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Sent February 16, 2001
Diary of a Trekker
The Helicopter

Somewhere in the Himalayas

Rich and Marci Tuzinsky, a young couple from Ann Arbor, Michigan, and I began our trek to Kalapathar near Mt. Everest a few days ago.

The tiny airport in Lukla at 9,400 feet is closed now until the end of April. The locals are paving the runway, a much needed alternative to puddles, mud and loose rocks. Thus, we arrived next to the construction site ducking the blades of a five passenger helicopter!

It was a thrill I had never before experienced. During takeoff, the propeller started, first slowly, then the hum was deep inside our bones.

The moment we left earth and started into the air, I had to smile. We were whisked as if by the wind across sideways. The mountains below fell away. A wide expanse of endless Himalayan hills, hand sculpted with terraced fields, covered the landscape.

Unlike an airplane, the view and reality of actual flight was on all sides. I looked around to see what kept us in the air: no wings like a bird. The huge propeller churned hard above us, so fast I could not see its parts. That circular blur somehow held us to the air.

I thought of the buzz of an insect. It must be just as loud to little bug ears as the helicopter's roar was to mine.

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