How can you describe perfection?
Well, I guess you can’t. That’s why it’s so difficult to describe the feeling that accompanied me at the top of Uhuru Peak, after the nightmare of 8 hours ascent to Gilmans’ Point and after the final struggle at the crater rhim when step by step, sometimes one step forward and half step backward, I was coming closer and closer to the dreamed-of summit.
It’s priceless to be there at down, to see the glaciers dazzling in the morning sun, to see Mt Meru covered by mists and to have that feeling, that unforgettable feeling, that here you are, standing at the roof of Africa, the highest free-standing mountain in the world.
Its also priceless to see your younger sister already descending as she made it to the top one hour earlier in the pair of old jeans at the temperature of -15°C.
Well, I guess you can’t. That’s why it’s so difficult to describe the feeling that accompanied me at the top of Uhuru Peak, after the nightmare of 8 hours ascent to Gilmans’ Point and after the final struggle at the crater rhim when step by step, sometimes one step forward and half step backward, I was coming closer and closer to the dreamed-of summit.
It’s priceless to be there at down, to see the glaciers dazzling in the morning sun, to see Mt Meru covered by mists and to have that feeling, that unforgettable feeling, that here you are, standing at the roof of Africa, the highest free-standing mountain in the world.
Its also priceless to see your younger sister already descending as she made it to the top one hour earlier in the pair of old jeans at the temperature of -15°C.


