Entries from Kilimanjaro
September 6, 2023
Posted by: Casey Grom
Categories: Expedition Dispatches Kilimanjaro
Elevation: 12,570'
Our team moved to Shira Camp today. Everyone moved efficiently on the trail as we left the Cloud Forrest and approached the Giant Heather zone. Within a few short hours we were at camp soaking in the views as we overlooked the Great Rift Valley. After a day and a half in the forest, we felt like we could see for miles. We are enjoying our time in camp, the food is delicious, and we are having great conversation in our dining tent. Cribbage anyone?
Tomorrow, we tackle the Barranco Wall,
RMI Guide Casey Grom and the Killi Crew
September 5, 2023
Posted by: Casey Grom
Categories: Expedition Dispatches Kilimanjaro
Elevation: 9,890'
Hello everyone,
Today the we had an early start and left behind our beautiful lodge as we have headed to the mountain towards the start of the climb. We left around 8 am and drove along the rural country side and small villages for two hours before reaching the park entrance.
Most of the area surrounding Kilimanjaro has been cultivated and primarily used for coffee and banana production, plus a variety of other agriculture needs. There are still a few areas that have been untouched and resemble more of a savannah that Tanzania is known for. Kilimanjaro’s base is mostly forested and resembles more of a jungle, this area is called the cloud forest.
Once we arrived at the park gate we had all of our gear weighed and divided into loads for our porters and other staff to carry before hitting the trail. Once everything was in order we started our climb slowly making our way up the winding trail that ascends continuously through the thick forest. Thankfully the overhead canopy provided a bit of relief from the hot sun overhead.
The team hiked for about five hours and reached our camp for the night that sits around 10,000'. After settling into camp and getting situated the team was served a nice warm meal for dinner.
Everyone is doing well and looking forward to a good night's rest.
RMI Guide Casey Grom and crew
Thank you for the updates! Sending love and positivity to Rebecca, Chad, and Jodi!
Posted by: Sarah Torzone on 9/6/2023 at 4:56 pm
Thank you Casey for keeping us informed of the daily progress. We look forward to your updates! Good luck to everyone, enjoy the journey and stay safe!
Posted by: Tania Walls on 9/6/2023 at 11:24 am
Hello from Tanzania!
Everyone and all bags have arrived in Tanzania and the team is doing well and in good spirits after some very long flights. Nearly 20 plus hours for many of us. It was a short and quiet ride to our lodge that is nestled in between Arusha and Moshi and not so far from the base of Kilimanjaro. The team had a quick dinner and headed for bed as the time change had us all feeling just a little off and pretty tired after all the traveling. Luckily we had an extra day here because of flight options. I say luckily, because the time change is pretty tough being about 12 hours difference for us. The extra day will certainly help us adjust.
Today we had a leisurely morning and then rolled into our group meeting after breakfast, where we did a round of introductions and then discussed the upcoming program for the days ahead. The team spent the remainder of the day getting our gear packed up, exploring the grounds of our peaceful Lodge and dodging the gaggle of monkeys patrolling the grounds. We wrapped up the evening with a delicious meal and plenty of friendly conversations.
Everyone is doing well, excited to be here and looking forward to stretching our legs tomorrow as we head to the mountain.
RMI Guide Casey Grom and the Kili crew!
GO TEAM!!!
Love the blog site!!! Thank you for the awesome updates!
Luv, Hikari and Belle
Posted by: Hikari and Belle on 9/9/2023 at 4:43 pm
Super excited for you all … how cool we can follow your journey from across the globe. Looking forward to the updates and pictures and wishing you all a great experience!!❌⭕️ PamH
Posted by: Pam Hess on 9/6/2023 at 5:01 pm
There were elephants walking between our tents in the night. We went to sleep to the sound of them eating grass and shrubs. Breakfast at Lokisale was just before sunrise and so we got the maximum value from our final day on Safari. We hated to leave such a comfortable camp, but we were excited to see what we could see. Within a few minutes drive, we’d crossed back into Tarangire National Park, but a considerable distance from the main gate. Our drivers took us along a gigantic swamp which was teeming with wildlife. We had the place to ourselves for hours. The team was still looking high and low for leopards when we found lions. Two big males, out for a mellow morning of hunting. They simply walked toward herds of hartebeest or Cape buffalo without much stealth, hoping to get lucky.
Then we saw a lioness and her two cubs laying about and doing cat things. Before the morning was out we’d gotten glimpses of another leopard and a couple of Cheetahs. Not close enough for photography but close enough that we felt very lucky to see them. We headed for the main gate eventually, after a hundred more eagles and giraffes, a dozen hippos, a million impala and wildebeest and zebra. There were hyenas and mongooses and darn near everything else… except bears and tigers. And mile after mile of beautiful East African savanna and forest.
By noon we were out of the park and driving east toward Arusha. We made a final stop at the cultural center on the city outskirts and stretched our legs while surveying the artwork. We reached our comfortable and familiar Rivertrees Hotel just after 3 PM. Then we started having to say goodbye to one another as our itineraries diverged. Some of us are flying today, some tomorrow, some are continuing the expedition to the shores of Zanzibar. It was a good team and so we are confident of seeing each other again on some future adventure. Even so, there is just a little sadness that it all has to end for now.
It was pretty fun. Thanks for following along.
Best Regards,
RMI Guide Dave Hahn & Team
We sure have enjoyed your blog and making us feel like we were on the journey with our friends! Congratulations to all on the tour! Safe travels home to everyone! Can’t wait to hear more about your trip and pictures on IG Cindee! Much love!
Posted by: Allie Frankie & Tillie on 9/2/2023 at 3:18 pm
Thank you, Dave for your wonderful blog. I think you should write for a travel magazine.Your comments and insights are so descriptive - all of us on the other side of the world could imagine being part of your expedition. Thank you for taking good care of our daughter Melanie, and her close friends, Debi and Dan. More travels in the future for these adventurers? You bet!! Wishing you all the best, Janice Smiley
Posted by: Janice Smiley on 9/1/2023 at 6:05 pm
We made the big move from the Ngorongoro Highlands to the Tarangire dry lands. But we didn’t rush it. A leisurely 9 AM departure gave us lots of time to enjoy the comforts of the Plantation Lodge. We made one stop for souvenirs and artwork, but then drove south and west to Tarangire. We entered the park at midday on what turned out to be a blazing hot day. All the usual players were visible immediately -impala, wildebeest and zebra. It took a little more poking around to see the odd Eland and Hartebeest. Tarangire is a series of three rivers running in parallel through arid land. It is a vast network of rough dirt roads going back and forth from one drainage to the next. Animals need the water and so we always have good luck in Tarangire. Especially with elephants. The team loved seeing giraffes but there were mixed feelings about eagle-owls. We saw a male and female lion, but we didn’t watch them for long…they were napping and we like our lions to be a bit more fiesty. We went deep into the park looking for leopards and finally Jacob jammed on the brakes and pointed up an acacia tree at a beautiful cat in a tree. The leopard was skittish though and hopped down to run off in the tall grass. We’d all gotten a look at him/her and seen the beautiful color and pattern of spots. This elusive leopard completed our “big five” hunt… but we want more. We’ve got an excellent chance of seeing leopards and lions early tomorrow on our final day of Safari. We are in a “tent camp” just out of the park boundary (the animals don’t know there is a boundary) and so we’ll begin the morning deep within the habitat already. Our last evening together was magical. We sat by a campfire as the sun went down and the super blue moon came up.
Best Regards,
RMI Guide Dave Hahn
AMAZING!! WOW!! What an experience y’all! The tent camp sounds interesting like it might be a little dangerous with all the animals that hunt in the dark!! We can’t believe all the animals you got to see in their own environment. How incredibly! So many wonderful memories! Thank you Cindee & Amanda & crew for letting us share in your adventure! Safe travels home!
Posted by: Allie Frankie & Tillie on 9/2/2023 at 3:12 pm
Love the photo of the big tree; it seems so iconic to a safari. Also, not sure what an eagle-owl is and why there were mixed feelings about it, but will ask Cindee when we talk next. Again, so exciting to hear about seeing the animals and the experiences you all had! Love this daily blog and thank you Dave for keeping family and friends updated! Safe travels!
Posted by: Kasey Oldham on 8/31/2023 at 5:13 pm
It was worth another predawn start to get into Ngorongoro Crater first thing in the morning. The animals are a bit more active in the cool morning than on a hot afternoon. We wanted action. The drive to the gate from Plantation Lodge was brief, but then the drive on rough roads up to the crater rim and along that rim was a good deal longer. It was slightly surreal as well because we did it in thick fog. We got under that cloud layer though as soon as we began our descent into the “crater” (which is really a caldera). At first there was some enthusiastic pointing at individual zebra and wildebeest… until our team realized there were thousands of zebra and wildebeest… not to mention gazelles and cape buffalo.
Our guide Jacob made the sighting of the day, pointing out four lionesses. We watched them move and rest… but they were clearly hungry and making their moves with breakfast in mind. We were all watching when one of them charged a Grant’s Gazelle. The Gazelle was moving fast but the lioness had cut off his exit possibilities and took him down before our wide open eyes. The other three big cats made their leisurely way over to enjoy a snack as we watched. It was a cool day in the crater, the clouds never really did go away. But that seemed to be fine conditions for viewing wildlife. We saw everything from hyenas to hippos… lots of hippos. But we weren’t seeing rhinos. They exist in Ngorongoro but they are notoriously shy. Finally, we spotted a pair of black rhinos from the crater rim on our exit. Emmanuel, our guide found the pair with binoculars and we each ticked them of… making four of the “big five” down… elephants, lions, cape buffalo and rhinos. Just missing leopards.
On the crater rim we visited a Maasai village and saw some fine dancing and chanting, watched the men make fire and throw spears and then entered their small huts to try to understand what it really is like to hold on to traditional ways and means in a modern world.
We were back at Plantation in plenty of time to enjoy the sunset, some excellent cocktails and a perfectly prepared and presented dinner.
Best Regards
RMI Guides Dave Hahn & Team
Wow! How cool was that to see!! What a great description we felt like we were right there with you witnessing it all go down! Wish my aunt would have done that with me instead of take me cruising downtown and make us hide in the back of her VW bug! #geauxcindeeandamanda
Posted by: Allie Frankie and Tillie on 9/2/2023 at 3:04 pm
Wow, what an awesome day! Love that you saw all those animals; what an experience! Love Dave’s descriptions; they make it easy to imagine being there! What a memorable trip for Cindee and Amanda to share!
Posted by: Kasey Oldham on 8/30/2023 at 2:53 pm
Sleeping in a bed again is pretty good, we decided. Even so, we didn’t sleep late this morning. We got driving west by 8 AM, excited to be on Safari. We made a brief stop on the edge of Arusha for provisions and then pushed farther west in our two Land Cruisers.
Our guides, Jacob and Emmanuel, explained that the arid zone we were traversing was Maasai country. We began seeing herds of cattle being marched to and from dusty waterholes by men and boys. We passed many “bomas” which were clusters of huts around a central animal corral.
Finally, we came to lush vegetation again on the shores of Lake Manyara and entered the National Park of the same name. Our first animal sightings were of waterbucks in the dense forests. Then bushbucks. Before long we were adding elephants and Cape buffalo to our rapidly growing list. Naturally there were plenty of monkeys and baboons. We enjoyed a picnic lunch on the shore of the vast lake and then got back on the dusty roads in search of more. Eventually we saw zebras and impala and warthogs. One shy giraffe appeared momentarily. There were egrets and eagles and hornbills.
As the afternoon stretched on, we headed for the park gate and drove up the steep escarpment to the Ngorogoro Highlands… out of the great rift valley. In Karatu our drivers took a side road through fields full of crops out to the Plantation Lodge. We enjoyed a very civilized evening sipping cocktails in a splendid bar in a splendid garden. Dinner was delicious… but we admitted to missing Tosha’s miraculous mountain cooking. You can take the climber out of the mountains, but…
Best Regards,
RMI Guide Dave Hahn & Team
WhooHoo! This seems like the R&R part of your journey! #geauxcindeeandamanda
Posted by: Allie Frankie & Tillie on 9/2/2023 at 2:58 pm
What an an amazing adventure for the 2 of you, Dan & Debi! Can’t wait to hear all about it. Oh, & by the way….love the unshaven look, Dan!
Posted by: Beverly on 8/30/2023 at 10:29 am
August 28, 2023
Posted by: Dave Hahn
Categories: Expedition Dispatches Kilimanjaro
Elevation: 6,000'
At breakfast, there was overwhelming consensus that a whole night at 10,000 ft was better than half a night at 15,000 ft. We were rested and we had appetites again and we were talking about showers. But we still needed to get down the final 4000 ft of trail to the Mweka Gate. Our staff pulled out all the stops for a good sendoff breakfast and then we got walking down through the forest. At first the trail was dry and pleasant, but around 9000 ft that changed. It got slick and muddy and treacherous. The forest was beautiful, of course, but we couldn’t look around much because every step required care and concentration to avoid slipping. Cheerful porters balancing great awkward loads came running down the slippery track but we had to tiptoe. That technique worked well though, by 11:00 we were on drier and easier ground coming to the Mweka Gate at 6000 ft. We signed out with the National Park and then rode a short distance to a local shop that hosted our team lunch and farewell ceremony with our staff. It was a cheerful session of dancing and singing. We tipped each and every one of the 44 Barking Zebra staff and tried to express our gratitude for their efforts. After goodbyes and a little souvenir shopping the team boarded the bus for the two hour ride back to Rivertrees Inn in Usa River. Showers at last! After all of that we got together for a celebration dinner out in the garden. The trip isn’t over, by any means, but we are entering a far more comfortable phase as we head toward Safari.
Best regards,
RMI Guide Dave Hahn
Wow! What a wonderful experience and incredible journey! Loving your adventure Cindee & Amanda! Can’t wait to see more!
Posted by: Allie Frankie & Tillie on 9/2/2023 at 2:53 pm
Congratulations on this awesome achievement! Can’t wait to see the safari! Woo-hoo!
Posted by: Kasey Oldham on 8/29/2023 at 2:44 pm
August 27, 2023
Posted by: Dave Hahn
Categories: Expedition Dispatches Kilimanjaro
Elevation: 19, 340'
Sunday, August 27, 2023 - 7:56 am PT
Big Day! And night. We were awake at 11 PM sharp last night. Thankfully, it was calm and not too cold at 15,200 ft at that hour. We geared up, ate a quick “breakfast” and got walking at 12:05 AM. Everybody else at Barafu Camp did so too. It was a great parade of headlights converging on the steep start to the route. Naiman led our team nice and steady through various teams that were stopping and starting to deal with difficulties. Once we were through the rocky start to the route, the walking got a little easier and one could pay a little attention to the stars and the lights of Moshi and other towns and cities. The moon was about half full and threw back some useful light for us. As expected, it got cold as we got a few hours into the climb. By the halfway point we pretty much had every scrap of clothing on. Water bottles within our packs were freezing up. Our main strategy for dealing with the cold was to keep moving. We hit Stella Point at the crater rim at 6AM. The walking got easier then… and absolutely beautiful as the light came up. Sunrise came as we were halfway to Uhuru -the highest point. We got to Uhuru at 7 AM. It was a little cold and breezy at 19,341 ft above sea level and so we didn’t stay long. Long enough for some victorious pics with the big sign board up there. The breeze/wind motivated us to move down the mountain at a pretty good clip, boot skiing in the scree. We were back to Barafu at 10:10 AM. Tosha presented us with a pizza brunch and we had some time for taking care of ourselves and packing up. Nobody was all that psyched at the prospect of four more hours on our feet to descend 5,000 ft but we got after it anyway. We made it down to a 10,000 ft camp in the woods by 3:35 PM. The team is safe and relieved to be back on flat ground (everything at high camp is tilted) and so happy to be breathing oxygen rich air with actual humidity again.
Best Regards,
RMI Guide Dave Hahn
Congratulations!! Now I know someone (Sarah) in real life that has climbed one of my bucket list mountains. Looking forward to celebrate in person when we all get together back in the US. Peace…..and Keep Climbing!!
Posted by: Dwight Fish on 8/29/2023 at 4:21 am
Congratulations!! Way to go!
Posted by: Karen Edwards on 8/29/2023 at 2:11 am
August 26, 2023
Posted by: Dave Hahn
Categories: Expedition Dispatches Kilimanjaro
Elevation: 15,200'
It was a pretty start to the day down at Karanga Camp. There were just enough clouds around to make the sunrise colorful, but not enough clouds to make us worry about the weather. It was calm and clear when we walked uphill just after 8 AM. The path upward was an easy one, on broad open slopes. Our gang had no trouble matching Naiman’s pace and in just a few hours we were going up the final, slightly steeper, slopes to Barafu Camp. As fast as we were, our support crew was faster still and we moved into a fine camp and took shelter from the strong midday sun in our tents. Tosha served up a great lunch and then the team sat for a detailed meeting about the big climb and how to prepare for it. This all left plenty of time for resting through the afternoon in preparation for our “alpine start” tonight. In s few minutes we will chow down on an early dinner at 5 o’clock… Spaghetti! And then we will go to bed before the sun sets at 6:30.
We’ve got big plans for the night!
Best Regards,
RMI Guide Dave Hahn & Team
Omg you all did it!!! Congratulations to you all - I am so super happy for you Amanda and Cindee!!!!!! Can’t wait to hear all about it over some wine!!!
Posted by: Belinda Greenstein on 8/27/2023 at 10:28 am
Thankful you’re having great weather and great food! Almost there… enjoy the “big” climb.
Hello to Sarah O
Posted by: Judy Hurley on 8/27/2023 at 7:45 am
Sounds like you’re all off to a great start. We’re enjoying your posts and photos. Have a good trek to the Barranco Wall tomorrow!
Posted by: Ted and Patti reingold on 9/6/2023 at 5:12 pm
Congratulations on your progress,
12 feet is mind boggling!
Thank you for providing great updates and photos.
We’re enjoying them immensely.
Posted by: Kristina Miano on 9/6/2023 at 4:15 pm
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