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"From
the crest of the ridge the last half of the plateau was finally
revealed. The vast natural forces that had thrown up these regular
downs had suddenly run wild. In the docile plain there opened
a gorge perhaps half a mile wide, leading to a bowl shaped valley.
It was the valley of Wehni. From the centre rose the scoriated
black thumb that was the mountain. It was in fact twice the height
that it first appeared and its sides perfectly sheer to the ground.
Once again my stomach contracted in fear."
Thomas Pakenham, The Mountains of Rasselas.
The Hot Rock Global Challenge had been going for four months since
that misty day when it left the docks of Dover to start the epic
world record breaking climbing expedition. It was to travel the
length of six continents overland, the objective to climb existing
and new routes. The expedition has just been back from the first
successful expedition to climb to the summit of Mt Wehni, a basalt
tower in Ethiopia. We are the first known people to be on the
summit since it was the prison to Ethiopian princes 300 years
ago. The princes were held on the peak to protect the king from
being over-thrown; all 200 prisoners and inhabitants were kept
on a summit 120m by 80m. The cut steps and wooden stakes that
were used to climb the peak had long gone and the closest you
could get to see the visible ruins was by looking across from
the hill tops on the other side of the valley. Two helicopter
missions failed to land on the summit, the British forces could
not climb the peak and numerous explorers were just left at its
base imagining what treasure the summit still held.
I
had been put in touch with a local boy who claimed to know the
where abouts of the peak from a contact in a village further south.
An unused road could get us 5km from the peak, but as the roads
were so bad we needed to get a local bus/tank to drive us in.
That night the bags were packed along with 30kg of oranges, 150
loafs of bread, 250L of water, 10kg of the smallest onions in
the world, and all the climbing kit we could collect into the
‘bus’. We left the next morning at 6:00am.
The bus stopped 5 hours later at the town of Addis Zemmen. Our
guide jumped out and spoke to a man (old and blind). After a heated
discussion they both came on to the bus and informed us the walk
started here. The mountain had moved again!! We were informed
that it lay 20km that way (direction given by a throw of an arm).
We had to trust this blind old man, and go against the advice
of the ‘trusty’ contact. This was hard to do, as to
walk 20km and find out he had directed us to his hut for lunch
would have been soul destroying. But we trusted the blind man
and packed up the water and food onto the backs of 11 very small
donkeys and set off. The word had gone round the village that
white people were here to climb their hills, and a crowd of a
couple of hundred kids screaming YOU YOU YOU at us escorted us
for the first hour of the walk.
The
donkeys were useless. We were "walking" (pushing donkeys
up hills) at an average speed of 1.5kmph, and with the big pass
still to come getting to base camp that night was out of the question.
In fact we only managed to get half way. The last 100m to the
top of the pass involved us carrying the water for the donkeys.
We camped on the out skirts of a small village. At this point
we still had no idea if the peak we were walking towards was the
one we wanted!
We
left early the next morning. With their bellies full of straw,
the donkeys trotted on at a happy pace. The hill top opened out
to a flat plateau, rather like Salisbury plain but with monkeys.
There at the edge of the plateau we received the same view that
Thomas Pakenham had 50 years ago. Did my stomach contract in fear?
No! Did I smile like a kid at Christmas and almost cry with relief
and for the joy of the others? Yes! There it was only a couple
of km away we could make out the ruins on the summit and the guard
house built two thirds of the way up the cliff. An hour later
we had made a base camp under an enormous olive tree and in the
shadow of the west face of Mt Wehni.
The audience had grown and the murmur of the crowd had risen to
an excited roar. The forangis had come to climb the prison of
the princes. There was suddenly a mad cry from the hill overlooking
the col on which we camped. A man had stripped down naked and
was running down the hill towards us. He reached a spot 20m away
stopped and started whipping him self while dancing in a style
of a religious "stomp" after one had just licked the
cane toad. Our guide, Mike, translated his cries and told us that
he is upset, because we will steal the ark of the covenant that
is on top of the peak!!! The local priests took this seriously.
After an hour or two they approached us and said that before we
climb we had to have our bags checked so when we returned they
would know what treasures we had stolen from the summit. This
gave us a buzz, as they really had no idea of what was on the
summit.
The
route I climbed was good climbing but very unprotected (Placing
only 4 bits of protection in 6 pitches of climbing). As our route
meandered along the original route up the mountain we came across
several sections of very polished rock, which would have been
done by the hundreds of princes who had passed up and down the
route. About 60m from the summit we passed through the doorway
of the guard house and from there I could see the rest was just
a scramble.
The
very last move was to squeeze past the enormous olive wood door
that blocked the entrance to the prison. We had done it. We had
completed the dream of so many explorers and were about to join
the vultures in knowing what secrets lay on top. The top was covered
in long grass hiding all the walls and pot holes which we stumbled
across. Our aim was to map the summit and photograph everything.
Most is just ruin but the church gave us a bit more interest.
There were old paintings on the wall and carved crosses and Amharic
scripture in tablets partly hidden by the cracked plaster on the
walls. Sadly we found no gold or booby traps, and all skeletons
must have been deeply buried. In fact the only interesting artefacts
that we found were two massive clay urns containing nothing but
hyrax poo. We spent the night on the summit and then descended
the next day. We were on the floor in 3 long abseils and 2 hours
later.
The priests were the first to greet us. They dipped their heads
and kissed our hands. An English speaking man approached us, "We
have so much respect for you, and such an incredible journey I
have never seen!" The rest of the day was spent drawing the
ruins and the carvings we had seen on the back of a box of tea
bags, for the chief of the village to keep and show the waiting
crowd.
We
celebrated that night with spit roast sheep. As it is Lent they
would not kill the sheep, but were happy to let us do it. This
was an experience that was close to making me a vegetarian. But
I soon forgot this when it was cooked, eaten and was being slowly
being digested as I lay back and looked at the route we had just
taken to the summit, absolutely perfect. The next day I took the
last of the 12 members in the team to the summit along a route
that was graded E1 5a and named "beneath the path of princes"
On our descent that day we were greeted by a crazy eyed man with
equally bizarre hair and teeth. We tried to communicate and then
as we walked off we realised he wore a set of shackles around
his ankles. We were told the gruesome story later of how he used
to be the village policeman until he had murdered a few too many
friends and family. His punishment is to stay shackled for the
rest of his life, the theory being that he is too slow to catch
and kill anyone else (unless he gets his hands on a gun, they
quietly added)!!!
We left the next day and walked 7 hours back to Addis Zemmen and
based ourselves in a bar celebrating with ice cold beer and ‘chat’
(a small leaf when chewed has a similar effect to the coca leaf).
Eventually the Bus arrived and we travelled south to Bahir Dar
to meet up with friends. The whole experience is everything I
could have hoped for: Rumours of being beaten to the top, donkeys,
porter disputes, crazy locals screaming out legends of treasure,
ruins, fine climbing and every member of the team climbing to
the top and safely coming down.
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