The following is the description of today from the tour company's info site:
"DAY 7 BARAFU CAMP TO SUMMIT
TO MWEKA CAMP, Dec 13 frıday!!
Hiking Time: 7 hrs to summit,
7-8hrs descent
Total Distance: 7km to summit, 23km descent
Starting Altitude: 4550m
Summit Altitude: 5895m – Uhuru Peak
Final Altitude: 3100m
Habitat: Stone Scree, ice capped summit, Alpine desert
At Stella Point you will be rewarded
with a breath-taking sunrise (weather permitting), which we enjoy while taking
a short rest. From Stella Point the trail is normally snow-covered, and every
step of the 2 hour ascent to Uhuru peak is challenging. At 5895m, Uhuru, which
means “freedom” in Swahili, is the highest point in Africa. Take a few minutes
to appreciate your accomplishment, as this is day to remember for the rest of
your life!
The time you will spend on the summit will depend on the weather conditions;
the temperatures range from just below freezing at midnight, to between -12 C
to -23 C just before dawn. We start back down the same trail, and descend back
to Barafu camp. Here you will have a well earned but short rest and collect the
rest of your gear. We then head down the rock and scree path into the moorland
zone, reaching the forest, and eventually arriving at Mweka hut in the late
afternoon.
Today is the longest, and the most mentally and physically challenging of the
trek. But a day that will stay with you forever, as you conquered the heights
of Kilimanjaro."
No time to sit down, watch, enjoy, celebrate. We have to go from 5,739m to 5,895m. Not as easy as it sounds! The weather is beautiful. We set off together but I can not keep up with them. Hussein carries my day pack. He asks me how I am. I can not reply. I want to say I am OK but words don’t come out of my mouth. Also, am I OK? NO! I do the thumb up move but he doesn’t believe me. I take 3 steps and I have to stop. I start feeling dizzy. He says "we should go back..." I think.. if I push myself, will I die? Is it worth it? But I’ve made it all the way up here. How can I give up right now? Will my stubborness be the end of me on this mountain top? Then he finishes his words. "...or we go very slowly."
I pick that choice. We walk very very slowly. I close my eyes and walk. Very often we sit down and wait for my heart to beat slower but it takes longer and longer for it to beat slower. I lose hope, then I force myself again. "Come on Aylin", I say to myself, just like in the song.. "you can do this". The trail goes on and on.
People who have already been to summit are returning. They all look content. They say it is right around the corner to encourage me, but that corner never comes. The views are fantastic. I don’t have the energy to take out my camera. I say “on the way back”.. there is a glacier on my left that has very intricate patterns that shine under the sun. It looks like the Taj Mahal of Kilimanjaro. On the right hand side, is the crater, but I don’t really know that it is there, so I don’t look closely. Only after we come down and I see a post card of summit that I realize it was there.
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| TAH MAHAL |
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| THE CRATER |
What looks like a 15 minute walk, takes more than an hour. The final 20 minutes, Hussein is holding me with one hand from my back like a puppet to keep me up or to keep me from falling face down into snow. I have the blank, fake eyes of a puppet. My gaze is fixed at one point in the horizon. I feel like a robot, like a human being in a sci-fi movie whose soul has been stolen by aliens. I am nothing but my own shell. I am a zombie.
My feet are moving forward. Slowly. He literally leads me to Uhuru Peak. On the way, I meet my team. They say they tried to wait for me up there, but were sent back by the masses of people there who were qued to take photos in front of the Uhuru Peak sign post. They say it was also very difficult for them to walk this last part. Excuse me? Go back go back.. Did you say crowds? Did you say "masses of people"?
I am putting my life at risk here on this mountain top with the only goal of summiting it and what I find at the top is crowds? Crowds who que for "the photo"?
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| I MEET MY TEAM AS THEY ARE RETURNING FROM SUMMIT |
Just as I reach Uhuru Peak, the clouds come back and cover everything. Only 10 minutes ago, my team took photos at this point and the sun was shining with a clear blue sky behind. The second I arrive, everything is foggy grey and snowy! Hrrr.. well there is no need to be ungrateful really. I have made it. If I let my feelings overcome the moment, I would definitely start crying, but the moment is pressing! I have things to do.
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| MY TEAM'S SUMMIT PHOTO |
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| MY TEAM'S SUMMIT EXPERIENCE |
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| AND MINE! |
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| IN FOG |
First, a photo on my own, then one with rainbow flag, then one with the print-out that I had been trying to keep dry, unsuccessfully, for a week that thanks Eressos Sourtoukes walking group. Once those are done, it is time to go down and start breathing better with every step. There is no moment of celebration, no moment of feeling proud, appreciating what you have achieved, no moment to look down on earth from the highest free-standing mountain.
(And certainly no psycological relief from your burdens as some fellow climbers may suggest. This belief is based on the main belief that you would leave your burdens, "your baggage" behind at places with high altitude. All of the above is luxury and romantic bullshit at that moment. You can not breath properly, you haven't slept for two days, not showered for five, you have walked all night long, your water froze, you haven't eaten in a long time. That's why, two days after all this mayhem, at a bar down in Moshi town, when a South African boy who summited on the same day that we did walked up to us and said "Man, I left a lot of baggage up there", we all thought he forgot his day pack.)
We set off. Of course there is nothing left to photograph on the way back. Everything has disappeared behind the clouds. I see other struggling people like me with that empty expression on their faces. I can not say anything to encourage them. I don’t have the energy to speak.
My team is already on its way so it is me and Hussein who have to walk back all the way to basecamp. Well, as it turns out, it isn’t easy at all!
3,5 hours of sheer torture again. The steep hill that we climbed all night long is now ahead of me to climb back down. New muscles are in action. I am tired, hungry, sleepy, and still oxygen deprived. The trail we made last night is slippery so I have to walk in snow, make myself a new trail. I try to go fast. I fail, because I don’t have the strength to go fast. I go slow and it seems like it will never end. I fall many times. We stop many times and rest. It goes on and on. Hussein says we will soon see the camp. 45 painful minutes pass until we do. Seeing the camp does not solve my problems anyway. It is quite far away. And don’t forget the sweet surprise at the end of each day.. a very steep descent is between me and the camp. (And did I say the end of the day? Well, it’s not. After basecamp, we have another 3-4 hour walk.) I tell Hussein lines from Turkish melodramas like “leave me here, you go save yourself” or “I can not anymore” or “I want to die” and he says he can not let me die until basecamp because I am under his responsibility.

Finally we arrive. I go to my tent and fall asleep for a short time with my feet outside and my body inside. I can not find the strength to take my boots off or zip up the tent door. Then we eat something, possibly soup again, pack up, and get going again. I can not believe I will be walking again! Another 4 hours! We have already walked 13 hours that day. Who do they think we are? Androids?
The walk down is through some barren land first and not so steep, but then we get to a trail with uneven steps. It gets very painful. My toes hit my boots really hard and it hurts a lot. My knees also give away after very very painful hours on an ever-ending trail. Every corner seems to be the end of it but it is not.
"Why am I doing this?" “When will we be there?”
The answer is almost the same every time: 40 minutes. I ask if it is German 40 minutes or African 40 minutes. They reply "African 40 minutes!" with pride. That means 1,5 hours. We are actually at a very beautiful spot. There are pine-like short trees around us as far as the eye can see. We pass by many different flowers and weird plants with fruits on them. It could have been a pleaasant walk if we had not been walking for 14 hours! Of course it rains, our faithful friend, but we don’t mind it that much because it is over. The stress of summit is gone. We are near the end.. the end that never comes.
4 hours later, we arrive at camp. It’s wet and very muddy. There is no comfort, no luxury, no celebration. We are all very tired. Just like the rain that has never abandoned us, milo and popcorn don’t either. This is our last feast. Tomorrow, we will sleep in a bed at a hotel. We are a proud team because all of us made it to summit. I know what my team thinks. They were worried all along that I wouldn’t be able to do it. But I relieved them. I made it. We don’t have to say things like “it is not making it to summit that matters, it is the whole experience” or “my mother told me not to do something stupid, so I decided to stop before summit, because I wasn’t feeling well.”
And I don’t have to buy a Kilimanjaro beer t-shirt that says “if you can’t climb it, drink it”.
We have dinner with soup and pasta. I go to bed with my hot water bottles again because we are still at 3,100m.