09:
Lobuche East (Lobuje) trekking peak 20,075 feet / 6,119 meters
Ninth
Highest Trekking Peak of Nepal
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Fact
Box about Kusum Kangru
20,075 feet / 6,119meters
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Elevation
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20,075
feet / 6,119meters |
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Location
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Khumbu region of Nepal
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Best for the Climbing
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April, May, September,
October, November |
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Year First Climbed
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1979 |
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First Climber (s)
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Japanese Expedition
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Convenient Center (s)
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Namche Bazaar
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Latitude
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27° 58' 19" North
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Longitude
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86° 46' 45" East
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Nearest Major Airport
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Kathmandu (Minor: Lukla
& Phaplu) |
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Itinerary type
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Lodge / Camping
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Accommodations
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Fixed / Customized
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Trek grade
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Moderate & Strenuous
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Total days
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21 + 4 = 25 days
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Year First Climbed
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1952 by Swish (Lobuche
West), 1984 (Lobuche East)
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Extra
cost except your Package cost
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Climbing
Royalty:
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Group
size
Rate in US$
Additional P/P in US$
1 – 4 persons
350.00 only
5 – 8 persons
350.00 plus
40.00 per person
9 – 12 persons
510.00 plus
25.00 per person
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Climbing
Guide’s fee:
Airfare:
Air rescue:
Garbage deposit:
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US
$ 300
will be divided for all participants
US $
184 for round trip flight
US $ 1200.00 per hour if necessary
US $ 250.00 is refundable |
| For detail
about itinerary and price: |
Mail
to: info@expeditionnepal.com
|
Most of attempts on the
mountain climb the summit ridge only as far as a subsidiary
snow summit before the true peak. Base camp for the South
Ridge is best established near a hidden lake at the base of
the South-West Face near 5,551 m. The views from Ama Dablam
and Tawuche are spectacular, and this spot provides a superb
site for the base camp.
From the end of the lake
climb beneath the main glaciers and gain access to the ridge
overlooking Lobuche and the Khumbu Glacier. This point can
be reached from the Lobuche side without great difficulty.
Depending on the conditions the snow ridge can be followed.
After crevasses will dictate the best line to take. Parties
have recorded problems with crevasses cutting the ridge and
presenting difficulties. The true summit can be reached with
some difficulty by gaining the notch by descended and climbing
the quite difficult snow slope to the summit.
Lobuche East is the hardest
of the trekking peaks that commercial groups attempt. In the
Everest Region (Khumbu) only Kwangde and Kusum Kangru are
more difficult. The main peak of Lobuche however is to the
NW of Lobuche East and is not included in the trekking peak
permit. Therefore, a legal climb to Lobuche West (Main) (expedition-peak-permit)
is considerable more expensive than to Lobuche East. Now follows
a description of Lobuche East (20075ft, 6119m 27 58 08N, 86
47 04S).
Very few climbers
who attempt this peak reach the real summit, but many attain
the worth -while false summit. Good conditions and a dawn
or pre-dawn start is recommended. The average angle for the
entire climb is not steep, but there are areas of messy seracs
that require two axes, front pointing and belaying. The ridge
route is sometimes easier. Many climbers who take this approach
stop at the top of the ridge, thinking this is the false summit
of Lobuche East. But, infact a continuation on the knife-edged
ridge is needed (rope!) to reach the false-summit. The true
summit proved to be, at first, an unattainable goal, but the
Swiss first climbed rocky outliners of Lobuche East in 1952.
Subsequent attempts fell short of the summit, finally climbed
in 1984. Lobuche West was first climbed in 1955, by the South
shoulder, which was also the first attempt. Since than the
mountain has been scaled only a few times, also by the East-Face.
There
are two distinct summits to Lobuje Peak - Lobuje East (6,119m/20,070ft)
and Lobuje West (6,145m/20,161ft). Although a continuous ridge
connects them there is a sharp gap and a considerable distance
between them. Lobuje is an attractive summit, offering a variety
of existing routes and a wide scope for new lines. Seen from
near Pheriche, the dark triangle of its rocky East Face rises
above the moraines of the Khumbu Glacier to an icy skyline.
This skyline forms the South Ridge, the junction of the East
Face with the glaciated South-West Face and the line of the
normal route of ascent. This in turn leads to the summit ridge
running northwest from the top of East Face through several
small summits to the East Peak.
Further
Information to arrange a climb to above trekking peak will
be provided on request

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------------- NAME OF THE TREKKING PEAKS ------------- > |
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