We gathered in the dining tent at
10:30. Inside,
light from the lanterns illuminated our tired but excited faces. Outside the
glow of the lanterns through the canvas competed with the stars that shimmered
in the otherwise impenetrable darkness of the night.
We were served hot tea and Dickson, our guide,
ever smiling and confident, gave words of encouragement and instruction before
we began the final climb to the summit . . . in the dark. The hope being that
we’d make it to the summit to watch the sun rise above the clouds spread out
like an ocean below us.
That was the hope, but in my heart of hearts I
knew that the reason we were making the final climb to the summit in pitch
darkness, was that if we could actually see what we were doing, we wouldn’t do
it!
“We were thinking of climbing Mt. Kilimanjaro for
our honeymoon,” my daughter Violet had told me some time ago. Perrin, her
beloved and my soon to be son-in-love, was standing next to her, both of them
wearing huge, toothy grins, “and we were wondering if you would like to come
with us?”
They had spent two wonderful weeks with me when I
had been living in Botswana and though I had been back in Canada for two years,
I hadn’t been able to shake the dust of Africa from my sandals. And so an
opportunity to return to Africa! “Yes! Absolutely yes!” I said.
We spent the rest of the weekend talking excitedly
about climbing Mt. Kilimanjaro, but on Sunday morning as they were preparing to
leave, I said to them, “This is your honeymoon . . . you don’t want your mother
sleeping in the same tent as you!”
“That’s okay, we were thinking it would be more
like a holiday.”
“No, really. That’s very thoughtful of you. But
it’s your honeymoon and you’ll never have another honeymoon. I want you to talk
about it on your way back home. I am so grateful for the offer, but you think
about it.”
The drive from Barrie, where I was living, back to
Guelph University where they were both students, was two hours and almost to
the minute, my phone rang and a very tearful Violet cried into the receiver,
“your right, it’s our honeymoon, I’m so sorry.”
“It’s okay. It’s okay.” I said, trying to comfort
her.
Violet and Perrin booked the climb through
G-Adventures, but not enough people signed up for the trip and so the Mt.
Kilimanjaro climb was cancelled. They honeymooned – without me – in Machu
Picchu – which turned out to be one of those “it didn’t go quite as planned”
honeymoons, but that is their story to tell.
But when they returned and recovered from their
Machu Picchu adventure, they called and asked if I would like to climb Mt.
Kilimanjaro with them next year. The honeymoon was over and so “yes,
absolutely, I would LOVE to climb Mt. Kilimanjaro with you!”
On August 23rd, 2011, backpacks
strapped over short sleeved shirts, gaters zipped over our lower pantleg and
hiking boots firmly laced, Violet, Perrin and I stood with twelve other
adventurers, three guides, three cooks and twenty-seven porters who carried our
gear, tables, chairs, dining tent, food, pots, plates, utensils, washbasins,
toilet tent, and water . . . on their shoulders, heads and backs . . . and one
after the other, we walked through Machame Gate into the hot, moist Enchanted
Rainforest that is Kilimanjaro National Park. Hakuna matata. Karibu! (No
worries. Be My Guest!)
“Porters to the left! Porters to the right!” I
lost count of the number of times I confused my left and my right as I turned
my body to let a porter pass by me, checking to see if my fire engine red
duffle bag was one of the bags stacked on his back.
After much walking and talking and getting to know
each other, and the passing by of the porters, the mud floor morphed into
packed dusty earth and the lush canopy and ground cover transitioned into
thick, dry brush as we climbed up and out of the rainforest.
Every once in a while, through the branches, I
would catch a glimpse of a distant rounded mass of grey rock with tendrils of
glacial snow imbedded in its crevices. The snows of Kilimanjaro.
In the months before leaving for Moshi, Tanzania,
I trained as much as is possible when there aren’t any mountains to climb. I
took aerobic classes at the Y, I ran and rode my bike up overpasses, which is
as much altitude as there is in Barrie.
Years after reading it the first time, I reread
Ernest Hemmingway’s “The Snows of Kilimanjaro”. When I told people that Violet,
Perrin and I would be climbing Mt. Kilimanjaro, people inevitably asked me if I
had read Hemmingway’s story. I had. And knowing the plot, that the “hero” was
merely hallucinating, I wondered silently, “Had you?”
“Yes,” I said. “I did read it.”
And now I’m peering through branches, catching
glimpses of the glaciers
that during Hemmingway’s day, covered the entirety
of the summit and which now today, have almost entirely disappeared. But she
was still beautiful and majestic, the sun turning her into burnished gold as it
reflected off the rock as we made our way into camp.
Six hours, eighteen kilometers of walking with an
upward climb of 2,980 meters, we shuffled into Machame Camp to find our tents
set up between groupings of trees with our bedrolls rolled out and our duffel
bags set inside, the toilet tent and dining tent were erected.
Our chef greeted us as we entered the tent, a
white towel draped over his arm, an entertaining smile on his face and bowls of
Chakula cha jioni (hot cucumber soup) and plates of roasted potatoes on the
table ready for us to devour. And devour we did. Fifteen ravenous and grateful
climbers, tastebuds savouring every bite, mouths full of food and compliments.
“Ladha sana!” Delicious. “Asante sana!” Thank you, chef.
Violet and Perrin shared a pup tent . . . just the
two of them. And because I didn’t have a partner, I was assigned a tent mate,
Beth Hallowell, a young woman from Britain. We were well paired and being that
we were sharing a very small space, I was grateful for that.
The sun set gold and night came quickly and very,
very dark. And stars! I never thought I would see stars again as magnificent as
when I was living in Botswana. And now . . . the night sky was filled with
uncountable shimmering glints of star light.
I fluffed my sleeping bag and then with socks on
to warm my feet and a hoodie over my long johns, I wormed my way into my
sleeping bag, pulling the zipper up close under my chin, and wiggling my hip,
found a sweet spot on the rocky ground beneath me. Usiku mwema. (Goodnight).
Note: All photos by Debra, except for the tents
under the stars, which was taken by Chinese Canadian climbing companion Xi Zhu.
Debra P.
McGill
retired for a whole four months after twenty-five years as a United Church of
Canada minister. Now, for the nine months, she’s been serving and learning at the
St. Clair United Church with the Aamjiwnaang First Nation community in Sarnia,
Ontario.
Growing up in a Canadian Air Force family, Debra
has been blessed to experience many adventurous opportunities, including this
story, a short chapter of a much longer story. Debra has two daughters, two
sons-in-loves and three grandsons. She dabbles in photography and very much
enjoys putting pen to paper in the hopes of sharing stories that others might
find affirming as they stir up memories for reader.
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