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Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Himalayas trek




I have just came back from the Himalayas trek with NUS mountaineering club (MIR). It was a good and memorable journey during my 3rd summer at NUS.

The trek was 17-day long and we went through many areas of Jammu & Kashmir state (India) and Himalayas range. What we lived with: nomadic lifestyle, Tibetan cultures (houses, tent, monasteries) and people, and North Indian foods.

The trek route is as followed:

Day 1-2: Singapore - KL - New Delhi - Manali
Day 3-4: Manali - Jispa - Baralacha
Day 5-7: Baralacha - Lachalung - Leh
Day 8-10: Leh - Latio - LaLungLa
Day 11-13: LaLungLa - Nimaling - Larsa
Day 14-15: Larsa - Shang Sumdo - Leh (Rizong Monastery)
Day 16-17: Leh - New Delhi - KL - SG

With some future treks in mind, I will pen down some tips for the preparation that I learnt from the trip. This will be a good reference for me and for those who want to join mountain trekking in the future. Pls note that this is only my personal experience after the Himalayas trek. The checklist for other treks may be a little different.

The most concerned issue with high altitude trek is the Acute Mountain Sickness (or AMS). AMS badly affects our health, strength, endurance during the trek, and thus should be minimized as much as possible. Below is some pieces of information about AMS I gathered myself from the trek and found on some online articles. Following the AMS information is the trek's checklist.


About AMS:

- Occurs at high altitude above 2,400 meters (8,000 feet)
- Due to the combination of low oxygen level and low air pressure. At 3,600 meters, the pressure is only 480mmHg (sea-level pressure is 780mmHg); thus there is 40% less oxygen (Traveldoctor).
- Symptoms: rapid pulse, headache, sleeping difficulty, abnormal dream, nausea, vomitting, loss of appetite, loss of concentration, fatique.

Prevent AMS:

- Acclimatization: climb up slowly at high altitude (above 2,500 meters); walk up slowly, do not run or jump. Try to stop for one day/half a day for every 600 meters above 2,500 meters for the body to acclimatize. Camp, pitch tent, and sleep at lower altitude. Never try to walk fast to catch up with friends when you feel tired; instead, walk and ascend the mountain at your own pace!

- Drink lots of fluids/water to prevent dehydration. At high altitude, the air is thin and dry; water loss occurs quite rapidly on the skin, lung, and through urination. Wear windbreaker while trekking to maintain body temperature and prevent dehydration. Avoid alcoholic drink, which increases urination.

- Take Diamox (acetazolamide) at least 8 hours before climbing. Diamox improves breathing at high altitude. Diamox increases the bicarbonate excretion at the kidneys, acidifying the blood. This stimulates ventilation, which increases the amount of oxygen in the blood.

- Eat high calorie diet, with meat and carb. Avoid alcohol and drugs. Never skip meals.

- If your body starts panting, stop walking and regulate your breath. If AMS symptoms increase, descend!

- Although you will have (light) headache while trekking, DO NOT sleep or lay down to rest right after you reach the camp site because this will make your AMS more severe. Instead, drink up and do light activities such as leisurely walking around, chatting with trekking friends.

- Take panadols/paracetamols when having light headache.

Checklist:
Essential
- Clothes (wear 3-4 layers): thermo layer, t-shirt (dri-fit), thick coat (only wear this layer when at night when the weather is very cold), and windbreaker.
- Bottom: thermo layer, trekking pants.
- Beanie, gloves, sunglasses
- Socks (polyester)
- Trekking shoes (waterproof recommended)
- Water bottles (vol. of 1 liter, 2-3 bottles)
- Paracetamols
- Diamox
- Sun-block (spf>50), Vaseline (this works much better than lips balm), moisturizer
- Wet wipes, toilet paper
- Torch light/headlamp
- Chocolates
- Hand sanitiser
- Sleeping bag

Optional
- Cap
- Camera
- Walking stick
- Bandannas
- Sandals
- Vitamin C
- Snack bar
- Compass, thermometer

Friday, June 24, 2011

24 June 2011



Sometimes, I just can't control my temper.

Saturday, June 18, 2011

18 Jun 2011

Hello! Ko có cái postcard của Lan lùn là mình quên cái góc quán cà phê này :D Thanks :)

1. Learn a new point of view today: If you are thinking of heaven or afterlife, you are no longer a free-thinker.

That's worth thinking.


2. I realize that practising a sport will help to boost one's determination towards achieving his goal. I will continue to run/jog not only to stay fit but also to be mentally healthy.

3. Never does my family members stay far from each other as we are now. Dad will work in Da Nang, mum in Saigon, brother in US, and me in this tiny Singapore. We are far apart now just to be together in the future: let's work hard.

Tee hee!!

Thursday, February 3, 2011

New year lor...



I agree that people do thing differently during the last day of old year and the following day: new year day! (We Vietnamese call them "đêm 30" and "mùng 1 Tết").

Yesterday was fun. I got myself sitting in the NUSSU office for 9 hours to do my laboratory report. After the dinner at Subway, I started walking to PGP to celebrate the lunar new year. It was by incident that friends met friends, strangers met strangers, and altogether we welcomed the year of the Cat in music, karaoke, and water drinking card games. We played till 6PM on the first day of new year. The whole night was like a craze and tiring.

I caught the very first bus of the day and got back home in Clementi at 7AM. I tried to text a Happy New Year message to my friends or to call back home but I was too tired and exhausted to do so. Lying down to sleep, I realized that the best thing in the world at that moment was my soft, soft bed...

I woke up at 1PM, ignoring the fact that all my housemates had left for temples, for friends, and for Penang. It was a great day to get several festive messages from friends. After loading all the bed sheet and pillow and blanket into the washing machine, I got my late breakfast with cereal and milk. As normal as usual, I was multitasking with eating my breakfast and calling mom and messaging my friends.

Afternoon was a short and filled with my new motivations. I managed to spend another 4 hours on my lab report before I went down stair to realize that all shops were closed and people were in neat clothes visiting friends. Walking around the neighborhood area, I got some satay from the Malay food stall with a random thought of having a decent dinner for myself.

So, dinner recipe was:

- Fry [noodle, satay, chilly, cucumber, onion] = dinner
- Blend [tomatoes, blue gum honey, ice] = dessert

Hello friends, hello the Cat, hello time! Will start my new year with a goal in mind: Working hard! I remember my first catch at my cubicle in my company when I started my very first day of internship:

“If a man is called to be a street sweeper, he should sweep streets even as Michelangelo painted, or Beethoven composed music, or Shakespeare wrote poetry. He should sweep streets so well that all the hosts of heaven and earth will pause to say, here lived a great street sweeper who did his job well.”