Thursday, September 04, 2008
Mt. Everest Report: Sept 4th (Day 5); (2) NFL Picks
Wow! What a day! We visited some of the holiest places in Buddhism and Hinduism today. Incredible views of Kathmandu. I know Bob Seger is smiling somewhere now that I have made it here. 
Seriously, we witnessed a Hindu burial today. It was one of the most moving experiences in my life. We have a pretty slow Internet connection here so posting photos will come later. I offered to troubleshoot the issue but it was in a far away place which I could not troubleshoot remotely. Hey, I'm a geek and that's why I'm on this trip. 
We will hopefully fly to Lukla in the morning. Exciting stuff.
(2) NFL Picks: The NFL Season is about to kickoff in later today. Wow! I haven't studied the season much but I have to keep my promise to Buffalo Steve to exchange picks before the season starts. Here goes nothing:
AFC
Division Winners:
AFC East: New England
AFC North: Pittsburgh
AFC South: Indianapolis
AFC West: San Diego
Wild Card: Jacksonville, NY Jets
Dark Horse: Buffalo, Cleveland, Tennessee
AFC Champion: San Diego
NFC
Division Winners:
NFC East: Dallas
NFC North: Minnesota
NFC South: New Orleans
NFC West: Seattle
Wild Card: NY Giants, Tampa
Dark Horse: Green Bay, Philadelphia, Arizona
NFC Champion: Dallas
Super Bowl Champion: San Diego
Posted by an excited Tank in Kathmandu, Nepal.
Wednesday, September 03, 2008
Mt. Everest Report: Sept 3rd (Day 4): You are bringing this to the mountain?
The team all arrived in Kathmandu alive and well and all the bags made it from home safe and sound. There are already rumors that the flights to Lukla have not flown in 9 days, but we have plan B: hire a military helicopter. The team gathered for a group photo (I took the photo so am not in it): This was when everyone was still talking to me. We then did a gear check where I asked everyone to dump their bags and show me their day packs and their duffel. We had some strange things that people wanted to take up the mountain ranging from exercise dumb-bells to EMS emergency kits. Richard ordered beers and I gave the talk about high altitude and our planned route and options in case of bad weather or altitude sickness. We then went to a sporting goods store for some last minute items that the gear check showed some of us did not have and then off to Fire and Ice for pizza where we allowed Linda to order way too much beer and started to debate politics. Off to bed then for a day of touring in Kathmandu tomororw. Posted by Steve in Kathmandu
Tuesday, September 02, 2008
Mt. Everest Report Report: Wednesday Sept 3rd (Day 4): Where is Everyone?
Hey this is Steve reporting from Delhi, India on where everyone is located at this moment (7:30am IST). Here is the list: Tom and Mychal: Already in Kathmandu Steve, Gautam, Linda, Joel, and Rod: Delhi, India Vassil: Arrived in Delhi, but has no visa so has to hang at the airport and wait for us The Tank: Bangkok, Thailand Richard and Remi: in route to Bangkok to pick up the Tank and head to Kathmandu Update later on when we are all in Kathmandu Posted by Steve in Delhi, India
Mt. Everest Report: Tuesday, Sept 2 (Day 3): "If I ever get to Katmandu"
The above lyric is from Bob Seger's classic hit "Katmandu". When Gautam e-mailed the YouTube link on Friday, I knew I had a fellow classic rock traveler. (BTW, Kal is my long lost classic rock brother, Steve for New Wave, and Editor-In-Chief PermaGuest Outlaw Jack for Country and Roots music.
Well, it's almost time to go to Kathmandu. I'm psyched but also concerned. You see, I am flying from Hong Kong to Kathmandu through BANGKOK where a state of emergency was just declared. Remi, Richard, and I will hopefully only be on the ground for about an hour in Bangkok. My bigger concern is returning through Bangkok on September 19 where I am scheduled to overnight there. I hope I can "fly like a bird in sky and no one can take my freedom away." (From "Una Paloma Blanca")
Being the seasoned global traveler, let's hope our trip is more like Antarctica where I met Steve and Linda in 2005 than my trip to Georgia in 1992. Keep the Faith and please keep us in your thoughts and prayers.
Posted by a concerned Tank in Hong Kong. Not gambling in Macau but hoping to get to Kathmandu.
Monday, September 01, 2008
Mt. Everest Report: Monday Sept 1 (Day 2)
Linda is visiting the Taj Mahal while waiting for me in India and the Tank is in Hong Kong planning on heading to Macau. I hope he does not gamble away all of the money he was bringing for the trip! I leave for India today. Several other trek members are already in transit as we speak. This trek is helping out a charity! We raised about $20,000 for Comp2Kids, a charity helping to bridge the digital divide in low-income communities. Gautam donated almost all of the money in a charity auction earlier this year. We are raising additional money for the schools, you can donate here. Posted by Steve in New York.
Sunday, August 31, 2008
Mt. Everest Report: Sunday August 31st (Day 1)
Tom (The Tank) has already landed in Hong Kong and I finished up packing my gear and stuff for the trek to Mt. Everest Base Camp. I leave tomorrow and travel to India and the entire team meets in Kathmandu on Wednesday. This is the first time I am the leader of an international trek of this kind. It was hard work but a lot of fun. Let me give you some behind the scenes information.
Our team is made up of some of my closest friends and I designed this trip almost a year ago. Actually I have been planning this trip since the last time I was at Everest. Here is the team:
- Richard Campbell (Canada)
- Tom Howe (USA)
- Mychal Howe (USA)
- Gautam Gujral (USA)
- Remi Caron (Netherlands)
- Joel Semeniuk (Canada)
- Rod Giesbrecht (Canada)
- Vasseto Terziev (Bulgaria)
- Linda Varoli (USA)
- Tom (the Tank) Djurdjevich (USA)
Some old Sherpa buddies helped me out on the Nepal side, but I planned out a great trip based on my previous visits to Nepal. I wanted to start the trek with a flight to Lukla on Friday (Sept 5th) so I wanted everyone to arrive in Asia on Tuesday (Sept 2) and Kathmandu on Wednesday (Sept 3). This is really for two reasons, one is to get everyone here on time with some extra wiggle room due to the crazy airlines canceling flights (which did happen to 5 of us!) and second is that I can do a gear check on Wednesday so we can buy any missing supplies in Kathmandu on Thursday before we fly.
Here is the trek schedule that we have posted on this blog before. It is different than most Everest Base Camp treks insofar as I have planned a lot of extra time in the schedule to accommodate flight delays (in and out of Kathmandu) and bad weather, which there is a lot of.
Sept 5: Fly to Lukla. Lukla (9,000’) to Phakding (9,500’) Overnight at Phakding
For starters we fly to Lukla on Friday, this can be a problem since there are no lights in Lukla and it gets fogged in a lot. There is a 50% chance that we won't fly on Friday and have to fly on Saturday, or worse on Sunday! So if all goes well we will stay in Phakding and acclimate, if our flights are late we will head straight to Namche Bizarre from Lukla.
Sept 6: Phakding (9,500’) to Namche Bizarre (11,500’) Overnight in Namche
Sept 7: Acclimation day in Namche Bizarre (11,500’) Overnight in Namche
It is very important to rest in Namche and see how we are doing with the altitude. At this point altitude is usually not a problem with anyone. That is why it is very safe to build up the red blood cells here.
Sept 8: Namche (11,500’) to Pangboche (12,700’) Overnight at Pangboche
First spot where altitude can start to be a problem. Hopefully the extra night at Namche worked.
Sept 9: Pangboche (12,700’) to Pheriche (14,000’) Overnight in Pheriche
Sept 10: Acclimation day in Pheriche (14,000’) Overnight in Pheriche
Pheriche is higher than any point in the lower 48 states of the USA and all of Western Europe. We spend an extra day here
Sept 11: Pheriche (14,000’) to Loboche (16,000’) Overnight in Loboche
Sept 12: Loboche (16,000’) to Gorak Shep (16,800’) Overnight in Gorak Shep
This is when people will start to feel bad. That is why the next two days are very different than most treks to Everest.
Sept 13: Visit Everest Base Camp (17,400’). Overnight in Gorak Shep
Sept 14: Summit Kala Pattar (18,700’) Gorak Shep (16,800’) to Loboche (16,000’) Overnight in Loboche
The 13th or 14th (or 14th and 15th if we are day behind) we visit base camp as well as climb a nice high mountain Kala Pattar. Most treks do both in the same day, get up early, climb Kala Pattar and then come down and go to base camp. We will split this into two days since if there is bad weather we will go to base camp (since there is not much to see) and use the good weather day for the views from on top of Kala Pattar. If we are two days behind schedule we will do both in one day. This gives us tons of flexibility.
Sept 15: Loboche (16,000’) to Kumjum (12,500’) Overnight in Kumjum
If we are stuck behind again, we can go straight to Namche.
Sept 16: Kumjum (12,500’) to Namche (11,500’) Overnight in Namche
Sept 17: Namche (11,500’) to Lukla (9,000’) overnight in Lukla
Sept 18: Fly to Katmandu (weather permitting) Overnight at Katmandu
What is critical to me is that we put in extra days in Phakding and Gorak Shep for acclimation and rest as well as to give us wiggle room if someone gets sick or if there is bad weather.
What happens if someone gets altitude sickness (or if the Tank has blackberry withdrawal and we decide to leave him in Namche?) No problem, Namche is our hub, so if someone gets sick or tired, or does not want to continue, we'll take them to Namche and a sherpa will wait with them until we return. At absolute worst they will have to wait a week for us. Most likely what will happen is that if someone gets sick it will be at Loboche or Gorak Shep. So we will send them down to Pheriche to wait for us to come pick them up in a few days.
This is our trek. We will try to blog every day from now until September 21st when we come home. Most days on the trek we will not have coverage or Internet, so if we can get the sat phone to work perma-guest Jack will post for us via our messages on the sat phone.
Posted by Steve in New York
Saturday, August 30, 2008
Birthday Boy v Birthday Boy at the US Open
I got to the US Open at about 6pm, quickly scalped some tickets, and went straight to the back courts to watch the unseeded player play. Caught a female match where we sat in the first row, then a men's match, and then some mixed doubles. After a rain delay and the day sessions going over, around 8pm we went into the stadium to watch Marion Bartoli defeat Lindsay Davenport 6-1, 7-6 (3), earning Bartoli her first win in her first match in center court at the USTA. The headline event was 26 year old Andy Roddick vs Ernests Gulbis, a 19-year-old from Latvia. Gulbis comes out with a cannon, acing and winning fast, taking the first three games in about 11 minutes. After about 25 minutes Roddick did manage to win a few games, but Gulbis won the first set. Then something happened. The clock struck midnight and *both* Roddick and Gulbis were celebrating their birthdays. Roddick 27 and Gulbis 20. Experience mattered and Roddick went on to win in 4 sets. ESPN reports that Roddick is washed up. Younger players are passing him by and it is only a matter of time before young kids like Gulbis give him a scare and defeat him in early rounds. Posted by Steve from New York
Thursday, August 28, 2008
Final Red Sox vs Yankees at Yankee?
As posted Live! by Jack: 12:15pm and I've just boarded a Yankee bound 4 train at Bowling Green for what may very well be the last ever meeting of the Red Sox and Yankees at the House that Ruth built. With the way the Yanks are playing it probably will be. I had to put in some long days at work to ensure I could take off today, the 2nd to last sales day for August (I'm a sales systems engineer for a Telecom) but how could I miss this? Especially since I'm meeting my Dad when I get there. The enormity of the closing of Yankee Stadium is setting in and I'm actually getting choked up as I type this. For my Dad it may be more so since he's been going to Yankee since the late 40s or early 50s. He used to cut school to go with his brothers to the original Yankee. Regardless of if the Bombers can pull off a win to avoid the sweep to the Boston sports machine or they look like little leaguers again, I will be in the sun with my Dad. The man who raised my brother and I to bleed Yankee blue. The man who still has his Mickey Mantle clippings in a folder somewhere. Priceless man. Absolutely priceless. Its what makes baseball great. Fathers and sons. Go Yankees. Keep the faith! We've pulled off miracles before and maybe the departed. Greats can smile down on us for a few weeks till the closing curtain at the Cathedral. 2:33pm Olympian Jason Kidd is in attendance. Moose is at 69 pitches thru 4 and 2/3 innings but we are down 2 0. Too many Sox fans here. Its sickening. 3:11pm A-rod continues to be unproductive. Can't even sac fly a runner over. And again bottom of the 6th we leave 2 runners on. They were on with no outs. At least Abreu sac'd Damon to 3rd. 3:25pm Moose 112 through 7 complete including a self fedencr 3rd out snag to end the top of the 7th. Still 2 0 sawx. Ronan Tynan singing god bless America 3:40pm Cody ransom doubles then The stache rockets a 2 out 2 run homer to dead center. All tied up. 3:57pm Bruney comes out for the 8th and gets pedroia to fly out. Marte comes in to face Ortiz. Cano playing shallow right center. Perfectly placed to field a hard liner and throw little pee pee out. 2 out. Mo comes in and gets youlkis to pop to center. Bottom 8 now. Jeter is 3 for 3 (half of the Yankees 6 guys!) and leads off. Drives one to left center and is robbed of his 4th hit by a great diving catch from Jacoby Ellsbury. 1 away. 4:00pm Abreu flies to left with Jacoby Ellsbury again Making the play. Long run too. Pitching change. Justin Masterson replaces Hideki Okajima. 4:02pm 2 outs non on and 0-3 rod is up. Fear! Just call him K-rod. I mean come on at least lean into the pitch and take one for the team. Baylor and Balboni did it all the time. 4:14pm Bay hits a Soft grounder to jeter who throws it wide pulling giambi off the bag. E6. Kotsay flies out to the right field warning track. Lowrie grounds to giambi on a tough play. Bay to 2nd. Cora grounds out to 3rd. 4:18pm Bottom 9th. The Xman is up and rips one just foul down the left field line. Full count and he nails one up the middle. Gardner in to run. 4:21pm Cano rockets one to lowrie. Godzilla up. Gardner steals 2nd. 1 out 4:25pm They intentionally walk Godzilla. 2 on 1 out pudge is up. Pudge walks. Bases loaded. Giambi is up. How many walk offs does he have? 4:29pm Sawx bring in an over rated reliever. Bases loaded 1 out. GIAMBI WALK OFF SINGLE! Yankees win this historic game in classic fashion! Posted by Jack LIVE! At the House the Ruth Built
Joe Namath
The Tank finally met boyhood idol Joe Namath almost a year ago, Friday, September 7, 2007. I didn't post it for a long time because I've been busy with work, looking for work, and working on Jets closure. Joe Namath is why I used to root for the Jets. This is the final part of my Jets closure.  Posted by a grateful Tank on the ESPN 1050 Jets Cruise cruising around Manhattan.
Live! | NFL
 Wednesday, August 27, 2008 11:51:00 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)

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Tuesday, August 26, 2008
Last Red Sox Visit to the Stadium
Tonight is the beginning of the final Yankees-Red Sox series at the Stadium. Tomorrow night maybe my final visit as I am not exactly sure when I'll be back from Everest Base Camp. BTW, Bob Seger's "I'm going to Kathmandu" played on Q104.3 this morning. Coincidence, I think not.  LI Mike is scheduled to join me for the game. I hope to see JR and other friends there. I don't know if I'll be able to write as I'll be pretty revved and choked up. It's hard to say goodbye to a big part of my life. Many great memories over the years with Otto (Jeter diving into the stands game four years ago), JH, Super Twin Gil, Medford Bob, Bay Ridge Bob, Rochester/CFA Mike, Howard, Ronjon, Linda, Score's Mike, "Diamond Dave", Jimbo, the real Dominican Luis, Anna, Nicholas, and apologies to anyone else who I may have forgotten. Steve, Kathleen, Jack, and I witnessed the All Star Game finale. What a classic! If the Yankees are to make the playoffs, the Yankees really need a sweep and then 2 out of 3 at Fenway on the final weekend of the season. If the Yankees go 27-7 as we did in 1995 to make the playoffs, we can make the playoffs. There are six head-to-head games with the Red Sox and Rays and four against the White Sox. Nina from Deep Water Running doesn't have much faith and asked me to reinforce it last night. Life is never easy but you have to take chances and believe in your team, yourself, and God/G-d/Allah/Buddha/Creator/etc. Fight the good fight and let the chips fall where they may. Posted by The Tank Keeping the Faith at the Baseball Cathedral, Yankee Stadium, in the Boogie Down Bronx.
Monday, August 25, 2008
"O"vercoming the Orioles at Camden Yards
Tank's Notes: Editor In Chief and PermaGuest Outlaw Jack traveled to Baltimore on Sunday with Adam and his son Chris. Jack is a true rebel, especially against the inhospitable Baltimore hosts try to tell him what to do.
 Adam and Chris wait in center field for a home run.  Without further ado, I turn it over to Jack. I took the notes on the first trip through the Yankees batting order on
Adam's iPhone as my Blackberry was out of juice. (Jack is awesome at
sending The Tank Blackberry Pin messages. It helped get me through the
Yankees 1-0 victory at Fenway when I went home for Baseball Hall of
Fame Induction Weekend.)
It was a beautiful day for the drive down to Charm City. Pretty much 3 hours door to door. We
parked at the Marriott hotel just down the block from the Oriole Park
on Eutaw Street and wandered to the gates to what seemed like a Yankee
Home
game. The crowd filing in past the statue of the Babe, had to be 85%
Yankee fans. The rest of the crowd seemed to be fans of just about
every other team in the majors and a few minors. As usual there was a
pitiful turn out of Oriole faithful. (The Tank can attest to this as
John Sterling and Suzyn Waldman noted the same thing on the radio
broadcast. It is so bad that 40 percent of the Orioles attendance
comes during Yankees and Red Sox series. 40 percent of entire attendance is from 18 Yankee/Red Sox games out
of the 81 home dates or about 22 percent. Just sad I tell you.) The smoke and the smell of Boog's
BBQ was enticing but the lines in that 90F heat at the start of the
game had us seeking the refuge of our seats, which turned out to be in
the sun for the first half of the game.
It's been a while since I was at Oriole Park
and I'd forgotten that the O's fans (what seemed like 2 or 3 thousand
who actually showed up) shout "OH" at every "O" or "O'er" of the Star Spangled Banner.
Onto the game itself, Damon bloops one to 3rd. Jeter nails a frozen rope right to 3rd. 2 Out. Bobby "Clutch" Abreu lines single to right. The major Giambi shift is on and he lines one right to Kevin Millar who was playing about 8' into the Right Field Grass. Would have been over his head had he been playing a normal 1st. Giambi needs to learn to go the opposite way.
In the Oriole half of the first, Rasner gives up a 2 out homer to Melvin Mora. Aubrey Hugg goes Back to Back with Mora. 2-0 Birds. Millar singles but thankfully Lou Montanez makes the 3rd out. Nady
singles to start the second. (The Tank is the founder of the Xavier
Nady Fan Club.) Matsui walks. Cano lines a 3-1 pitch to right. Nady
scores. Matsui to 3rd. Cano at 2nd. No outs. Pudge rockets a 3-1 to
right for the first out. (BTW, JR from Deep Water Running ran into
Pudge at the Brooklyn Diner in the City on late Sunday evening. It's hard to escape the crack team of SteveAndTheTank.com reporters.) Daniel Cabrera
is at 43 pitches as Damon sneaks a 3-run homer around the right field
pole. 4-2 Yankees. Jeter out on a 6-3. 2 Outs. Abreu walked. The
Tank's buddy A-Rod
pops out ending the rally as usual over the past month. (BTW, Nina
from Deep Water Running prays that A-Rod gets beaned when he's at bat but doesn't get injured. She just doesn't want him hitting into an inning ending double play.)
It's hot. There were lots and lots of Yankee chants on a beautiful day. It was an untimely but exciting 4 hour 1
minute game with some late inning nail biting drama. (Justice prevailed with an 8-7 Yankee victory.) It was a not-so wonderful 6+ hour
drive home on I-95 thanks to construction and several accidents. We thankfully jumped off the NJ Turnpike at 7A and managed to find side roads to
bypass what would have made it an 8 hour ride. Written
by Editor in Chief and Perma Guest Outlaw Jack reporting live from
Camden Yards in Baltimore, Maryland. Photos by Adam and his son
Chris. Edited by The Tank.
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