If you would like to join me for a hiking / climbing trip, please email me ... mntviews@gmail.com
Saturday, November 30, 2013
Soi Sim Island hill, Ha Long Bay, Vietnam
2013 November: Short climb up a hill at Soi Sim Island, Ha Long Bay, Vietnam
Ha Long Bay and Soi Sim Island
Vietnam's Ha Long Bay is truly beautiful. No wonder so many people visit the place.
Usually you see the islands (which are limestone karsts) from a boat. But depending on the boat's schedule, it may drop anchor at Soi Sim Island, one of the many islets dotting the Bay. There is a hill in this island. Its summit is around 60 meters above sea level - 10 minutes to climb up there - where you will get a different perspective on the islands of the Bay.
Photos from boat
First, let me present 3 pics taken from a boat, showing the colours of Ha Long Bay at different times of the day.
1) Ha Long Bay basking in morning sun
2) Ha Long Bay at noon
3) Ha Long Bay in the evening
Soi Sim Island
4) As mentioned earlier, Soi Sim Island is one of the many small islands in Ha Long Bay. Here is an interactive map of the Bay. If you zoom right in (click on the small "+" icon a few times), you can see the Island and a trail from a beach to the top of its highest hill marked by the green pin. From there, you get a fantastic panoramic view of the surrounding islands which make Ha Long Bay so famous.
View Soi Sim Island, Ha Long Bay, Vietnam in a larger map
5) Our boat approaching Soi Sim Island in the late afternoon ...
There is the beach.
In the middle of the pic, you can just see a set of stairs ... it leads to the top of the hill on the left side of the pic.
6) What better way to loiter away the time than to take a swim here ! ... especially after you've climbed to the top of the hill.
7) Can you see the stairs at the back of this thatched roof shelter?
Climb to the top of the hill
8) Here are the stairs heading up the hill.
9) The stairs soon peter out to this type of dirt trail ... nice view down at the beach and the sea below
At the top of the hill
It is only a short walk ... 10 minutes should get you to the top which is only about 60 meters above sea level.
The rest are some of the scenery from the top of the hill ...
10)
11)
12)
13)
14) I like this the best ... a magnificent view of Ha Long Bay ... you can't see this type of scene at the boat level.
Wednesday, November 27, 2013
Fansipan, Vietnam
2013 November: One day climb of Mt Fansipan, Vietnam
Why climb Fansipan?
Because it is there! (I can hear you say "why don't you do the dishes because they are there?")
At 3143 meters, Fansipan is not only the highest mountain in Vietnam, it is also the highest mountain in Indochina - comprising of Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia. Most people climb it in 2 or perhaps 3 days. But what is the fun in it ... I said to myself. Why not do it in one day.
Little did I know, it turns out to be the hardest day trip I have ever done ... definitely not an easy fancy pantsy walk. Reminds me of the Japanese proverb ... something along the line of ... you are wise to have done it, but a fool to even think about doing it.
Here are the stats from my Garmin GPS:
10:30 0.0 km - From trail head at Tram Ton Pass, 1995m
11:40 3.8 km - Reach Camp 1
13:30 7.2 km - Reach Camp 2
----- Lunch - 30 min
14:00 7.2 km - Leave Camp 2
15:47 10.3 km - Reach summit, 3143m
----- Photo session - 18 min
16:05 10.3 km - Leave summit
17:34 13.4 km - Reach Camp 2
19:38 16.8 km - Reach Camp 1
----- Rest - 6 min
19:44 16.8 km - Leave Camp 1
21:33 20.6 km - Finish at Tram Ton Pass !!!
----- Total - 11 hrs 3 mins; 20.6 km
This is also the first time for me where the uphill time (5 hr 17 min) is shorter than the downhill time (5 hr 28 min) ... which succinctly captures how difficult and treacherous the trail is.
The night before
19:20
1) Meeting Tâm, my travel agent, for the first time at a Hanoi hotel lobby ... She is super friendly, beautiful and always smiling. She organized my Fansipan climbing trip and the Ha Long Bay cruise.
2) As Fansipan is located in Lao Cai province, 11 hours away by train from Hanoi, she takes me from the hotel to the Hanoi main railway station on a motorbike and on high heels ... this is the type of super friendly personal services you always get from the Vietnamese people.
For those who don't know what the streets of Hanoi is like ... they are full of motorbikes. Here is a video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XxE7LS4iaAM
Sensing my desire for a taste of the Vietnamese road chaos, she drives the motorbike down a busy one way street against the traffic, with all the other motorbikes charging head on towards us ... the stuff you only see in a movie!!! And here I am, experiencing it in real life!!! This has to be the high point of my Fansipan climb even before I walk a single step; definitely far more memorable than reaching the top of Fansipan.
Hi Tâm, we must do this again in another day!!! Though I prefer you not to turn your head around to talk to me. Just concentrate on those motorbikes. :-)
3) We reach the Hanoi railway station in one piece.
4) My cabin in the train, 4 bunk beds inside to be shared with 3 others ... you can see 2 beds in this pic. This is my first experience of sleeping overnight in a train. Not too bad, better than trying to get a sleep in a plane.
20:35
The train leave dead on time at 8:35pm.
Morning
07:30
5) 11 hours later, the train arrives here at Lao Cai at 7:30am. (It should get here earlier, say around 5:30am. The delay is due to track work along the way.) As the pic shows, it is a looong train.
08:00
By the time I'm picked up in a mini bus, and start heading for the town of Sapa, it is 8am. (Fansipan is near where Sapa is.)
Arrive at Sapa after almost an hour on the mini-bus.
6) First thing is to check into Fansipan View Hotel. To get there, you need to walk up this narrow lane way of stairs ... Here, you can see the Hmong people in their colourful dresses ... they live in the mountainous regions of Vietnam (here) as well as China, Laos and Thailand.
10:00
After breakfast, meet up with Dao, my mountain guide. It will be just the two of us ... all set to conquer the roof of Indochina.
7) Half an hour by car and we are here at the Mt Fansipan trail head at Tram Ton Pass, 1995m in elevation. Dao goes inside the building to register and pay climbing permits. As can be seen from the pic, it is a misty day, not good for photographs. The rest of the day is also similarly uninviting.
The climb
10:30
Finally at 10:30am we are on our feet walking.
8) Soon, we start meeting female Hmong porters on their way down the mountain. (The other guy in this pic is Dao, my mountain guide.)
9) The last time I met female porters was when climbing Mt Kinabalu in Malaysia's Borneo. There, the porters had very thick thighs, way out of proportion compared to their height. But these Hmong porters are slim. (I don't require a porter, mine is a one-day climb. Whereas most people do the climb in 2 or perhaps 3 days.)
10) Now, why aren't there female porters in Australia ???
11:40
11) Dao sets a brisk pace. We reach Camp 1 after 1 hr and 10 minutes. No stopping here from Dao.
12) The trail is not an easy walking track. The tree roots and rock are slippery and treacherous. So far, my pants are clean coz I have not fallen yet. It is almost impossible to walk in this mountain without the aid of hiking sticks ... and yet the porters don't require them and just glide over the trail with ease.
13) At some of the steep parts of the trail, the Fansipan national park authorities have installed ladders like this.
13:30
14) After 3 hrs of non-stop up hill climb, we reach Camp 2, around 2800m in elevation. This is where most people would sleep over for the night.
15) I can see only 2 structures at Camp 2, one in the previous pic (for sleeping) and one here (for cooking).
16) It is cold outside, but warm and cozy in here. Lunch is simply egg & ham rolls which Dao carried all the way up. A cup of hot tea is made over the fire ... its smoke fills up the inside of the tent, hence the misty look of this photo.
14:00
Half an hour of lunch, and we are on our way. On paper, there is only 350 more meters in elevation to the summit. In reality it is more, because you climb up a bit, then climb a fair way down, then up again.
17) The trail is something like in this pic ... plenty of slippery rocks. Dao is laughing at the countless times I have slipped and fell ... sadist :-)
18) Fansipan summit is almost in sight now. It is a misty day, which is a pity. Dao said the view down on the country below is beautiful ... unfortunately not today.
15:47
19) After 5 hrs 17 mins, we made it to the summit !!! There is a Vietnamese flag here, So I waved it ... I'll wave anything here ... really exhilarated !!!
20) My pants tell the story of the countless times I tripped and slipped and fell on the way up. It is a miracle no limps are broken.
16:05
Time to leave. We will be down the mountain by 9:33pm (making the total trip around 11 hrs) ... hence majority of the time we are descending in the dark. Again, during the descent, I fall so many times that both my walking sticks are soon broken. Dao gives me his ... which are merely bamboo sticks. They are light weight and they don't break. Why couldn't our modern high-tech hiking sticks match bamboo sticks in weight and strength ???
After the climb. I asked Dao what is the average time for one-day-ers to complete the Fansipan climb. He said 11 hrs ... which was exactly my time. Hard to tell whether he was covering up the truth for the sake of my ego. I was really tired by Camp 2, a mere 3 hrs after we started walking. For the rest of the day, my legs were in slow motion mode ... hence the suspicion that the average time may be shorter than mine.
Few days later
21) Back at Hanoi celebrating my climb with Tâm in an eating joint ... Tâm plays host and selects traditional Vietnamese dishes for us. They are yummy. By the time this photo is taken, we've licked the table clean.
Sunday, October 20, 2013
Peak Hill, NSW, Australia
2013 October: Climb Peak Hill in Ku-ring-gai Chase National Park - NSW, Australia
Prolog
This excursion is organized by Sydney Bush Walkers Club ... mostly off-track walking, plus detours to a prehistoric Aboriginal art site and to Mud Point.
Peak Hill
Peak Hill, 180 meters high, is a small hill just south of Brooklyn in Ku-ring-gai Chase National Park. From the top, there is a fantastic view of the mouth of the Hawkesbury River.
This photo of Peak Hill is taken from the north-west.
This one is taken from the south-west.
Timeline & Route
09:01 0.0 km - From Hawkesbury River Railway Station, head for the trail which starts at the end of William St
09:24 1.4 km - Get off trail and start bush bashing to Mud Point
11:32 5.1 km - Reach Mud Point
----- Rest for 14 min
11:46 5.3 km - Leave Mud Point, retrace some of the steps, then veer off towards Peak Hill
12:43 7.0 km - Reach Peak Hill
----- Lunch for 47 minutes
13:30 7.1 km - Leave Peak Hill
14:10 7.9 km - Reach Sandy Beach
----- Explore around the beach for 17 minutes
14:27 8.1 km - Leave Sandy Beach
14:48 9.0 km - At Dead Horse Beach
14:58 9.4 km - At Parsley Bay
15:14 10.5 km - At Angler's Rest Hotel at Brooklyn (corner of Brooklyn Rd & Bridge St) for a cold beer
----- Total 6 hr 15 min; 10.5 km
KML file
Our KML file of the route can be downloaded from:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B877-h5SCJaSYVZ0Z3FqNG1jNDA/edit?usp=sharing
The detour to an Aboriginal art site where prehistoric hand prints can be found, is edited out of both the KML file and the above map. This is to prevent graffiti nuts from going there to vandalize it.
Walk Description
09:01
10 of us meet up at Hawkesbury River Railway Station. At 9:01am, we are on our way ... 1 minute behind schedule ... all because I was late :-)
The first 1.4 km is over the same trail as the Oxfam 100km walk I did in 2011 ... refer
http://mntviews.blogspot.com.au/2011/09/oxfam-sydney-100km-trailwalk-australia.html
I had walked over this section countless times as training exercise for the 100km. Feels nostalgic now that we are going over the same trail again.
At the end of William street, 290 meters out from the railway station, there is a steep uphill stretch. One sure fire way of telling whether a person is suitable for a quick pace over the Oxfam 100km walk is to test how fast he can walk up this steep slope. Well, the guys in this group can all walk pretty fast here without the need to take a breather ... these guys are serious, they take no prisoners when walking!
09:25
1.4 km later, we turn south and start bush bashing to Mud Point. I love bush bashing ... but it would be so much nicer if there is no vegetation blocking the way while bush bashing.
Here is a termite mound built around a grass tree ... a most unusual sight.
What a view !!! The bridge at the centre of the photo is the Pacific Highway over the Hawkesbury River. Where the yachts are is the Sandbrook Inlet.
We make a detour to a prehistoric aboriginal art site.
There are a few aboriginal hand prints on the cliff face. When they leave hand prints here, we call them art. When we leave our hand prints, they will be branded as graffiti.
On our way to Mud Point ... nice scene of the rolling hills of the Ku-ring-gai Chase National Park
Very close to Mud Point now ... looking at Porto Bay
11:32
Arrived at Mud Point which is a little knoll overlooking Porto Bay
11:46
We have a bit of a rest at Mud Point, then it is off to Peak Hill ...
Here is its southern slope.
Some rock scrambling is required to climb Peak Hill.
12:43
Made it to the top of Peak Hill !
From the summit are these views of the mouth of the Hawkesbury River ... love them !
Lunch is on top of Peak Hill.
13:30
Leave Peak Hill for Sandy Beach.
14:10
Sandy Beach - a remote and lonely beach.
The beach is full of crab holes ... The crabs feed on detritus in the sand, leaving the tell-tale rounded pellets of discarded sand all over the surface.
These are culprits of the holes ... the crabs' scientific name is Mictyris.
At a nearby rock face is this tiny orchid growing horizontally.
15:14
Of course, a walk is not complete without a cold beer ... make it several cold beers. I love hiking ... especially so when it is a short hike and long drinks.
(At Angler's Rest Hotel in Brooklyn)
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