Wednesday, 27 July 2011

Monsoon Madness & Long Weekends.


Nepal is a short hop and a light skip for expats in Dubai. It makes a great spot for those on a long weekend. Those that wish to progress the skills gained at Wadi Adventure, Global Climbing and such like. Pure Land Expeditions in partnership with Elements Adventure in Nepal is proud to offer our deluxe 'Long weekend - Monsoon trips'. These have been running well all season, with adrenaline junkies enjoying the high flows of the Himalayan rivers. The peace at our safari beach camps and the chaos of Thamel.

We specialize in private trips only, so grab your friends and come over for a great few days of fun. The schedule will blow you away - as will the whirlwind tour of Nepal.

Our tours are set for Rafters and Kayakers - so pack your swim suits and come over. We will take care of everything.


Day 1

Collection from airport in private transport and journey to the heart of Kathmandu – Thamel and our base camp boutique hotel (address supplied on booking. Enjoy the chaos and the temples.


Day 2

Following breakfast at the hotel we load the transport and make our way to the Trisuli river

Stay in our safari lodge, this is a fully catered day. The journey cuts through the heart of Nepal, making its way from the Kathmandu Valley to the home of the Gurung community. Our destination is the amazing Trisuli river, flowing from myth and making its way to India via the twists and turns of the mighty Himalayas. The Trisuli is graded between 2-4+ and we will raft on sections that are suitable for your group.


Day 3

Waking to the sound of the rushing water an aquatic highway that is the Trisuli. We will breakfast before leaving for yet another aquatic ride, one that will be a real monsoon blast. We return to Kathmandu and our base hotel in the evening. On the first night you are welcome to leave luggage not needed until the final day, this is also true for passports and other items not needed


Day 4

Kathmandu is a crazy chaotic capital full of magic and you will have time to explore the streets and temples after breakfast prior to your airport transfer. Please remember that your return flight requires 3 hour check-in period. We will liaise with you about a suitable time for the transfer.

Images c/o Ian Ganderton.

Tuesday, 19 July 2011

From mass hysteria to a single emotion.



Last weekend I spent an enjoyable afternoon at a rugby match. I went to watch Wrexham Crusaders, who I had taken rafting at the end of winter. I am no rugby fan and sat in the crowd to wait the game as a passive observer.


As the game progressed I was amazed that I got more and more engaged in following the interaction of players. Not just that but also how the spectators interacted with each other, strangers but for a common belief.


As the battle for possession moved from team to team and the ball passed left to right I could feel the masses of the crowd grow with adrenaline and be pushed and pulled by defeat. Throughout this time in the heat of the moment. In the shouts and moans from the crowd not a single obscenity was mentioned, no curse or oppressive comments. It was family viewing par excellence.


This brought me to the current crop of kayaking dvds online and to buy, along with the music that blasts from cars at each venue. Too much gangster rap, not the audio pleasantness one expects. Its hardly family centred. It alienates and keeps people away, is this what we want?


This is a slight detour, its not the part of the essay that we need to concentrate on, but is worth thinking about. The main crux is the euphoria as the ball was passed, how the spectator and emotions are moved along by the pace and the collected ambience of the surroundings. Spectators willing the side to win and the other to loose, but this is pure speculation and superstition, no cause and effect are correlated. Even if Wrexham made the move, the shouting, crossing of fingers etc are not the cause. Players skill is what matters the most and no amount of shouts from the terraces will change that, although the fans feel that the players owe them, they must explain the mistakes and do better for the fans next time around.


So how can this experience be filtered into the world of paddling. We are all alone when we make our journey on the flow. The skills we have learnt over the months and years become crystal and so we embrace our surroundings. The river bank is our stadium for experience. The flow and moves we make become formed as our comfort zone builds, the emotions that we can see as the spectator masses 'are' the individual. As a river runner we answer to no fans, no spectators. We are all that ever was, and all that ever will be. It only matters to us.


Is this a greater or lesser pressure, only the individual could tell, no scape goat to be pulled at the horns. We answer to our own questioning only. Our stadium is not filled with people 'willing us to win'. The blossom of nature is the only chorus we have and that requires no post match debrief.


What is apparent at this point is the 'person centered approach' river running has no team as such. So why is it that after we run a river do we, at times, feel deflated like we have 'let the side down'. I often hear this from my groups and from people on the river. For myself I have also been known to 'beat myself up', about a missed move, a stroke that wasn't placed as I wanted and such. This is not why we paddle and we need a mechanism to halt the emotions that 'tell us' we are bad for making mistakes. We don't have to answer to peers. Only our own happiness matters and I believe this is the joy of putting our self in nature. To be immersed in a place that we interpret, a place that asks nothing of us and expects nothing. Our stadium doesn't expect a winner.