climb Kilimanjaro- Africa Natural Tours ( africanaturaltours.com )
Kilimanjaro
:Africa Natural Tours
AFRICA
NATURAL TOURS
(The best tour company in Tanzania)
Specialized in: Mountain climbing,
Wildlife safaris, Cultural tourism and Beach holidays
Contact
+255 653 679 958 OR +255
692 436 113
Why should I climb Kilimanjaro, why not another mountain? What is so
special about Mount Kilimanjaro? To answer these questions we have to
take a look at caused Kilimanjaro to become a mountain in the first
place.
Kilimanjaro is different than most other mountains on
Earth. It was created by three ancient volcanoes. Two of these volcanos
are now dormant—they could still erupt—and one is extinct. These three
volcanoes form what is now Kilimanjaro the highest free standing
mountain in Africa. It stands at 19,341 ft.
Kilimanjaro was first
discovered by the Europeans in the 1840’s because everyone knows that it
doesn’t exist until someone “discovers” it. Many attempts were made to
reach its summit, Uhuru Peak. This feat wasn’t completed until a German
geologist, Hans Meyer, accomplished it in 1889. Only the most serious of
climbers and scientists even attempted to summit this majestic peak
whose glaciers and foul weather thwarted even the most intrepid of
adventurers.
Over the next hundred years, the weather on
Kilimanjaro changed and the approximately 1,400-year-old ice-field
retreated significantly. In fact, the ice has been disappearing so
quickly that scientists believe it could be gone entirely by 2060 or
sooner. The effects of this climate change have yet to be felt. There is
one major thing that the ice-melt has already made possible, tourism.
Every year, an estimated 35,000 people from all over the globe visit
Tanzania in an attempt to climb Kilimanjaro. And thousands of those
people go home without reaching the summit. They either suffer from
altitude sickness, get hypothermia, simply lack the willpower, or worse,
die.
So why do they do it? More importantly, should you attempt
it? Everyone’s reason is different, however, there are some
similarities.
Bucket List
It is probably not a surprise
that climbing Kilimanjaro is on many outdoor enthusiasts bucket list.
The reason for this lack of surprise is the simple fact that people like
a challenge. Accepting a challenge is a major part of everyone’s life.
Things like earning a college degree, landing a great job, buying a
house – they’re things we can all relate to. For example, marriage is a
big goal for many people, but that’s not the end of the road; now you’ve
got the rest of your life to keep the relationship together, so at what
point can you say, “I did it,”? Climbing a mountain is a distinct
achievement – either you did it or you didn’t. So why Kilimanjaro? The
U.S. has tons of mountains which are easily accessible by Americans,
provide great views, don’t require tour operators, and are lot less
expensive to get to. Every continent has its fair share of climbable
mountains. But they’re not Kilimanjaro. They’re not special, or at least
not in the same ways.
But Why Kili?
I think that it is
that Kilimanjaro stands alone, that it is in Africa and has an almost
magical draw to it. It isn’t just another tall mountain in a range of
tall mountains. It towers over the Tanzanian plains almost daring you to
reach its summit. Mount Whitney is an amazing peak but it is next to
many other amazing peaks. Does climbing Whitney take you through a
rainforest, scrubland, and glacier territory?
Perspective
But
that is just the unique facts about Kilimanjaro. There is more to it
than that. If you searched the internet for ‘Kilimanjaro,’ you get back
facts about Kilimanjaro or your get blogs from people who have climbed
it. They consistently talk about how difficult it was, how they had to
face their inner demons to reach the summit, and how it forever changed
their lives. People get perspective from climbing Kilimanjaro, even if
they didn’t make it to the summit.
Dangerous
In today’s
age, it’s rare for the average person to be to be in real danger by
being in the outdoors. Kilimanjaro is a real threat, from the terrain to
the altitude sickness, a threat that is unpredictable.
Around 10 people
die on its slopes every year. When you are sitting at your desk reading
this that doesn’t seem scary, just a statistic, but when you are on the
mountain it is a real threat. Your hometown mountain probably doesn’t
require you to walk three to five days at a very slow pace just to reach
the summit, or constantly monitor yourself and your group for symptoms
of altitude sickness.
You probably don’t have to get up to use the
bathroom three times a night because your body is having difficulty
adjusting to the altitude. Mental and emotional breakdowns are common,
people just give up before reaching the summit and have to be escorted
back down. The mental side of the battle is just as important as the
physical, and according to many previous climbers, even more so.
But for all the difficulty, expenses, and danger, most climbers wouldn’t trade their experiences climbing Kilimanjaro for the world. The life lessons that are taken away from a Kilimanjaro climb are as varied as the people who have climbed it. Simply put, it truly is the climb of a lifetime.
Comments
Post a Comment