We crawl into our tent, a long blue tube that could have about twenty people
cocooned sardine-style, and take refuge in our sleeping bags. Although it is
barely 4pm, we can only think of rest. Dung fills a bowl with rice wine from a
plastic water bottle.
“The first time I came here I didn’t drink any. Then I couldn't sleep,” he says,
taking a generous swig. “It was so cold!” He passes the bowl around. It goes
down harsh, but it makes us feel marginally warmer.
Dinner arrives, prepared by local H’Mong women: stir-fried chicken and ginger,
tofu steeped in tomato sauce, garlicky strands of cabbage. We devour ample bowls
of rice. Between bites, Dung asks us about America; we ask him what it’s like to
grow up in Sapa.
"Around here many children speak English before they can speak Vietnamese,” he
says, flushed from the wine. “They don’t go to school. They follow tourists and
try to sell them stuff.”
Within minutes, he is sleeping soundly. I fall asleep but wake up soon after,
tossing and turning in the darkness. A few feet away the tent flap has come
undone, and the wind rushes in, sharp and blistering. I burrow into the hood of
my sleeping bag.
Waking again, I see a fierce white light through the crack in the tent. The wind
feels more bearable in the sun. A hurried bowl of ramen noodles laden with
cabbage and strips of soft omelet, and then we’re headed for the summit.
The first few minutes are easy walking, and we keep a rapid pace. When we emerge
from the shade of the bamboo forest, Dung lets out an ear-splitting “Woo!” He is
always happy, bounding up the mountain in a red fedora and tight jeans. It seems
like not even the cold can unnerve him. I step up a final rock after him, onto a
broad plateau.
We’re above the clouds now: surrounded by the gentle curves of terra cotta
peaks, speckled with trees, and beyond that harsher green ridges. In front of us
the mountain slopes upwards, and someone asks if that’s the summit. Dung laughs.
Now we are clambering up boulders again, and the rest breaks grow more frequent.
We are not talking anymore, only dragging ourselves forwards with vines and
carefully placed bamboo rods.
The current record for scaling Fansipan is one hour and thirty-five minutes. We
feel accomplished enough when, two and a half hours after leaving camp, we
stumble up the last incline onto flat ground.
The wind hits hard at the summit. Clouds drift across sprawling ridges,
mountains that would seem formidable if we were standing anywhere other than the
peak of Fansipan.
Somewhere down the Himalayan chain, Mount Everest beckons. Three thousand metres
in the air, gazing into the foggy blue distance, I feel a little closer to
reaching it.
Elisabeth Rosen
Source: VOV |
High Quality Tour Service:
Roy, Spain
Fransesca, Netherlands
A member of Vietnam Travel Promotion Group (VTP Group)
Address: Room 509, 15T2 Building, 18 Tam Trinh Str., Hai Ba Trung District, Hanoi, Vietnam (See map)
Tel: +84.24.62768866 / mail[at]tuanlinhtravel.com
Visited: 1967