Heroes For Humanity - The Expeditions of Dan Mazur

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For more than 15 years Laurel Barrett has worked with charitable and inspirational organizations around the world. She's traveled extensively studying the world's most influential leaders and their philosophies. A little over five years ago she created a grassroots effort called Heroes for Humanity to celebrate heroes from all walks of life.

Friday, June 22, 2007

An Incredible Journey



We just arrived from Hong Kong late yesterday from the middle of the monsoon in rural Nepal in the foothills near Everest where we were building a hospital to help local farm families stay on their land and be good environmental stewards, rather than migrating to the slums of Kathmandu. On our service trek we were working with www.MountEverestFoundation.org .

Before that we had a "successful" spring season climbing Mount Everest from Nepal, the world's highest summit and also the fourth highest mountain in the world, Lhotse. We are honoured to say that both expeditions placed members on top and send our congratulations and thanks to all of those who were involved.

In addition, our expedition to Everest from Tibet was also successful, placing 11 of 13 members and 8 sherpas on the summit. The weather this season was surprisingly good, and our teams benefitted from the good weather and the high quality of the people involved. Our best congratulations and thanks go out to everyone who helped.

However, the season was not without its downside, as there were 8 people from other
teams killed, including the most famous Nepalese woman climber, who died in a tragic fall from just below the summit. We send our our deepest condolences to their families, friends, and colleagues.

Thanks for watching our mountain expeditions and charitable endeavors this year at
www.summitclimb.com/news and http://heroesforhumanitydanmazureverest.blogspot.com

Bye, Bye for now.

Dan
________________________________

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

The Trek of Service


Greetings from Patale, Nepal! This is Dan Mazur, member of the June 2007 Hospital Service Trek.

Today we are introducing two of our volunteers Kanad Chakrabarty and Dr. Lisa Mc Clellan that have come to service in this remote community.Kanad and Lisa are her providing the amazing gift of service.

Kanad: Hello, my name is Kanad Chakrabarty and I am writing to you as a member of the Service Trek. I'm from New Jersey & this is my first visit to Nepal. I am on my way to Thailand to teach English and am taking advantage of this opportunity to experience this seldom visited remote and beautiful location.

Lisa: Hello, I am Lisa McClellan. I am a Family Practice doctor in Phoenix,Arizona.

After a two day trek from the mountain outpost of Phaplu our Service Trek, sponsored by www.mounteverestfoundation.org and www.summitclimb.com , we arrived at our destination, the health post at the remote village of Patale on Sunday, the 10th of June.

Our team includes a doctor who has already administered to over 40 patients, some of whom have walked many hours for the rare opportunity to be examined by a doctor. This health post serves as the only source of health care in this region & has a full time staff of two health care workers who are from this village.

Although there are many health issues faced by the local population, we are very pleased to see thatthe local people are healthy and robust for the most part. Dr. Lisa has been getting the word out to the villagers about some basic health issues and has also been helping to train the local health care workers.

We are absolutely overwhelmed by the hospitality of our hosts, who have made us feel incredibly welcome. Last night we were treated to a Sherpa song and dance. This morning we were visited by children from the village school, to which we presented backpacks donated by our friends Maya & Arnold. Our stay has gone by very fast and we will be starting on trek back to Phaplu today to catch our flight to Kathmandu on Friday.

We have some extra baggage due to the generous offerings of dozens of kata (scarves which are a cultural symbol of hospitality.) Our backpacks are decorated with fresh flower garlands made by local Sherpa children and given to us by their moms as a going away present.

We will really miss volunteer, Celia Rogers, a member of our service trek who had slipped on a muddy trail and damaged her shoulder. Her injury did not seem extremely bad, but it was painful to walk, so she jumped on a helicopter yesterday and flew home to England today.

The weather has been pretty rainy, but today the sun came out, in a beautiful way that has lit the gorgeous green wildflower studded hills beneath blue skies. It is quite warm and pleasant and we can hear the hustle and bustle of cattle, sheep, goats, chickens, and families cutting wheat with hand sickles and carrying newly harvested potatoes in baskets and other noises of traditional agriculture in this hilly terraced village, which has no roads, no phones, no running water, no electricity and no technology of any sort.

Today is marvelous, but during the last three days, the weather has been changing by the hour, ranging from sunny to thick fog, mist and rain. The clouds often descend below the hilltops, giving a very mysterious feel to this pristine locale.

Yesterday, we visited a Gompa (Buddhist temple) and were treated to a Puja prayer ceremony performed by four monks. It was a really special and peaceful moment as they lit incense in an ancient painted room with high ceilings and dusty old statues and silk covered prayer books. The four clerics blew trumpets, banged drums and symbols, and chanted away in bass tones, in what they told us was a 400 year old temple.

The temple certainly was ancient looking and musty, with some really antique paintings on the walls. The audience consisted of a few local gentlemen in baseball caps that looked like they had just returned from an expedition to Everest, 12 little children who were transfixed by the monks blowing on their horns, and one older woman who said she was 57, but we guessed 80.

We have been eating a lot of local food, dal bhat, served with cups of tea and some of us have sampled some of the local homemade beverage known as chang. Our cook, Lakpa, has been creative and made french toast, french fries, and may come out any moment now from the guest house kitchen with flaming crème brule.

Alcoholism is a problem in the village, as many of the people are unaware of the health risks. We believe a future public health education program in the village could include information about the effects of alcohol, tuberculosis, hand washing and sanitation, and basic female health. The local health care workers are aware of these needs. In general, these people are very healthy; they just have not had the opportunity of learning habits of public health that we in our developed regions take for granted.

Traveling is a challenge in this area, which is very remote and the trails are not really that great. It is the stunning beauty of region and the incredibly kind and friendly people have made coming here more than worthwhile. We sometimes wish it was not a twenty five hour walk to the nearest crude airstrip, especially in case of the necessity of emergency evacuation, but then we are constantly reminded of the beauty and simplicity of the remoteness of the village. We know that if the airstrip was closer, this village would be quite a bit more developed.

It’s always that conundrum that faces us in these service treks. The beauty of nature and the balanced existence of local villagers in their natural surroundings, and contrasting tradeoff with the lack of comforts, poor health, minimal education, the overall inconvenience and lack of civilization that rural life creates. How does one resolve this dilemma between modern economic development and pristine old methods of subsistence farming?

We are at 1900 meters (6000 ft) and the terrain here is rather hilly. There is no snow or ice here. This is a low elevation trek in these gorgeous foothills near Everest, where snow rarely falls, perhaps one day in a year.

We passed through some dense Rhododendron & Hemlock forests (among other kinds of widely varying vegetation) on our walk in. These are extensive forests and many of the trees are quite large and ancient. some would say this is "old growth", a present surprise in Asia, which is supposedly being destroyed by development. Not here yet.

We encourage the villagers to preserve their forest resources and not cut trees unless absolutely necessary. For example, when cutting firewood, they take the dead and downed fuel woods first, rather than cutting large live trees for firewood, which is the lowest form of wood used.

Today, we were shown the local school on Sunday. It consists of three classrooms & serves over 70 students from grades 1 through 5. There are three teachers on staff and students travel here daily from as far away as an hour walk to attend classes daily. The local school board is seriously considering the possibility of extending an invitation to volunteers to teach English here for several weeks to several months.

Teaching volunteers will trek in with a guide & have their own bedroom in the home of a villager. If you would like to become involved in our new school programm, would like to volunteer or know someone who does, please send us an email or check back on our website for more details in the near future!

Thanks for following our service trek!

Yours Sincerely,

Dan Mazur and all of us at summitclimb.com

Patale: Lending a Hand

Our service trek has arrived in Patale village. We actually reached here late yesterday afternoon. Today we have been busy seeing patients with our visiting doctor who's name is Lisa McMillan. We went to a local Buddhist temple and had a prayer ceremony early in the morning before the patient visiting started.

We have some bad news to report. Celia Rogers slipped on a muddy path yesterday. She injured her shoulder, perhaps her collar bone, her clavicle and she was helicopter evacuated today this morning at around 9:30 or 10:00. She's back in Kathmandu now and she's doing fine.

The rest of us plan to see patients again tomorrow. There's going to be a village meeting this afternoon and they are going to try to reach a decision about where to build the new health clinic and about training some more local people to be teachers and health care workers.

We plan to leave here on the 12th tomorrow afternoon and begin walking back to the village of Phaphlu where we will hopefully be able to fly out on the 15th of June. We're hoping for better weather.

The weather has been pretty cloudy and rainy so far. Although today it did clear up a bit fortunately for Celia so she could be helicopter evacuated.

Bye for now.

Dan

Sunday, June 3, 2007

The Season of Giving

Greetings. I hope you have been well.

We have just arrived in Kathmandu, the peaceful capital city of Nepal. It is rather hot at the moment, as the monsoon has not yet begun. We just flew here from the
village of Lukla in the Khumbu Valley, after walking down from Everest base camp.

Our expeditions led us to climb the world's highest Summit and the fourth highest mountain in the world, Lhotse. We are honoured to say that both expeditions placed members on top. We send our congratulations and thanks to all of those who were involved.

Our expedition to Everest from Tibet was also successful, placing 11 of 13 members and 8 Sherpas on the Summit. The weather this season was surprisingly good, and our teams benefited from the good weather and the high quality of the people involved.

Our best congratulations and thanks go out to everyone who helped. However, the season was not without its downside, as there were 8 people from other teams killed including the most famous Nepalese woman climber, who died in a tragic fall from just
below the Summit. We send our our deepest condolences to their families, friends, and colleagues.

At this time, we briefly turn away from high-altitude mountaineering and toward helping the environment. Our project focuses on families of Nepal, the 12Th poorest country in the world and the poorest in all of Asia. We are surveying of a site for a new hospital in the remote Okhaldunga Valley, where 4000 poor farmers live. We are helping through www.MountEverestFoundation.org to help these families stay healthy, in their own homes and cultivate the land. Then they can become effective environmental stewards, rather than being forced to become economic refugees and
migrate to a life of poverty in the slums of Kathmandu.

Thanks for watching our mountain expeditions and charitable endeavors this year at
www.SummitClimb.com. We encourage you to read read more at: www.everestnews.com

Yours Sincerely,

Dan

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

The End: The Incredible Everest Expedition

This morning at about 8:00 in the morning we put Paul Fitzpatrick on a helicopter. A Nepal Army helicopter landed in the Base Camp and picked up Paul.

Paul rode the helicopter today with a bottle of oxygen in his lap and an oxygen mask on his face. He has pulmonary edema and pneumonia, which was diagnosed by the Himalayan Rescue Association Clinic doctors. He spent several days in the clinic in Base Camp trying to get better. And he did improve! Although, he still not strong enough to be able to walk out under his own power.

There is a national strike in Katmandu today, so there is no transportation available except for emergency transport, which is lucky in Paul's case because he'll be riding around in an ambulance. He rode the army helicopter to Katmandu where he's going to go to the Sewek Katmandu Clinic. They will take excellent care of him, I'm sure. We wish Paul all the best and we're going to miss him and hope he recovers well.

The rest of our team is trekking down to Namche today. OK, we're just packing up Base Camp now. That's the end of our SummitClimb Everest Lhotse Nepal Expedition.

Thank you very much for following our news.

Bye Bye,

Dan Mazur

Back At Base Camp

Today is the 25th of May and the local time is 10:50pm. All of our team is back safely in Base Camp. All the members and all the Sherpas are here.

It was a long and challenging day that took us more than 10 hours to get back to Base Camp. One of our members Paul is in the Base Camp hospital. He has pulmonary edema and pneumonia, and we hope that he gets better soon.

We are planning to begin our trek out and back to Katmandu starting tomorrow. Our Sherpas are going to go back up to the upper camps to carry out all of the equipment and remove all the rubbish that's accumulated. They will clean up the camps very well.

We hope Paul gets better as soon as possible, I'm very hopeful. He's in the care of some excellent doctors here in the Base Camp. I will update you as soon as
possible.

Thanks again for watching our expedition.

OK, take care, bye bye.

Dan

Nepal Everest Lhotse SummitClimb Expedition
http://www.everestnews.com/summitclimb/everestsouth05262007.htm

We Are Going To Miss This Place

It's May 24th and the time is 6:47pm local time. I'm calling from Camp 2. I'm here with Terry, Bill, Paul, Dan, Tenje, Lhakpa Galu and Lhakpa Congle.

It was a beautiful sunset this evening, and we're planning on going down tomorrow, starting at 6:00 in the morning. We plan to go all the way to Base Camp. We're going to try to leave early to fight the heat down in the Icefall, which has been apparently playing havoc with the route and the ladders, so we want to try to get down through there before it gets too warm.

It's with mixed feelings that we leave this camp. Some of us are more ready to leave than others. It took a lot of work to get here, and we're going to miss this place. Some of us are gonna miss it more than others, I guess.

I'll update you with the news when we're back in Base Camp.

Thank you very much for following our expedition, bye bye.

Dan
SummitClimb Nepal Everest-Lhotse Expedition.

Our expedition team is

Dan Mazur. USA.
Philip Ling. Australia.
Bruce Manning. England
Florin Grama. Romania
Daniel Kim. USA
Mark Luscher. USA
Bill Burke. USA.
Paul Fitzpatrick. USA.
Terry Schuck. USA

Our Sherpa team is

Lhakpa Chiri. Personal Sherpa to Mark Luscher
Lhakpa Congle. Climbing Sherpa
Phuri Sherpa. Climbing Sherpa
Tenje Sherpa. Personal Sherpa to Bill Burke
Lhakpa Galu. Personal Sherpa to Terry
Kaji Sherpa. Sirdar
Jai Bar-Dur. Cook
Dawa Jangbu Sherpa. High altitude porter
Lhakpa Tundu Sherpa. Climbing Sherpa and Camp 2 cook.
Temba Sherpa. Kitchen staff