Heading up towards the North Col
The route climbs directly through the ice cliffs.
It would have been easier to skirt the ice cliffs on the right as the British
did, but that slope is prone to avalanche.
I was tired when I reached the top, and so was happy that Kancha had pitched the tent only about 3 metres from the top of the fixed ropes.
Camp 1 is in two parts, separated by a nasty crevasse. This is the large upper
part. The slopes we climbed to reach it are at right.
The route follows the foreground ridge to the top of the snow (7500m/24600ft) and
continues to about half way (7900m/25900ft) to the skyline (northeast) ridge, where
it cuts right.
It was windy on the snow ridge and I was climbing quite well --- about 140m/460ft per hour (without oxygen) --- and so, when I got to about 7350m, I decided that was far enough, and returned to my tent at Camp 1.
View from my tent at 7am as I was about to set off down. ABC is visible at
lower-centre, as are the tracks leading towards the North Col.
I reached ABC in time for breakfast. For some reason, Kancha had also gone down to base camp. (Pasang: "Sherpas have no need to go to base camp.") The kitchen boy had shown signs of pulmonary edema, and had also descended.
I left at 10:30 and reached base camp at 4:30. On the way, I met the four Spanish women on their way up and also Hugues, Maryse, and the Austrians. The Austrians, Greeks, and we share a cook and some tents at base camp.
Pemba had seen the Italian doctor at base camp who had given him an antibiotic, which seemed to be helping his illness. The doctor told the kitchen boy that he needs to go down to Dingri and take oxygen (perhaps he did, but the doctor tells almost everyone that).
I will rest at base camp until I'm ready to go up and make a summit attempt.