Socks or Peanut Butter?

Our Mount Kilimanjaro climb is quickly approaching (68 sleeps) and I find that I am starting to think about all the little things, this includes using up a lot of brain power debating what to pack for the mountain. This challenge is not an easy undertaking (the climb or the packing in my opinion).

There are many nuances to consider when compiling what to bring and that is just when you consider the basics of the climb not even preferences. Here is a minimum of what you need to know when you start making decisions on what to pack:

  • How long? 7 day Unique Rongai route
  • With which guide company? Climb Mount Kilimanjaro
  • What does the company provide? tents, food, water, toilet, sleeping mats, basic first aid
  • What will the weather be like? bottom of the mountain +30C, top of the mountain -15C
  • How much stuff am I allowed to bring for a porter to carry? 70-90 liters (44 lbs)
  • How much of my own stuff do I carry everyday? 3 litres of water, and no more than 15-20 lbs (camera, rain gear, some snacks, some ear buds and a iPod if that’s your thing, warm sweater)

Crazy enough the reason I am getting into this ‘what to pack’ thought process is … to get to a discussion on peanut butter! Yup, you read that right! Peanut butter to me as what spinach is to Popeye. It gives me energy, it makes me strong and on a tough hike it gives me back my happy place.

So if this is about peanut butter, why do you have socks in the title? Well, I was trying to get down to the least number of socks possible in my pack so I could justify replacing “sock space” with “peanut butter space”. Yup those are my priorities – or they will be when slogging up and down a mountain for 7 days in Africa.

I was thinking I could get down to wearing the same pair of Smart Wool Hiking Socks for 2-3 days (so bringing only 3 pairs) and wearing the same Wigwam Gobi Liner Socks for 2 days each too (so bringing only 4 pairs).

Well, on my training hike today, I sadly discovered (picture both me and my peanut butter crying at this point) that so few socks is just not going to work.  So glad I tested my quite logical, albeit a bit smelly, theory. Seems that my liner socks stretch out after one wear from the heat and moisture of my clean, very feminine, perfume smelling and super cute feet. Meaning that the seam of the heel part of the liner sits up on my ankle on the second wear and rubs in the worst way between my heel and my boot. Not good! A disaster really after a few hours on the mountain. Doh!

What does this all mean? A few things …

  1. I had to pull over on the side of the BCMC Trail to take off my boots, remove my wool socks, take off the liners and toss em in my pack, put back on my wool socks and then back on my boots. Sitting on a steep trail to balance in bare feet is a real test of my fear of heights and my willpower to stand up and start hiking up again – yes, yes suck it up princess you are about to climb a mountain! {oh and yes you read that right. I am terrified of heights and I am travlling across the globe to climb a mountain. Passion before reason right?!}
  2. I had to go shopping to buy more liner socks so I would have a full 7 pairs; 1 for each day of the climb. Doesn’t sound like a big deal right? Well … hmmm … umm I accidentally bought other stuff too, tee hee. I cannot be trusted at Mountain Equipment Co-Op (MEC) every time I go I add another 2 or 3 things to the list of things I want to do in the world and that list is already pretty darn long!
  3. Finally, and most importantly I will need to downsize my peanut butter jar for the trek. Sob! I may have to go with the smallest container and rock myself slowly in comfort when it runs out on day 5. Sob! If you hear my crying from Africa eat some peanut butter toast in memorandum of my empty peanut butter jar. (mmm PB toast)
Asolo boots and Smartwool socks

Asolo boots and SmartWool socks of amazingness .. liner socks MIA.

On a side note, the BCMC Trail in North Vancouver which takes you up to the top of Grouse Mountain and is a great alternative to the grueling and very busy Grouse Grind is my very new favourite trail ever in the Vancouver area – wow trail, wow workout, wow view! Its a bit longer and more difficult but so worth it!

View from Grouse Mountain Gondola

The view from the start of the Gondola down from the peak of Grouse Mountain.

Brande

PS 68 sleeps to go

Oh the Places these Boots have Gone .. and will GO!

Oban, Scotland Ferry

Lana-Rae and Brande on our 2006 Scotland and Ireland adventure.

We are the greatest of friends and the biggest of geeks when it comes to making every attempt to see all the nooks and crannies of this great world we live in. We have traveled to many places together, alone, with family, and with other friends …and it all comes back to sitting down together in the quiet of the morning, with a warm mug of good coffee, and sharing our latest travel story with each other all the while planning our next adventure!

For a little more info on who we are and what inspires are travel and crazy antics – check out About!

“I haven’t been everywhere, but it’s on my list”  Susan Sontag ~

70 sleeps to go …

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A Table for 7 Please

project management

Project management geek on!

Our 6 week great African adventure starts in Tanzania (climbing Mount Kilimanjaro), then into Zimbabwe (Lake Kariba, Zambezi River, Harare) and South Africa (Cape Town, Drakensburg, Table Mountain, Shark Diving) as tourists. We may even toss in some Zambia (Devil’s Pool) and maybe some Mozambique.

Planning all of this has been interesting – especially with the added nuance this is not just a trip for 2, this is a trip for 7 people at any one time. Wow, that is a lot of moving parts!

So how do you approach planning a trip like this? Well you ‘geek it up’ and go into full blown project management mode. We have itineraries, calendars, task lists and spreadsheets. And those are not all mine, some of the other travelers are doing spreadsheets too! I have to admit there was some mocking when I brought out poster sized post it notes and colour coordinated small post its.

To officially kick off the planning, we gathered on our big deck, ordered in some sushi, cracked some cold pints and started laying out the details:

  • The group had their iPads, travel books, notes and whatever else
  • Everyone had an idea of what they wanted to see, where they wanted to go
  • We drew up a massive calendar with all our travel dates
  • We added to the calendar anything that was booked (flights to and from Africa, etc.) using post it notes so things could be moved about as needed
  • We added to the calendar things that we needed to book on certain days in post it notes again so we could shuffle as and when needed to accommodate other items
  • The end result was an exciting start to a travel calendar, and pretty large task list with action items (things to book) and who was doing the booking
  • We put the task list and travel calendar up on our private Facebook Group ‘Africa or Bust’

We are now all working on our tasks, using Facebook as our communication vehicle so everyone sees all of the conversations going on, and will meet again in August and September to finalize. Loving the ability to ask a Poll question on Facebook – this is dream with 7 people involved.

At the end of the day we now know we have some serious thrill and monkey seekers in the group – and some sightseeing, museum and wine tour seekers in the group. The combination of both will give us a plan with a bit of lazy and a bit of crazy…perfect!

Brande

PS …73 sleeps to go

Step by Step Training – Literally

Brande's Keens/Socks

Happy, dirty boots and socks post Grind!

There are many different schools of thought about training for Mount Kilimanjaro.

Some say you should build up the core and legs, hike a lot of stairs and steep hills, and learn how to drink a lot of water. Some say there is no use in training when the middle aged and out of shape have a great success rate of getting to the summit. I say lets go for more training than less, it is good for the body anyway and hope for the best out of this body when it comes down to step by step up the mountain.

So here is what I loosely consider my training regime:

  • jog 3 mornings a week
  • stair / hill walk 3 times a week
  • long hike weekly
  • hard or crazy work out hike weekly
  • play some of my usual sports
  • eat way more veggies than usual, losing a few pounds is always a nice treat
  • work on core, legs and all around harden up the muscle-y bits

For this weeks hard or crazy work out hike I tackled the Grouse Grind in North Vancouver.

PLEASE NOTE to some this is not hard or crazy, they do it near daily and can get up the mountain side in under an hour or less and enjoy themselves … I am not that person, sadly but also proudly lol. For me the slog up the 2,830 stairs is grinding (pun intended) but the reward amazing.

So up I went this morning – I started at 8:00am and finished at 10:40am, took lots of 20-30 second breaks on the way up (yes, these were usually to let someone pass my turtle self) and generally enjoyed my pace and my time. I didn’t love the fog that socked me in at 1/2 way up or the rain that soaked my from about the same point – but I live on the lush, green coast of Canada what do you expect.  I started my Keen Targhee boot training this morning to get them warmed up for Kilimanjaro and they were awesome! I also had my day pack stuffed with 25lbs which I swore at a few times on the way up 🙂

I enjoyed me a lovely yummy extra hot latte at the top – did a little reading for school while sipping away. Usually I would enjoy the amazing view but that fog I mentioned prevented seeing more than 10ft.

If interested in more Grouse Grind details: https://www.grousemountain.com/grousegrind (you may secretly hate the path and everyone on the way up, but wow you feel like a rock star when you get there)

76 sleeps till we leave for Kili!

(PS one of the things hikers on Kili hear over and over from their guides is Pole, Pole. This is Swahili for Slowly, Slowly so you don’t burn yourself out and get more time to acclimatize as your climb. Perhaps my turtle self was made for Pole, Pole! Yah!) 

Brande

One ‘Step’ At a Time

What is the hardest part of climbing Mount Kilimanjaro?

Kilimanjaro Trekking Guide

The Trekking Guide to Africa’s Highest Mountain by Henry Stedman, Trailblazer Publications

Seems it was NOT signing up for the hike, the training, convincing friends and family to join the crazy adventure, or even researching on altitude sickness. The hardest part so far has been getting up the courage to launch a travel blog – this blog – to tell all about the amazing adventure we are about to embark on.

Well here goes nothing.

If we can climb a mountain in Africa we can probably write a blog right? ha!

Stay tuned to find out …

Brande