Sunday, December 18, 2016

Thanksgiving and Ski Trips

Thanksgiving
Thanksgiving is always an interesting time in Geneva as the city is full of Americans and expats from all over the world; however, Wednesday is not a bar night, it's difficult to find Turkey, and there isn't a general expectation that very little work will be getting finalized the entire week.

As one of the more memorable American holidays; many of us are eager to find others to celebrate with.  During the prior year, I hosted fellow coworkers at my apartment and in the current year, I celebrated a US partner's apartment in Lausanne.  There were 38 of us in total so quite a large group of people for dinner.

Everyone brought a dish or two to pass and there was no shortage of food; I think we had 7 kinds of stuffing!  It's always fun to try to make an American recipe while in Europe as not all ingredients are available; for example, I made green bean casserole and the following ingredients don't exist here:

1) French cut canned beans - Replaced with fresh beans
2) French style fried onions - Replaced with actual fried onions
3) Sour Cream - Replaced with Creme acidulee
4) Cheddar cheese - Exists, but hard to find and definitely grated!

Casserole turned out great and it's fun cooking as I enjoy the small challenges that are my grocery store scavenger hunts.

All of the food was delicious and definitely a fun night!



Verbier - Wkd Nov. 26
I spent the the weekend skiing in Verbier and renting a Chalet with friends.  Always a fun city that I've been to several times the past ski seasons.  Slopes were great for this early in the season and kept the Swiss tradition by getting the first raclette of the season.


CAT Team Cook Off - December 1st
Beginning with 2015, our team started the an annual tradition of having a team potluck where each person must make a food from their home country.  I feel a bit disadvantaged as an American with few options outside of grilling and tailgate options while competing with the French, Italians, Swiss, English, and Canadians.  Only rules were you must make the recipe and we were assigned a category to avoid all desserts; the menu:

Starters
Foie Gras*
Salmon Tartar with Avocado
Mushroom Soup

Entrees
4 Cheese Pasta
Sloppy Joes*

Desserts
Macaroons*
Cheesecake
Chocolate Mousse Cake

I made the sloppy joes with a Swiss twist of adding Gruyere cheese and brown sugar imported from the US (also doesn't exist in Europe).  Everyone voted for their favorite within each category, which I've noted with the *s above.  Always a fun event with the team and looking forward to next year's!




Zermatt - Wkd of December 3rd.
As my last trip of the year and to kick off the formal SCIG (local ski club) ski season, I spent the weekend in Zermatt.  I did the same trip during the prior year as well.

Skiing was great although I purchased new boots that were a bit too tight and could barely walk the following day so I was only able to ski for 1 day.  I did go to the Dr. and luckily no break, but pretty sure I'll have no nail in about a week.

In addition to skiing in view of the iconic Matterhorn, this is also a fun weekend as it falls close to my birthday so I was able to spend the weekend and Saturday night out with friends.

Last update of 2016; let's see what 2017 brings!


Tuesday, November 29, 2016

Lausanne Half Marathon and Budapest

Lausanne Half Marathon - October 30th
While still in running shape, but losing my marathon form I ran the Lausanne half marathon on October 30th.  I've ran this race in the prior year and it's is likely one of the prettiest races that I've ever run; PwC also sponsors any employee in the canton that would like to run so the registration is free so why not run!

After running two marathons in 2016, I've really relaxed my weekly running routine so I took this race as an opportunity to sightsee and appreciate the scenery; even stopping for pictures where I was asked if anything was wrong.

The course runs along Lake Geneva with mountains in the background and through the Lavaeux vineyards, it was quite a scenic run!

Following the run, the PwC runners grabbed dinner and drinks before I made my way back to Geneva on the train.


Budapest - November 5th
With work requiring me to be in Brno, Czech Republic the following week, I took advantage of the flight in the region and spent the weekend in Budapest.

I arrived late on Friday and spent Saturday on a walking tour to see the cities' sites.  Budapest fest very similar to visiting Prague although I did not anticipate how cold it would be while there and was quite underdressed.  



After shivering through the walking tour, I grabbed lunch with someone from the walking tour.  Fun fact from lunch would be Hungarian goulash is more so a soup rather than stew; although apparently American goulash is thought to have originated from Hungary (only similarities are there's meat, paprika, and red sauce).


To warm up from being outside in the elements, I went to a Hungarian bath house.  There are several throughout the city as the entire country has many thermal springs.  The baths are Turkish baths with large pools and hot tubs.


After warming up, I grabbed drinks at a local wine bar with some fellow Americans in town for a medical conference, grabbed dinner, and went to a ruin bar (szimpla).  The ruin bars are a theme of Budapest of buildings from the communist regime that were vacant following the fall of communism and are now very popular bars within the city.

The following day, I relaxed and did a wine tasting in the city and prepared for the upcoming work week.  Hungarian famous wines are Bull's Blood, which is a blend of reds and also sweet white wines (similar to mead).  It was all quite good, and a good contrast compared to my visits to Bordeaux and Burgundy the prior summer.

Very fun trip and would love to get back again soon to tour outside of the city.










Saturday, November 19, 2016

Jordan - Nov. 19

This weekend I planned a 4 day trip to Jordan as I've always wanted to see Petra after seeing Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade.

Friday
I worked while traveling and didn't realize until midway through flights that it's roughly a 5 hour flight from London; luckily, I planned to spend a few days here to take advantage.  

Upon arriving at the airport, getting my visa, and then through customs, I encountered my first challenge.  Given the language barrier and I was staying at a smaller hotel, I had to call the hotel and then hand my phone to the taxi manager so that they could discuss where to drive me.  Needless to say I made it, but then learned that someone had smoked earlier that day in the hotel and triggered all of the sprinklers so all reservations for the night were cancelled.  Luckily, the affiliate I was transferred was across the street (note this was all taking place at midnight to 1am).

Saturday
My driver picked me up at 7am to drive to 2.5 hours to Petra.  Within Petra, I had a guide for the first 2 hours who described each of the sights and walked me through the Siq and main walking path.  After the tour, I hiked to the Monastery (1 hour), grabbed lunch (30 minutes), and then did a looped hike to the sacrificial obelisk on top of the mountain (2.5 hours).  Hiking was very pretty with the ancient carvings and temples from 200BC-200AD with the colorful rocks from the varying minerals adding to the effect.


Treasury
Monastery
View from inside a tomb
Hiking path
At the end of the day, I started a hike that appeared to reconnect to the main path leading to the gate from looking at a map; however, it ended with an elevated view of the Treasury, thus at a dead end >100 meters above the path that I needed.  It's also important to note that I had started this hike at dusk planning to reach the end at sunset.  Luckily, there was a group of us and by the time I had retraced the path and reached the entry gate, it was dark.  
Dead end of my hike
The hotel that night was great!  Probably one of the nicer hotels I've stayed while traveling outside of work.

Sunday
My driver picked me at 10am and we drove 1.5 hours to Wadi Rum to meet my guide for the day.  We toured Wadi Run for 5 hours by jeep, touring different rock formations, having tea with the Bedouins, and doing small hikes.  The tea here is probably the best I've had while traveling; black, mint, sweet tea with cardamom.  Wadi Rum is the Jordanian Grand Canyon.



Following the tour, my guide dropped me off at the Bedouin camp for the night for dinner and camping with a larger group.  It was myself, 2 Aussies taking a year of travel, the cook, and a German that was volunteering at camp for the month while also taking a year of travel.  The Bedouin food is traditionally cooked in an underground over of coals buried with the food in the sand.  We had essentially chicken with vegetables and a variety of sides; it was all quite good!  Our campsites were less campsites and more so small huts with beds and power.  This was a stark contrast from my last camping trip at Kilimanjaro!


Lounging at the campsite

Monday
We awoke and had breakfast at our camp before heading to town for each tourist group to depart ways for the next leg of their journey.  My original driver picked me up and we drove to the Dead Sea.  The Dead Sea is the lowest point in earth and is 8x saltier than the ocean; so salty that you float with no effort.  The muds are famous for their healing/spa qualities so I partook and had someone coat me for 3 JD (4 USD), let it dry, and then went in the water.  Washing my face was 'interesting' as the water was so salty it burned your nose and I had to run to the beach to my chair to rinse my face with a bottle of water so that I could then open my eyes.  After the Dead Sea, I returned to Amman for the evening to fly out the following morning.  Note that this was my original hotel that I was supposed to stay at on my first night in Amman, but no issues this time.


Vantage point along the road trip
Dead Sea
Mudded Up!

Jordan was a blast and I would highly recommend going!  The country is quite safe; the tour experience is very interesting as everyone knows each other and it's quite a network.  See below for an example:

Day 1
I had a single driver take me from Amman to Petra, to a separate guide, to then another driver (friend of my original driver) who led me to my Petra hotel.

Day 2
My original driver drove me from Petra to Wadi Rum with directions that someone will pick me up the following morning at the same location at 8:30am (note I'm in the desert with no reception), to a separate jeep guide, to a then separate campsite.

Day 3
Rode from the camp with another group's jeep driver to town and arrived at the location.  That driver then called someone to pick me up and it was my original driver.

Sunday, October 30, 2016

Kicking off the Ski Season - Oct. 22

As the summer has come to a close and the weather has cooled, leaves are beginning to change, and football season has begun, it is time to look forward to ski season!  

Although absurdly early, I went to Saas Fee for the weekend to ski with friends (I have never skied in November yet alone October!).  Saas Fee is the center of Switzerland and the skiing is on a glacier so it's possible to ski most of the year although it did take 3 lifts to reach the top of the mountain as there was no snow in the village.


Coverage wasn't bad for what was open, although not a lot of ski terrain was open.  Most of the area was dominated by ski teams (private club, high school, and national teams throughout Europe); it was likely that 10 pct. of the skiers were recreational.

In order to get skiers to the area early in the season, the resort was featuring a promotion to demo skis (essentially free with the lift ticket and hotel from now through the end of November). I managed to try 6 pairs of skis in a day and a half of skiing and many things I would not buy such as slalom and long GS racing skis.  I did manage to push the GS ski to the limit, get some air and then proceed with a GS style fall skidding down the hill to a stop and breaking the ski; I was perfectly fine so no worries.




All-in-all a great way to kick off the ski season; the only negative being there are limited restaurant choices this early in the season as not much has opened.  We laughed early in the day that a reservation would be needed and then struggled to find a restaurant with an available table for dinner and had to sit at the bar.



Sunday, October 16, 2016

Berlin Marathon and Ocktoberfest - Wkd Sept. 24 and Oct. 1

Long before I had moved to Europe and once I began getting interested in running marathons, I had learned that the Berlin marathon was at the end of September during the Oktoberfest festival in Munich, which convenient would allow for a great post race party.  Last summer, we organized a group of 6 runners and 3 spectators for this race (which was Sept. 25, 2016); ranging from my sister (Melissa), to college friends (Lisa and Alicia), and then friends of friends (Dan, Chris, Kris, Plum, Josh).  The races fills up quite quickly so we were lucky to all obtain racing bibs through lottery registration that allowed runners to apply in groups of 3 where all runners were either accepted or denied.

Melissa arrived in Geneva on Thursday and did some sightseeing and relaxing to adjust from jetlag before flying to Berlin the following day.  Per usual, we went to Chez Ma for dinner; every American visitor to Geneva has now been here, but we did forego fondue and raclette as neither are the best pre-race meals in a week leading up to a marathon.  We arrived late on Friday in Berlin after needing to make some emergency flight changes requiring a ticket to be purchased at the Geneva airport ticket desk.  When arriving in Berlin, we then had an "interesting " 30 minute taxi ride listening to German hip hop on full blast sung by the driver's cousin; during the drive, the driver also sung along and was texting during the entire process so we felt quite safe!  In retrospect, if you're ever asked if you'd like to listen to some German hip hop I would suggest politely replying no.  After the longest 30 mutes of my life, we reached the apartment where we were staying; our entire group stayed in an apartment that slept 9 people all in beds and was incredibly convenient when traveling with a group that size.

On Saturday morning, we participated in the Breakfast run, which is a 6km run that finishes in the Olympic stadium with coffee, bananas, and pastries are available afterwards.  Arriving at the Olympic stadium to run one final lap was quite an amazing experience with great views.  The remainder of the day was spent trying to stay off our feet as much as possible with the race the following day.


Start of the Breakfast Run
Outside the Olympic Stadium
View when entering from the tunnel
Snacking post run

Judgment day
The marathon started at 9:15 and we didn't have to leave our apartment until 7:30, which was quite a nice alternative from other races I've done where it has been necessary to wake up at 5 or before.  Race day weather was gorgeous as it was sunny and about 50F at the start with the last hour getting a little hot (70F).  I ran well for the first 21 miles and then made the mental decision that I didn't have the energy for a BQ push so I slowed my pace to appreciate the experience and scenery.  It was likely the best I have felt after a marathon other than in Philly when I was very well trained as I'm typically used to my whole body seizing up post race.  The course had plenty of spectators and the course followed many of the famous sites in the city; at the finish, the runners ran beneath the Brandenburg Gate so that was quite special.  The end even had showers so was able to be clean and sun bath in the grass in front of the Reichstag while waiting for the other runners.  Most of our group finished within a relatively similar time span so we all waited and cheered for one another before going back to the apartment.  

Marathon morning - Prerace
Post marathon at the Reichstag

After all of the runners arrived, we then cleaned up and relaxed at the apartment before going to the Prater Biergarten for some victory beers and brats; this biergarten is apparently the oldest in Berlin.  While at the biergarten, we were joined by my friend Meghan (from Australia study abroad) and her husband as they saw that we were in town so that was fun to catch up with some old friends.  Following the biergarten, we capped off the night at the horror bar near our apartment; very odd bar, but it was very near our apartment.




The following day we did a hop on hop off bus tour to see the remainder of the city that we missed on the marathon (or went by too fast to see).  We saw Checkpoint Charlie, had dinner at a Pirate Bar near the East Side gallery and then prepared for the following day as we had the train for Munich.




We had a 5 hour train ride to Munich and 
arrived mid afternoon; the trains are great in Germany (Per Dan)! Beyond the speed and efficiency, the escalators in the stations change direction depending on if there is no one on the escalator and you approach the oncoming direction; this created a fun game over the course of our trip.  After arriving in Munich, we kicked off being in a new city by grabbing a few masses of beer at Hofbrauhaus and then all split to different directions of the city for sightseeing and shopping; I helped Plum find some leiderhosen.  That night, we grabbed dinner and went to the Paulaner tent to kickoff being in the city for Oktoberfest.









The following day (Wednesday) we did the New Europe walking tour; note that this is my 3rd time doing the tour so I'm quite sure that I could give the tour by now, but I still really enjoy it!  We had lunch at the Schneider Brauhaus and then the group separated.  I went to the BMW museum with Melissa and Chris while the rest of the group went went shopping (primarily to find leiderhosen and dirndl for the 
Oktoberfest tents).  For dinner, we went to Alten Kreus!  Alten Kreus was a restaurant near the hotel I stayed at my first time to Munich (and Europe) in 2011 and I've eaten at the restaurant on every trip back since as the food and people are great; the whole group really enjoyed the restaurant.  Following dinner, we had some drinks at Paulaner Nockerberg before heading home; this brewery was where I also came in 2013 when in Munich for Starkbierfest on my first ski trip to Europe.



BMW car badges from the beginning to now




Wiener schnitzel at Alten Kreus

Thursday was Oktoberfest all day!  We started the day getting breakfast at Marienplatz before going to the tents for our reservation at 11:30.  Being a weekday, we were able to walk in and get a table quite easily; we had one drink at our reserved table before moving to the open area as we would otherwise had a harder time finding a table at the end of our reservation (4:30).  The Hofbrau Tent, as usual, was a blast!  I'm not sure if it was the fact that we started at noon or had just ran a marathon a few days prior and had not been drinking during training, but we were all in bed by 10.  I actually got 8+ hours of sleep during the night!




Most of the group; this is the beginning of the day before entering the tents!

Yours truly; and of course my shirt is green and white and I'm sporting socks from Kyle's wedding!
The following morning, I walked Melissa to the airport at 7am!  Any complex thinking was not possible so I did some relaxing and we spent the remainder of the day wandering the city and checked out a few of the tents to see the insides of others as we had only been in 2 before then.  The decorations are quite impressive given the tents are built for a 2 week festival and then torn down until the following year.

That evening, we embarked on the next leg of the journey and flew to Milan late that night.  At this point, it is only Lisa and Plum, Alicia and Kris, and me on the trip.  The following day, Plum and I got breakfast for the group at Twins and went and rented a car.  Lisa, Plum, and me spent the day going to sparking white wine wineries in Franciacorta and then dinner on Lake Como while Kris and Alicia shopped.  The weather was very wet (it downpoured), but we had fun in Como riding the funicular to the top of the city and then having an amazing pizza dinner before heading home for the night.  The following day, I returned the car, ran, and did lunch with the group before boarding a train back to Geneva.

This was a GREAT trip with fun people; everyone was very easy going and I would travel with any of them again.  The train ride home was a quite sad given we had spent so much time planning this trip and the anticipation that led up to it; we had a lot of fun with no issues and now it was coming to a close.  For me, it also was my last big trip that I had planned for the summer and now must return to real life and back to work.  I'm not sure if you've been reading my blog posts, but I feel like I've been traveling on vacation since the end of July (and maybe even June) and now must finally return to reality.


Saturday, September 10, 2016

Greece - Wkd Sept. 10

Arrival in the Islands
After working the week in Geneva and with the McLaufer/Interliggi trip drawing to an end, I had another US visitor (Aimee Schauer) in town and we decided to do some traveling to Greece.  Note that typically this would be a short week within the US due to Labor Day, but Switzerland does not celebrate this holiday; however, Thursday was a holiday within Geneva as it was Jeune Genevois so we had a long weekend.

On Wednesday, I flew to Athens and arrived at the hotel at 2 am and Aimee arrived earlier in the day to relax after the long haul flight from the US. The following day we had a ferry planned for Paros leaving at 7:15am so we tried to stay close to the port; I think i slept 3 hours max. that night, but we made the ferry.


On Thursday, we arrived at Paros at 10am and hit the ground running after checking into the hotel.  We rented a dune buggy for the day and this was by far one of the best ideas we had as we were able to visit several of the beaches the first day (Santa Maria, Monastiri, Piso Livadi, Contaratos, Pounda, and Chrisi Atki).  At Chrisi Atki, I took a wind surfing lesson and fell a few times, but was otherwise quite successful having sailed a few times in the US and knew the basic techniques and concepts.  Definitely a fun experience that I was happy to try!  That evening we dune buggied back to Piso Livadi for dinner on the water.


  
The following day, we did an all-day boat cruise to see Anti Paros, the neighboring island, with a few different snorkeling points along the boat ride.  We snorkeled near the coves, rocks, and small caves along the island where we saw some fish in the cool blue water.  Fun day trip and then we did dinner in Naoussa that night on the water and then followed the beaches back to our hotel.



On Saturday, we rented another dune buggy after having such a great time the first day.  We went scuba diving and I did an intro course while Aimee did an advanced course to see the remnants of a small shipwreck, many fish, crabs, and sand dollars.  Fun fact was we were one of the only groups ever to recognize that the instructor has a Nittany Lion tattooed on his back shoulder as he did his master's degree there.  For dinner, we dune buggied to Lefke; this proved to be a fun experience as it was in the center of the island in the mountains, all of the roads were poorly lit with no guard rails, and we were using a dune buggy with no speedometer, gas gauge, and a terrible turning radius; we managed to make it home though.

On our final day (Sunday), most of the time was spent doing a 12 mile run as part of my training and then we headed back to Parikkos to take the ferry back to Athens.  The visit to the islands was great as it was warm, sunny and the food was amazing as there was fresh seafood everywhere.  I tried Octopus for the 2nd time (first time in San Sebastien on the France road trip) and it is easily one of my favorite island foods going forward.

Athens
We had two days in Athens and on our first day we did a 3 day island tour to Hydra, Poros, and Aegina: 



The following day in Athens, we did a walking tour to see the Acropolis and Forum:



All-in-all, Greece was a great time and I would love to go back, the food was amazing and there is so much to see on each of the islands and in Athens.

Saturday, September 3, 2016

Gruyeres - Wkd Sept. 3

During the month of August, I spent all of my time in the US other than one week when I returned to Switzerland.  The first two weeks were spent with a day in Detroit followed by Ludington for a week and a half for Kyle's bachelor party and with Melissa's family, and then Kyle's wedding in South Bend followed by a few days of work in Peoria before returning to Peoria.  This was quite an eventful time period, but always fun coming home.

After in Geneva for less that a week, I then flew to Detroit area to run the CRIM, make a celebrity appearance on my old soccer team, and go to Disney world for a work training.

I returned to Geneva on Sept. 2nd and had visitors the next day as the McLaufers and Interliggis were beginning a two week European vacation.  I ran my last 20 mile training run for marathon training and then I met them at the airport as my bag as delayed from the prior day and helped them reach their AirBnB.  After leaving them for some time to relax, we went to Yvoire for filet du perch on Lac Leman.  Very fun first day, but the jet lag was catching up to all of of us well.

The following day, we went to Gruyeres Switzerland, home of Cailler Chocolate and Gruyere cheese.  We did a tour of each; both were fun, but at the end of the chocolate tour there they provided endless tastings of their entire chocolate line so that tour wins of the two.


Gruyeres is a gorgeous city perched within the mountains; the castle is located on the top of the the mountain along with the entire old town.  In the city, we did a fondue before heading into the castle for some sightseeing and back to Geneva.



The group had a Chamonix visit planned the following day (Monday) so we did one last dinner at Chez Moi (likely the 5th time in a month) and then they continued their Eurotrip on to Zurich!

Sunday, August 21, 2016

Kilimanjaro

As part of my plans for the summer, I decided to go on a trip with some ski club friends to climb Kilimanjaro.  I figured this could be a great trip while living in Europe as a group of friends had already finished most of the planning, it fit with my schedule, and I was in good physical fitness based on the amount of running I regularly do for marathon training.  Kilimanjaro is a single mountain that is freestanding rather than part of a range as you would see in the Alps or the Rockies. 

In retrospect, I severely underestimated the physical requirements of the hike.  Leading up to the trip, I didn't do much preparation other than my typical running and then in the final week I had a bit of a scramble to get to all required vaccinations and medications (in French) and order/receive hiking boots the day before I flew to Tanzania; luckily, most of the other gear was the same that I would need for skiing.  This was my 2nd trip to Africa (following Morocco in Fall 2015) and Tanzania was substantially different than Morocco.

Our tour was organized through Trekili; I was very impressed by our tour group as all of the staff was very helpful and knew what it would take to get us up the mountain by keeping a slow pace, monitoring our vital signs twice daily (Oxygen and Beats per Minute), and working altitude acclimatization into our daily hiking routine as much as possible.  We had 2 guides (Matthew and Stephen), 1 cook, 23 porters for 5 hikers; may have been slight overkill!  Every day we received 3 massive meals, were greeted with morning tea/coffee in our tents, had a tea time snack around 4p, and had a full bathroom that was set up at each camp; we never could finish all the food!  We were by no means a low maintenance group if you read on through my daily summaries.  Once we determined on day 4 that we could all stomach french toast, it somehow found its way into all of our meals.


Another interesting fact about one of our guides is he was hired by a runner to plot the course to run up/down Kilimanjaro that set the women's record (approx. 13 hours) earlier this year and he accompanied the run down.


Matthew (Guide) and Team

Stephen (Guide) appearing out of nowhere along the path; he did this often
During our trip, we became known as 'the Dreamer' team from our tour group; I'm attributing this to our likelihood of summiting or something was getting lost in translation from Swahili.

Getting to Tanzania
I took the 7:15a flight from GVA to Kilimanjaro airport (through AMS) and arrived late the night prior to our trip; this was the longest trip without crossing the ocean I have taken.  When first arriving, I was a bit lost trying to find my airport pickup that ended up being a sign that said Mike and no other indication of tour company so I tracked my progress through GPS on my phone to make sure this was the right ride; other than that the flight in went well.  Immediately the following morning, we started the transportation to the gate and the first day's hike;

Day 1 - Arusha to Mt. Mkubwa Camp

We started our day with a 2 hour drive from Arusha to register at the park gate and then began with a 3 hour hike through the mountain forest to our camp for the night.  On the hike, there were monkeys and many ferns, mosses, and tree coverage.  When reaching camp, we were greeted with a large dinner in the mess tent; the food on the trip was very good and better than I would likely eat while living in Geneva as I was often stressed to eat as much as possible in order to ensure I would have enough energy since I assumed there would be a point of the trip where nothing would be appetizing or I may succumb to the altitude sickness.  Following dinner, our vitals were taken (also taken each morning) and this became a routine each day of the trip; during this process, our BPM and O2 were taken, we were asked how we felt on a scale from 1-10, and how much water we had drank during the prior day (recommended 4L - 5L).  Each time vitals were taken, I think my heart would beat about 10 beats faster due to nervousness.  First day felt great so there were no surprises between any of the group members.  One major consequence of the recommended amount water to drink and the combination of altitude medication (Diamox) was the need to use the restroom often; typically this would not be an issue, but getting up 4-5 times a night when it's below 0 C is dreadful!


Registration Gate.....The Beginning!
Mountain Forest Hiking
Kilimanjaro View from Camp on Day 1
Team on Day 1 in good spirits and looking warm!
Mess Tent for meals

Day 2 - Mt. Mkubwa Camp to Shira 1 Camp
Following the morning tea and breakfast, we hiked 3 hours until lunch then another 2 hours to the Shira I camp; we crossed from Mountain Forest area to Moreland (Mountain Tundra) and closed the day with Kilimanjaro in the background.  During the course of our hike we started in the Mountain Forest area, moved into the Moreland area and will progress through the Semi Desert and Ice Cap areas on the way to the Summit.  

As we finished our hiking at 3, we had time to kill after the afternoon tea and played some cards.  During our dinner debrief, we were warned to be cautious at night as there are Caped Buffaloes and Hyenas near this camp typically; luckily neither of the two were seen by any members of our group.  The following morning, I awoke to find frost on my tent and this became an ongoing theme for the remainder of our trip. 

Kilimanjaro from Camp
Morning view from the tent
Day 3 - Shira 1 Camp to Moir Hut Camp
During day 3's hike, we hiked 5 hours mostly flat with a slightly uphill climb to the Moir Hut camp.  The first half was a little chilly as there was still frost on the ground, but once the sun rises it gets hot!  At this point, I'm still feel quite strong as does the rest of the group, but people are starting to struggle with the sun as it was quite intense during the day.  For days where's it's sunny, I purchased a safari hat to hike in that was a lifesaver!  Hat looked ridiculous, but definitely offered protection and I wasn't the only person wearing one (Matthew our guide).  Luckily, I found that I was generally quite prepared on the trip with the gear that I packed as this was a concern when doing my packing the day before the flight; most of my equipment was spread amongst the group during the course of the trip (athletic glasses to Lianne for a day, Turbin/Gaiters/Vaseline to Mandy, and carabiners to clip water bottles to Jill).  This night's camp was at 4200 and after lunch team team was to climb to 4600m as an acclimation hike; we had our first bouts of altitude sickness this day as we had one team member unable to do the optional hike and the other threw up twice on the hike so we had to cut it short to 4400m.  The acclimation hikes were quite helpful even as people got sick as they prepared the team for the Summit hike that would be a shock to the system as we neared 6km (most skiing is at less than 4km).

We had a scary situation this day as a team member was unable to make the optional hike as she appeared quite incoherent, drained of energy, and had to be given oxygen as her vitals were quite low. Luckily, one of our other team members was a nurse so it was quite helpful to have someone familiar with this situation; in addition, our guides were familiar with these types of situations as I expect this is common for at least one member of each group.  Only positive part of this situation was we discovered that the camping crew would boil water and put in our water bottles so that we could then use this to heat our sleeping bags at night; we all did this every night going forward.

Mountain Desert
Teamwork!
Day 4 - Moir Hut Camp to Barranco Camp
The team member that needed oxygen was fine today as her body had acclimated to the altitude surprisingly in just one night and she was able to continue the hike; it's quite amazing what challenges the altitude can present.  This day in general took the greatest toll on the group.....

We started the day with a hike to the Lava Cap, which was 4550m and immediately upon reaching the top for lunch, we had one team member get sick in the mess tent and all other team members were a bit woozy/light headed after hiking uphill into the sun (it took us 1:50 to walk 1 mile).  After lunch, we hiked downhill to the Barranca camp for the night, which was at 3900m.  

At this point of the trip, I've hit my lowest point as I'm was running a light fever (101F), my stomach was a mess, and pretty sure I'm breaking out with an eye infection or pink eye (learned this was just dust after instantly recovering with a shower after the hike); the team in general was having a hard time eating and replenishing energy, and all of our team was showing some sign of dehydration/exhaustion.  During dinner, there were even short discussions about people considering backing out and not progressing; I'm pretty sure I would have to be dragged off of the mountain for that to happen.


Lava Cap
Day 5 - Barranco Camp to Karanga Valley Camp
Everyone awoke the following morning and generally felt great; being at a lower altitude helped us all get a goodnight's rest, which seemed was all that we needed.  I only awoke once during the night, which was a good alternative to getting up the typical 4-5 times due to Diamox.  Each night, we typically are given about 12 hours of sleep possible so I generally found myself eager to jump out of bed and get dressed to start hiking; this never would happen in my normal work life.  

The mornings hike was up the Barranco wall, which was difficult climb as it was less 'walking' a trail as we had been accustomed, but scaling a rock wall through switchbacks as the trail was very steep and narrow.  This was one of the few places in our entire journey where there were not multiple paths where the porters could pass us so this created an added challenge.  Despite the difficulty of the terrain, the group enjoyed this portion of the hike as we welcomed the challenge and the difficulties and this distracted our minds from feel exhausted or looking ahead in dread of the hours of the journey that remained.  Upon reaching the top of the wall, the views were gorgeous as one side was Kilimanjaro and the other was a sea of clouds with Mt. Meru peaking through the cloud line that we are now above.  Following the wall, we hike through two valleys to our final camp (Karanga = English for Peanut) that is located at 3995m around 3:30pm for the night where we relaxed, had tea, grabbed pictures, and waiting for the next day as it would be the final hiking day to the base camp to our ascent hike, which would begin at midnight.  Fun fact is this was the first place where I had phone service so many of you received emails/txt this day.

Top of the wall





Day 6 - Karanga Valley Camp to Barafu Camp (Base Camp)
Hiking on this day was kept to a minimum (3 hours to the base camp) as we had lunch at the base camp and spent the remainder of the afternoon relaxing before an early dinner (5) as we would only get a short nap during the night as we went to bed after dinner around 7p and would awake up at 11p to start the summit hike by midnight. 

Spirits were high in the group as the camp was at 4.6km and we were feeling great; the last time we were at this elevation was near the lava towers, which was a struggle for the team (see day 4). 



Day 7 - Judgment Day - Base Camp to Summitt (Uhuru) to Mweka Camp
I'm pretty sure that I did not sleep at all as we went to bed at 7p, I was nervous in anticipation of the following day's hike while also trying to avoid getting out of bed due to the low temps; I ultimately broke down for a bathroom break at 9p.

The hike was quite challenging as it was basically 7 hours uphill the entire way (4600m to 5875m); the hike had some spectacular views though!  As we started the hike it was completely dark other than the stars above and the headlamps of the other hikers on the path; we likely saw 20-30 shooting stars as a group.  Much of the hike was like this until we reached the summit at sunrise; this was quite nice for views, but it also helped our team focus on what was immediately ahead rather than getting discouraged at seeing an endless path above.

The last 1.5 hours was very difficult as the air was very thin and it was difficult to catch your breath; we all wanted to kill the guide when he said almost there and then responded that there was 1.5 hours left.  It felt like a death march where I would inhale every left step, exhale every right step, while my heart was racing and feeling as if a heart attack was imminent.  It was a great accomplishment when our group reached Stella point.  From Stella point there was only a short 30 minute hike to the actual summit (Uhura peak) that was much easier.  

The summit was quite cold as our hands immediate froze when taking off our gloves and the water bottles froze along the hike; it was nice when the sun rose to add some warmth.  I was very impressed by our group as no one got sick and we held an incredible pace that was very consistent!  I later learned that we were one of the faster groups on the mountains as we arrived at sunrise. 

Our descent down the mountain was the same path and it only took us 1.5 hours and was more so skiing through the sand than actual hiking.  We were eager to get down the mountain on our small amount of sleep so that we could grab a nap before needing to continue our hike to the next camp.  

When reaching the camp, we were all drained and napped before we started the 3 hour hike to our camp for the night.  We later found out that our other team member who did not attempt the summit was taken by mobile stretcher to the final camp.  The path was not the easiest as it was full of rocks and not smooth so this would have been quite the site to see; the stretchers have a single wheel underneath and cannot be comfortable.

Mountain stretcher; looks comfortable?
For dinner that night, the cook made us a typical Tanzanian stew of beer, carrots, onions, and plantains that was quite tasty; he also made us a congratulations cake that was quite special.


Summit Team
Spartan Will!
Glacier at the top
 Crater view at the top



Day 8 - Mweka Camp to Mweka Gate and Airport
For the final day of our trip, we had a 3 hour hike down the mountain to the park gate where we did a tipping ceremony with the porters and said goodbye to our guides.  It was an odd experience after being surrounded by this team of people for 8 days whose purpose was to support us to reach the top of the mountain while also remaining safe. 

After the departure, we grabbed lunch in Moshi before heading back to the hotel as it was about a 2 hour drive from the gate to the hotel.  In my short trip to Tanzania, this was the only meal that I had outside of a tent other than a small hotel breakfast the 1st day of our hike; none of us ventured too far from comfort food and ordered burgers, fries, and beer.  

Once arriving at the hotel, I quickly had to unpack my camping bag and repack my bag to fly; this was a fast process as it involved putting all of my clothes directly into a trash bag then into a suitcase given the volume of dust in my clothes from camping.  I did have time to shower, which was amazing and I could not have been more thankful!  Immediately following the shower, I needed to go to the airport as I had a same day red eye flight back to Geneva as I needed to be home quickly to then board another flight in GVA within 24 hours to from home to the US.  During our hiking, my body became accustomed to sleeping at 8pm each night, which is even further than the the time difference from GVA to the US so that will make the adjustment home even more fun.

All-in-all this was an amazing trip that I will never forget; I was thankful for the help from our tour group and the new friendships that I made on the trip.  We definitely underestimated the effects of the altitude sickness that we all experienced in different ways during the trip, but in retrospect I'm not sure what we would have done different in our training.  I was lucky enough were my first time using my hiking boots was 8 straight days of hiking in Africa and had no problems with blisters.


Completion Gate
Fun Trip Quotes
- During Vitals (Me) - "I'm Mike Nitz, I'm 10.5."
- End of Day 5 (Me) - "I feel stronger as we go higher."
- Summit Hike (Another Group's Guide) - "Eat the cheese and don't ruin this for me."  This guide was yelling at his group and we had a good laugh; I was quite thankful for our guide keeping a slow, consistent pace and knowing the mountain.
- Summit Hike (Mandy/Mathew) - "We're almost there only 100m to go." / "How long?" / "About 1.5 hours." / "**** You Matt".  Last portion of ascent climb.

I land in Geneva at 11:10a and fly out to the US the following day for 3 weeks at 10:30p for a friend's wedding so could be a while before my next update.  Working in Europe is tough in the summer ;):

June 24 - July 10 - France Road Trip
July 11 - July 22 - Work
July 14 - July 18 - Poland
July 24 - Aug 2 - Kilimanjaro
Aug 3 - Aug 18 - US
Aug 26 - Sept. 2 - US