Photos of the northern face of Sapugangri are common on the internet, but the western face are rarely seen. If you look at the photos of the Western face at first glance, you’d think it was a mountain in Nepal or the Alps.
To see the Western face, you need to go over a rocky pass at an altitude of more than 5,300 metres, with no trail, which is unfamiliar to the locals.
In the middle of the pass there is a large stone paved platform, which is flat, but there are few plants willing to grow in such a barren place. In the middle of this platform is a blue ice lake set in the middle, which tells us that this was once a glacier.
‘We need to hurry, the weather is changing too fast.’
‘Okay, but the air is thin.’
The path to the pass is littered with scree, boulders that have flaked, crashed and cracked under glacial erosion and thermal expansion, full of sharp edges.
I wonder how the first Tibetans who came here found these paths. The so-called path is to walk through the rocks without a trace of dirt underfoot or any markings, like finding the optimal escape route in a maze.
The higher the altitude, the faster the weather changes, bad weather can strike at any time, and the lack of oxygen slows down the action and makes the danger even more dangerous. At this point, the only thing you can do is to save your strength and keep your mind clear.
When we reached a few dozen metres below the pass, a fierce snowstorm suddenly descended, visibility was instantly reduced, the back of the team disappeared into the wind and snow, the front team could only temporarily hide under a big rock for shelter.
‘Yu, it will be a long time before Shanren and Meng Qiang come up, should we wait? Or should we go over now?’
‘We must wait, or they won’t be able to find their way over the pass. Bring out the tents and mats, let’s hide under it.’
‘Yu, it will be a long time before Shanren and Meng Qiang come up, should we wait? Or should we go over now?’
‘We must wait, or they won’t be able to find their way over the pass. Bring out the tents and mats, let’s hide under it.’
Even though we just put the tent over our heads, it was much warmer inside than outside, and the wind and snow couldn’t blow in at all. A thin nylon sheet, a few people squeezed inside, heat and moisture filled the small space, on the outside was the vast stretching Nyenching Tanggula mountain range, but the cold wind and blizzard was raging.
By the time Meng Qiang and the others walked up, the snow had stopped, the sun was back out, the sky was clearer than before, and the deep blue colour made the snow seem unreal.
All the colours on us were more vibrant than before, and if I had tried to record the feeling with my camera, it would have had to be pulled up saturation.
The wind on the pass was nowhere to be found, and there was even some warmth standing in the setting sun, the snow hiding the footprints that had come, as strange as the sudden descent here.
The sun was setting and the shadows of the mountains were growing and lengthening along the ridgelines, and although we wanted to enjoy the afterglow of the setting sun for a little while longer, the shadows of the mountains were telling us that we needed to find the campsite asap.
Walking in such a barren land can be a more heartfelt way of thanking nature for the food and shelter it has given us. We’ve always thought of those things as mere products of industry and ingenuity, but here you realise that it’s more important what resources nature itself can provide.
If I hadn’t been hiding inside a tent made of petroleum and curled up in a sleeping bag made of bird down, I wouldn’t have been able to find anything that would have kept us alive on this windy, snowy night in this barren land.
The tent shook violently in the strong winds, and I could only pray that the fabric of the tent would resist the hypothermia and tearing, or I would lose my life. No wonder the locals worship the towering snow-capped mountains as if they were deities, faith becomes the only saving grace when through hard work one cannot provide support for survival.
In the morning when I drilled out of my ice-crusted sleeping bag, I found that the plastic water bag filled with water froze into an icy lump, and if it wasn’t for the strong plateau sunshine, I might have had to carry this big ice cube on my back to continue my trek.
From my review, the first four passes of this trek were all of the same type: above 5,300 metres in altitude, full of gravel or rocks, with no trail bed and steep gradients.
After the third pass, we reached the western slopes of Sapugangri, with a muddy road that goes right up to the glacier nearby, and two very modest, ventilated, air-sprinkled tin houses. Who wants to be huddled in a cramped tent when there is a house to live in, no matter what it is like.
I shoved cow shit into the roaring fireplace and the heat and smoke made the house dry and warm. The crew who had been out shooting the stars panicked and came back inside, telling that they had heard wolves howling, and we learnt to howl like wolves.
Maybe it was too much of a fake learning, and no more wolf howls outside.