From Camp Lolo, it was an ardous journey of 2 hours uphill to reach Camp Pacat.Obstacles like fallen tree trunks, Kunta Kinte(roots), mud, boulders, etc makes the 2 hour journey feels like shopping with an indecisive girlfriend in
Mid Valley on a Saturday.
It was only 1030am and the weather was good. Initially, Jimmy and I discussed the excuses we could conjure up if we turned back. One of them was the bad weather on the mountain. But on the day of the hike, it was as though we were in the Gobi Desert. Panas gelegok. From Camp Pacat to the Summit took us another hour. I was so glad to reach the summit on my second attempt.
After celebrating for 15 minutes, we started our journey down. I hate descending.
It took me at least 5 more hours to trek down all the way to the car. Jimmy and I vow not to go up this mountain again and opt for waterfall trips from now on.
Nevertheless, we did it in one day. Most people camp overnight to make their journey more comfortable. I couldn't afford to not summit after my first summit failure.
I just couldn't. That day, no matter how my legs wanted to give up, I soldiered on.
At the end, I'm glad I hung on and reached the summit. I rewarded myself later with a dip in the lower waterfalls and petai spaghetti. Amazing combination.
4 comments:
Thanks for the drop by at http://royedsworld.blogspot.com
Returning the favor. Actually its my significant other who's from KB, myself from Sarawak. Both of us live in KL/USJ, but work overseas.
I was like WOWed by your adventurism, you and your significant other sure are outdoorsy people.
I wonder why its called Camp Pacat... err a lot of pacat?
4898 feet at the summit, that's about 570 feet less than the summit of Genting Highlands yet it looks like the weather's still hot up there...
it's hot, its humid, and the journey was hell
to add the salt, once you're up the, it got no view..
i hate nuang..
Yup, it's true. No view. It's torturing. But it's not hot.
First and last time for me at Nuang.
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