Wednesday, October 22, 2014

A Sufferfest of Solitude

So there I sat on the summit ridge exhausted, a bit scared, and daunted by the realization that I would have another three or four hours of climbing ahead of me to reach the summit.  The day did not start out as a planned summit day, but after climbing through some pretty scary terrain for the last four hours I thought I would be pushing my luck to climb through it again for a summit bid which would also require down climbing that same terrain.  On top of that, the summit ridge didn't exactly look like a walk in the park, the day was heating up which meant rockfall would be starting to ramp up in the couloir I had to downclimb, and there were some tiny, baby clouds just forming on the other side of the ridge.

The summit ridge

Fluffy clouds!

The choice for the day was an easy one.  Within an hour or two those little clouds would build into dense fog and snow, and warming temperatures would mean increased rockfall in an already narrow and technical couloir.  Time to head down.  Should I make another attempt after a rest day?  That was the question eating at me.  I eventually answered, "No."  The terrain was sketchy, but what it really came down to was that I would have to spend another day in my tent by myself... The past several days had taught me that I am not as good sitting in absolute solitude as I had imagined, and the previous ten days or so had taught me a fair amount about ego and pride.

Flashback to 400 or 500 days out of the last two years.  This is probably the number of times I have been able to see the gorgeous Dhaulagiri mountain range to the north.  The range is obviously dominated by Dhaulagiri, but the other peaks in the area are equally beautiful.  I have been staring at those peaks for the last two years always yearning to explore them which is easier said than done.  I have been looking at one peak in particular for a potential climbing peak: Jirbang Himal.




The mountain stands 6062m tall and has a pretty imposing southern façade.  A quick look through binoculars (or a nice zoom lens) from my house will show serrated knife ridges interspersed with large cliffs which would be a technical nightmare if climbed from the south.  After looking at some topos and Google Earth I thought that a climb might be possible from the west side and decided to go check in out last March.  I spent a few days wandering along some of the paths of the Dhaulagiri Circuit trekking route and briefly spied a ridge through binoculars that looked climbable to the summit via a steep couloir.  Now all I had to do was wait for climbing season.

I spent a little time and effort attempting to get a climbing partner, but as climbing season drew closer I thought it would be quite a challenge to attempt the peak solo and unsupported.  "Well that would be quite an accomplishment," I thought.  I could find no information online or anywhere else about the peak which made planning that much more difficult and the idea of the climb that much more of an adventure.  Not only would I be attempting to climb a 6,000m peak alone, I would also have to find a route up!  Boy, perhaps I was getting in over my head...  Nah!

I decided I would give myself about two weeks to climb with a couple days on either end for the approach.  I set out one morning in early October on my motorcycle loaded down with a 35 kilogram pack.  I rode to a place called Sibang (see map below) which involved pushing the bike through some very steep and loose landslide areas and riding across a old wooden footbridge.  From Sibang the sufferfest really got started.

The route

The upper route

Feeling good at the beginning.  This feeling lasted about 4 minutes of walking.

That first day I hiked for an hour or two down to Phaliyagaun and was already feeling the weight in the pack.  I stayed the night with a nice family, and the next day headed out planning to get to Bogara.  I was told this would be fairly easy in one long day.  As it turned out I was on the main trekking route which winds back and forth and up and down to get more views.  This is nice, but it just meant my approach was longer and with my pack I was already moving incredibly slowly.  By the end of the day I had only reached Naura which was still a solid two or three hours from Bogara.

The first night in Phaliyagaun the guy I was staying with found a little forest crab.

I think they add the vegetation to the bridge to get cattle across.

I seem to have a lot of pictures of bridges...

The next day I made my way to Bogara (very slowly).  It took me four hours for what should have been three hours maximum.
The path on the way to Bogara is just etched into the cliff.  Jirbang looms in the background.

A very pretty waterfall

The first good view of Jirbang.  I would eventually climb the furthest left couloir.

As I ate lunch I was able to reach my girlfriend, Tara, on the phone.  I was so tired, and moving so slowly.  She recommended I find somebody to help carry my load.  Initially, I was against this, but as I was eating the idea became more and more intriguing.  I started asking around and eventually found an older man who was heading to his herding shelter called a ghot. He said he would take some of my things to a point an hour or two down the trail and then return back a bit and head up the hill towards his ghot.  On the way we started talking and I learned that his ghot was in the general direction that I wanted to go, and on top of that there was a bridge crossing the river which other people had assured me did not exist.  I asked him if I could come to his ghot with him and he was very happy to have me.  He said, "Just my wife and I will be there, and from there I can lead you higher up the mountain."  This was working out perfectly!  Not only did I have someone to help me carry my things, but he could also show me the path through the jungle.  Without this guy it is likely I would have not even reached the base of the climb.  It seemed the only thing I had proven by carrying everything myself is that I know how to damage my knees.

A nice waterfall on the way up to the ghot.

The bridge that doesn't exist- hard to believe they take the buffaloes over this thing

The ghot and some of the water buffaloes
At the ghot they treated me well, fed me rice and some wild mushrooms, and gave me a place to sleep under their shelter.  This was very kind, but we also shared the shelter with 4 goats, some chickens, and three baby water buffalo.  I was given the side of the fire closest to the water buffalo which put me pretty close to everything when those things had to take a dump.  The plopping of shit about 2 feet from one's head is not the most wonderful sound to wake up to.  Also, the mother came to the ghot at about three AM and very noisily announced that it was time for her to feed her baby.  The man's wife got up and released the baby to be fed and then had to tie it back up again after the feeding.  Needless to say the sleep could have been a bit better.

The next morning my new friend and I set out to head to what he called a wardar which I learned later was basically an overhanging rock that people use as a shelter in the subalpine.  That morning I realized I had forgotten to turn in a report to my office which could definitely lead to some trouble for me if I didn't take care of it.  The man said that from a higher summer ghot there was phone reception, so we initially headed up there with plans to go to the wardar.  Well, we couldn't get reception and so rather than get booted from Peace Corps with just a month to go, I decided to cancel the trip and head down to the valley where I could get a phone and from there head home to my computer.  We did just that.  We descended all the way back to Bogara arriving at 9PM.  The phone towers don't work at night out there (perhaps solar powered with no battery backup?), so I planned on making some calls in the morning.  My friend invited me to stay with him in his house, which I gladly accepted.

At his house we walked out of the night and straight into hell.  It was holiday time which means family was visiting.  There were at least 700 small, crying and screaming children in that tiny three room house with only maybe 10 adults to control them all.  They kindly made us some rice and dried meat, and I realized just how hard off this guy was.  He had ten children, and the older ones all had children of their own (all of whom seemed to be trying to out temper tantrum each other).  The children were all filthy and had chronic coughs (from open woodfire cooking stoves in their homes or perhaps just had perpetual colds).  They didn't even have daal (lentils) which is a staple for every Nepali.  Everyday they just had rice and some sort of "vegetable."  This time of year the vegetable was dried goat meat, but they still used the word for vegetable when talking about it.  However, this man was a true Nepali which means he treats his guests with honor which is more rare in a trekking hotel.  He gave me the only bed and slept on the floor, and he didn't ask for a single rupee for the food or lodging.  Even though he had so little, he shared what he had with me.  That night was again a tough night's sleep due to the crying children (one woke up with night terrors), but things looked up in the morning.

I made phone contact with a good friend who said that she could easily write a little something up and send in my report.  All I had to do was tell her what to write.  Amazing!!  Now I didn't have to go all the way back home.  I could continue my climb!!  I told the guy the good news, and he agreed to go back up the mountain with me.  Due to the festivities he left quite a bit later than me.  I pushed on to the upper ghot because I wanted to sleep over 3,000m for acclimatization purposes.  He met me up there the next morning, and we continued on to the wardar.  Along the way he pointed out edible mushrooms, and medicinal plants.  Part of his income is collecting medicinal herbs and selling them.  His most popular herb is a painkiller, but he also collects one that is very deadly.  He said that just touching it can kill you which seems unlikely, but is certainly possible.  I asked what people use that for, and he said he didn't know but he gets orders for it from Kathmandu.  He showed it to me on the hike up, and it turns out it is Aconitum aka monkshood, or wolf's bane.  A pretty flower, but extremely deadly.

The deadly wolf's bane



The wardar
We stayed the night there and the next morning he agreed to take me up to ridge which was a long grassy slope.  We crossed the ridge at 4,300m and finally I could really see where I needed to go.  We dropped into the valley on the other side and he took me as far as my camp at 4,330m.  He even helped me dig out a tent platform in the dirt and then headed back down to his ghot.  That evening I shuttled some of my gear up to a point at 4,600m and returned to camp.  That night I discovered that my air mattress had acquired a tiny leak that made it deflate every four hours.

Climbing towards the grassy ridge

The east face of Gurja Himal poking through the building clouds

The first good view I got of the intimidating summit ridge

The guy, Min, who helped me so much on this trip approaching camp.

The first good view of the couloir I would climb


Evening and fog rolls into Camp I.
The next morning I took the rest of my gear up onto the glacier and made camp II at 4,650m.  I had to build a little sleeping platform out of the flattest pieces of glacial till that cover the ice.  Then I went back for my other gear.  Now began the true solitude and the waiting game.  Everyday after 11 AM above 4,000m the weather would just sock in and it would be cold and dreary with some spitting snow.  This snow would be a bit more intense higher up which would result in large sloughs coming out of the couloirs that interspersed the headwall.

Approaching the glacier


This platform was extremely comfortable...ahem.  It took an hour and half to build

Day 2 at camp was a rest day so I slept in and climbed a little ways up the couloir in mid-morning.  I found that the beginning of the couloir involved some pretty serious ice-climbing.  It was fairly tense getting through that 100ft or so, and I decided on my way down to check out the loose fourth class rock surrounding the couloir.  This turned out to be a better descent than downclimbing the ice, so I figured the next day I would use the rock to get up and down on my way up to the ridge.  That afternoon was cold and very lonely.  I was really struggling with being alone up there.  The dreary weather led to scary thoughts about HAPE and falling in that terrain, and just really got me down.  That night it snowed quite a bit.


Camp II

A little ways up the couloir (5030m)

Camp
I woke up early for an ascent up to the ridge.  I approached the fourth class rocks I was planning on going up and down and discovered that they were very slick with four inches of new snow and ice covering them.  That meant the ice climb up the couloir.  There was still a fair amount of slough coming down from the snow, not enough to be particularly dangerous but just enough to really get down the back of my jacket.  As the sun rose I was treated to some delightful views.  I was not sure about snow conditions further up the couloir so as soon as I could I traversed out onto a small ridge on the side.  Of course this meant some mixed climbing, but around 10:30AM I reached the summit ridge, and began deliberating my options.

Reaching the top of the iceclimb


I really tried to take some photos of the iceclimb, but wasn't really successful


 
 

The Dhaulagiri range (part of it)

 
The Icefall on the west side of Jirbang



I decided to do a full retreat.  I just wasn't up for another day in my tent followed by the sketchy climb back up to the ridge.  If I had gone with a partner then ropes would have been a very wise option.  I really learned what the value of fixed lines would be.  Rappelling through the ice section would have been much less scary. 

The intimidating ice section



Anyways, I packed up camp and started heading down the mountain just as fog moved in.  I found the talus much more difficult to navigate with a full pack and with the nice covering of snow that had collected.  I also found the grassy slopes pretty treacherous for the same reasons. 

The usual post 11 AM fog, and a talus field.  Navigating out of the valley became extremely difficult in this
I wanted to get down to the upper ghot, and I arrived at the wardar a little before dark.  I had eaten little all day and was running low on water so I stopped to pump some water at the little stream.  Well, my pump decided to give out at this time, so I only was able to pump a small amount of water.  It would take just an hour to reach the ghot and I immediately took a wrong turn in the bushes.  I realized I was way off track just around dark.  At this point I made a typical decision that someone would make after walking for half an hour the wrong direction and being very tired.  A shortcut!!!

Now the adventure for the evening really begins.  I began to work my way down a gully that led straight to the upper ghot.  I could see the tarps that make up the roof before it got dark, and this gully would lead me right there.  The entire time I was going down I was expecting something to go wrong as shortcuts rarely work the way they are supposed to, and this shortcut did not disappoint.  I worked my way down some small cliffs, and around 7PM was less than a quarter mile (.09 miles to be exact) away from the ghot.  Then I found the cliff I had been dreading all along.  I had slipped my down the slick, steep gully using bamboo to keep from sliding over the edge, and sure enough there was no way down from this cliff.  I struggled my way out of the gully, fought a thicket of bamboo and thorns, and got into the gully just to the west.  Another cliff.  At this point I couldn't climb back up the slick gully with my backpack so I ditched the backpack and went to look for a way down.  Moving through the thick vegetation was easier without the pack, and soon enough I found a way down… Now I just had to go find my pack again. Shit!  Luckily I had my GPS on or I probably would not have found my way back.  Eventually I did, figured out a way to haul my pack up through the steep mud, and then worked my way back to the ghot using a waypoint I had marked on my way up.  Again, I would not have found it in the dark without the GPS which is not a position I like to be in.  Technology is fun, but relying on it in the wilderness seems like a really good way to end up one of the stories about the idiot who went into the woods knowing only how to use a GPS and then ended up dead.  Anyways, on the way down my thirst got the best of me, and I just could not wait to drink anymore. I came across some running water and enjoyed for a good ten minutes.  I still haven’t gotten giardia, but there is still time.

I got to the ghot at 9 PM after spending four hours wandering around the bamboo forest.  I felt very ill.  I got some water boiled, drank some, felt like vomiting, and then heated some dinner and ate it.  I haven't felt that bad in quite a while.  I clearly needed food, but just wasn't hungry.  I needed sleep, but wasn't sleepy.  But finally I slept...

The next day I worked my way down to Bogara around lunch time.  I ate some food, and was originally planning on blasting out to Sibang that afternoon- I had been told it could be reached in five hours-after eating though, I was so tired, and there was a nice group of trekkers I met so I decided to stay and socialize.  That night we discussed how some trekking guides use poor judgment, and push their clients in bad situations.  I related to them the story of the blizzard last year in Gokyo.  That evening some high level moisture entered the Annapurna region.  Some of the 7,000m peaks had cap clouds, and I said to the group, "You know, I wouldn't be surprised if there is some serious weather in the next 48 hours. I've seen this pattern before, almost the exact same time last year."

The next day the high level clouds built a bit more, which made hiking a nice (ish) temperature.  We set out a little late, and my friend who I had again hired to help carry my stuff to Sibang also decided to carry his own load of medicinal herbs to sell.  Despite his assurances that he could still move quickly, he moved very slowly.  We skipped lunch and still the five hour day turned into 9 hours, and I finally left Sibang a little after 5 PM on my bike.  I reached the landslide area just as it got dark, and could not get my bike through by myself.  On my first solo attempt I almost put the bike over a 50 foot drop into the river.  I ran to the next town and asked for a hand pushing my bike through the landslides.  Two nice gentlemen helped me, and I set off for Mallaj in the dark just as first raindrops started to fall.

Jirbang with the high clouds

Myagdi Matha (6273m)

Gurja Himal just a few hours before the rain/snow started
The rain quickly turned into a downpour, and after a long battle/ride in which my loose chain kept popping off I finally reached Mallaj around 10 PM very cold and wet.  It rained all night, the next day, and the next night.  This equated to snow in the higher areas where some solo trekkers, and some guided groups decided to try to cross Thorung-La (a pass at 5400m) in the blizzard with much the same attitude I saw near Gokyo last year.  Like last year, almost 2 meters of snow fell, but this year the consequences were much greater.  The body count is currently at 48 with around 100 people still missing in various alpine areas in Nepal.  Some were caught in avalanches, while others succumbed to exposure while attempting a high alpine pass crossing in a whiteout.

Sad news, and I got out just in time. I'm fairly confident I would have had made good decisions (i.e. stayed at camp) if I had been stuck in the blizzard, but I'm glad I wasn't faced with that decision.

Monday, May 12, 2014

Upper Mustang

I got to go to Upper Mustang for almost two weeks with Tara, a guide named Durga, and two other friends...

Upper Mustang is a restricted travel area in Nepal.  Permits are $50 per day for a minumum of ten days...so $500.  Of course, very little of this money actually goes to the area the permit is for, but that's the way things are sometimes.

The area is a high desert valley made from rivers that flow off of the Tibetan Plateau.  It is in a truly magnificent rain shadow.  To the south the massive Dhaulagiri and Annapurna ranges put an immediate stop to any moisture trying to sneak up from India.  A series of 6,000m peaks barricade any sort of water trying to out flank the valley on the east and west.  I found it very intersting to watch the clouds mass their power everyday behind the mountains and then charge in only to provide a light dusting of snow on the high slopes of the leeward side.

Until 40 million years ago, (when India had that accident with Asia), the whole area was a large ocean which is evident by the copious amounts of sea creatures still cruising around the area.  It was not uncommon to see a Mustang whale (goat) munching on the plankton (weeds) that litter the barren ocean (hillsides).  There were also a lot of fossils.

Culturally, people are more Tibetan than Nepali, but are more independent than either.  They are the Lowa people, and the whole area was actually a semi-autonomous kingdom until the 1990's.  Mustang valley is a historic trading route between Nepal and Tibet and there are many old forts build to repel raiders as well as protect the route.

These are a few trekking maps of the area:





After a long bus ride from Beni, we started our trek in Jomsom the first evening making our way to Kagbeni.

Amanda approaching Kagbeni in the evening.


Nilgiri and the wheat/barley fields in the morning

Tara
 The next day we headed up Chele.  I was constantly fascinated by the tortured geology along the way.  I bored one walking partner after another with my very amatuer interpretations of what each layer might have been.



Just outside of Kagbeni
Photo: Tara Upreti

Entering Tangbe
Photo: Tara Upreti

Photo: Tara Upreti

Me: Ah, and here we can see a change in geology....
Mark: Where did I put my cyanide?
Photo: Tara Upreti
A mighty confluence!

Geology!

I liked the little tower in the river.

Approaching Chhusang

More geology!

The outskirts of Chhusang

One of many ancient forts along the way.

Old meets new in Chhusang with a gigantic suspension bridge now integrated into an ancient town.
From Chele we went to Shyammochen where we met a child laborer working in our hotel.  Upon learning this, I was initially very critical and began (nicely) grilling the owners about this set up.
Their story was this:  They asked someone they know out west to get them a working man.  When they went to go meet the new laborer their friend produced this boy.  The boy's father was a drunk, and his mother had married someone else who didn't want the kids from the previous marriage.  So she left them with the father.  When they met him they said the boy was covered in sores which I attribute to malnutrition.  At only seven, the boy knows how to cook and clean because he had to care for his younger brother.  I'm not sure what happened to his little brother... The boy we met is a laborer, yes.  And the hotel owners don't send him to school (which we told them to try to do), but his stomach is full.  The boy laughed a smiled the whole time we were there, and it goes to show that there is always more than meets the eye.

Above Chele

I liked the red rock just sticking out.

Just one of the many amazing vistas

One of many passes we would cross

The afternoon wearing on... Amanda, Mark, and our guide about to round the corner.

Nice visuals in the evening.

Enjoying the bone chilling breeze


Above Chele
Photo: Tara Upreti

More nice visuals
Photo: Tara Upreti
 From Syammochen we rallied all the way to Tsarang.

A long wall with prayer stones outside of Gami
Photo: Tara Upreti

What's this? More geology! and Durga.
Photo: Tara Upreti


Tara outside of Gami
Photo: Durga

A good face is really just expected now...
Photo: Durga

Stumbling into Tsarang
Photo: Tara Upreti

A chorten outside of Tsarang.  Chortens have some significance I'm sure...
Photo: Tara Upreti


On the way to Tsarang

So many different landscapes!!

Durga outside a chorten.

Colorful rocks...Durga and Tara making a run for it before I talk too much about the rocks.

The long prayer wall with some very ominous looking clouds building.

Fluted landscape outside of Gami

A chorten and rocks


Tara and Durga approaching Tsarang in the last sun for the day.
Tsarang is home to a few different things:

A picturesque soccer field

Some buildings and mountains

A normal picture of Ethan

A colorful monastary.
Stacks of wood and mountains
Photo: Tara Upreti

Colorfully painted window frames
Photo: Tara Upreti

Incredibly inaccessable caves
Photo: Tara Upreti

Prayer wheels
Photo: Tara Upreti

Two normal pictures!!!!
Photo: Durga

An archway.
Photo: Tara Upreti
The next day was up to Lo Manthang which was the regional capitol for many, many years.  There was very few signs of human existence in between Tsarang and Lo Manthang except for one magnificent chorten and some caves.

Tourists and chorten
Photo: Tara Upreti

Durga and chorten
Photo: Tara Upreti

Tara and chorten
Photo: Durga

Durga in cave
Photo: Tara Upreti

Tara in cave
Photo: Durga

Weeeeee!
Photo: Durga

How did Ethan get up there?
Photo: Tara Upreti

Oh, that's how!  An entry hole.
Photo: Durga
We reached Lo Manthang, and spent a day checking out the area around Lo Manthang.  We rented horses which was quite a riot!  It was my first time on a horse, and I must admit it was very entertaining.  I named my horse Natalia, and she was the biggest one they had.  Natalia seemed to respond to me well, and immediately she took the lead while the other horse followed.  I quickly figured out how to make her stop and turn, and was feeling rather cocky about how quickly I had figured how to control Natalia when she decided to take matters into her own hooves.  About 20 minutes into the ride she starts to canter.  When I pulled back on the reins she put her head back, shook it, and then took off at a full gallop.  This was quite an experience for someone who had never ridden a horse before.  I didn't know how to sort of roll use my legs with the gallop so ended up just sort of clinging on for dear life.  I tried all sorts of cooing and commands to get her to stop, but she decided not to do that until she wanted to.  I was actually pretty terrified- I was worried if I fell which felt likely I would snap my leg in the other stirrup.  She missed the turn we were supposed to make, so I got her turned around and back she galloped.  My friends just thought I had gotten the hang of it, and was showing off until I asked our horse guide to help me.  Natalia got back into line, and I figured out how to actually pull on the reins to make her stop.  I also later learned how to use my legs in a gallop, how to make her gallop on command, and how to stop her.  The later galloping sessions were much less terrifying.

Tara tips her hat like a real cowgirl

Riding the open range
A Buddhist gumpa built into some cliffs
Photo: Tara Upreti

It was pricey to go inside, so we didn't.
Photo: Durga

The horse gang.
Photo: our horse guide

Tara, atop Fatty, the name she gave her horse.
Photo: Our horse guide

The wind was cold
Photo: Durga

Durga was terrified to ride a horse, but had a great time in the end.
Photo: Tara Upreti

Cruising through a boulder field.
Photo: Tara Upreti

Arriving back in Lo Manthang
Photo: Tara Upreti
The next day we rallied off the main tourist trail to a place called Yara.  The views along the way were breathtaking.

I really thought hese canyong were somthing else.  We would cross their upper reaches in the coming days.

The desert has some truly amazing colors.

Approaching Yara there are more and more cliff systems that people dug out of the soft cliffs.
We spent a day exploring outside of Yara to a place called Yuri.  Here there is a gumpa and an amazing cave system.  Inside people had built a stupa.  They had plastered the walls and done intricate paintings.  The paintings are at least 800 years old with Indian influences.

 



 
 

People had more recently added their own decorations
Photo: Tara Upreti

Photo: Tara Upreti

The stupa stands almost 15 feet tall
Photo: Tara Upreti
Walking back to Yara

This Tibetan Mastif was not stoked about me taking a picture near him.

The morning in Yara
After Yara we crossed a pass at 4,100m and walked to Tengge.

Tara and Amanda nearing the top of the pass

Amanda nearing Tengge

Evening falls on Tengge

Looking down river from the roof of our hotel

Tara enjoying the sunlight...and wind.


Someone's been in the bush a bit too long...
The next day was a long day.  We went from Tengge all the way to Chhusang which involved another high pass and then winding along a 4,000m ridge until we dropped 1,000m into Chhusang.

Amanda getting to the top of another pass.  Looking North towards Tibet

We were getting out just in time.  Those clouds looked really dark in the afternoon.

 
Looking down at a deep canyon and more geology
 

Cool fluting
Photo: Tara Upreti 

Durga and geology
Photo: Tara Upreti

Tara and geology
Photo: Durga

Durga making her way off the ridge
Photo: Tara Upreti
The next day we hiked back to Kagbeni with plans to take a bus the next day back to Beni, but this is Nepal.  The bus/jeep operators went on strike in the Mustang/Myagdi district which covered the road from Jomsom to Beni.  I heard several stories, but the main idea I got is that the jeep/bus committees (which are very mafia like) decided that they lost money when Indian tourists took "Tourist Only" vehicles.  They wanted to ban Indian tourists-(Indians are generally not well regarded in Nepal- from taking the tourist vehicles and put them on the committee owned vehicles.  So they held a strike to get what they wanted.  The funny thing about strikes in Nepal is that the demands are rarely, rarely met.  People just eventually decide to randomly lift the strikes.  This one was no exception.  We ended up catching a ride in the back of a cargo truck for about half of the way to Beni, and the next day hiked to Ghasa.  That day around noon, the strike lifted from Ghasa to Beni only, so we got on the first bus out. 

Another trip well travelled!