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IAF Stok Kangri Base Camp Cleanup in progress |
Stok Kangri (6135m) highest mountain in the Stok
range of Indian Himalaya in Ladakh, Jammu & Kashmir is often suggested as an
easy peak, a trekking peak and one of the most accessible 6000er which can be climbed
within a short period of time-although most of the hurried ones end up being a
casualty of different level of AMS (Acute Mountain Sickness) due to lack of
acclimatization.
‘Despite
its high altitude, Stok Kangri is a popular trekking peak and is often climbed as an initial non-technical foray
into high altitude mountaineering. However, the difficulty of Stok Kangri is
often underestimated and the need to acclimatise before and during the ascent
makes Stok Kangri an enduring challenge’ says Wiki and rightly so.
The lure of a 6000er, such encouraging tags added with the peak’s location, a modest
12km hike from the trailhead at Stok Village just 15km away from the capital
Leh, one can only wonder the numbers of hikers and climbers it attract during
season which becomes crowded with the added benefit of availability of almost all
facilities/services at Base Camp, availed by many who hike up to the BC with bare
rucksacks, quite a luxury considering the altitude.
“With Great Power Comes Great Responsibility” once said... who? Spiderman? Voltaire? Churchill? Lord
Melbourne? John Cumming? Hercules G. R. Robinson? Henry W. Haynes? Well, whoever
said it definitely got it wrong! Therefore “With Great Numbers come Volumes of Garbage” being the present dictum
of our collective (and also individual) behavior to go by, Stok Kangri Base Camp
is no exception to the recent pollution issues associated with many popular places
in Himalaya that are being similarly violated by our lack of basic sensitivity
towards our environment, the highest example probably being that of Everest
Base Camp being turned into a garbage/poo dump highlighted by mostly O-T-T internet
scribes saving a few factual and informative ones.
Without devoting any further words on the need for cleanup, saving environment…
… … rhetoric, i.e. cutting the long story short, here is a photo essay representation
of the IAF Stok Kangri Base Camp Cleanup Expedition conducted by members from
the Indian Air Force, jointly with Advanced Mountaineering Course (AMC) Trainees
of Jawahar Institute of Mountaineering and Winter Sports, (JIM&WS) during
September, 2017.
With I-A-F proving the gears like gloves,
masks, collection sacks, bleaching powder for toilets etc, a substantial volume
of garbage was collected as members got down and dirty into the cache pits, even
cleaning up and disinfecting the permanent tin barricade used as toilets. All collected
garbage was to be ferried by I-A-F choppers at a later date; else it would have
been a muleteer’s nightmare to bring the load down… even for those who know the
art of convincing their mules!
The sincere and commendable effort from the
young guns of JIM&WS was highly appreciated by the I-A-F Expedition leader alongwith
their members and is evident from the photographs or so I believe/hope.
AMC trainees coming from all across India
and therefore the idea/notion/metaphor of a cohesive, pan-India cleanup in today’s
ever-polluting world perhaps made the activity more profound in a personal way.
However I am quite
certain these few photographs does not do justice to their humble act and commendable
effort of which I was grateful to be a miniscule and behind-the-scene part of,
and therefore cannot take any credit whatsoever, saving documenting with some
photographs.
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Warming up |
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Spreading away |
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All that to recover a couple of Mazza bottles. May the owners of the plastic live long and litter less! |
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Following the message: Cleanliness is next to Happiness |
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Who is going down here? |
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Yes Sir... we all are! Heroes of JIM&WS |
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Getting down & Dirty |
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Under the watchful eye of an IAF Drone |
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Spot the Drone |
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Into the Pits |
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Filling sacks full of waste |
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Carrying out garbage from the pits |
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Cache pits being cleared |
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Cleaning and disinfecting the toilets. A sack of bleaching powder |
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Stock taking |
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Young guns from JIM&WS |
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Assembling the collected garbage at a spot. |
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The customary Group Photograph |
Note: Due to a cracked UV filter (which I ignored) some of the mainly wide angle shots have a visible halation along the crack.
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