Visa
As there were no embassy of consultate in Doha, will get visa when I arrive at Dar Es Salaam Airport.
Vaccination
I had my dysentery, polio and tetanus shot taken before. The only vaccination I needed was for Yellow Fever. This was not only required by Tanzania but also by Qatar for visitors returning from places that have high likelihood to contract Yellow Fever.
I managed to get the shot from the Vaccination Unit in Abu Hamour Area. This was a small medical outfit operating out of a small villa. The whole process took about 5 minutes as there was no queue. It only cost me Qr10. Got a WHO health booklet that was appropriately yellow with record of the shot and indication that the shot was good for ten years.
US Dollars
Needed to go to the exchange to get US Dollars for :
a) visa (USD$50-100)
b) taxi ride to Arusha Lodge from the airport (USD$60).
c) tips for guide and porters (USD$100)
d) Souvenirs (USD$200 – I shop alot)
e) Drinks after climb (USD$20)
f) Massage after climb at Arusa Lodge
g) spare cash changed to Tanzania Shillings (USD$10 for transport to and fro Arusha town)
h) money for 3 dinners and 1 lunch (USD$80).
Paperwork
a) Passport
b) Qatar Multi-exit permit card
c) E-Ticket for doha-DARS and DARS-Kili
d) Yellow fever card
e) Copy of Vaccination records
f) Emails from AWC and trip dossier and invoice & insurance from Exodus
g) Pen and small notebook for trip log
Gear and Packing
This was major work for me as I am now in Doha, Qatar and most of what I need is in Singapore. There’s only one outfitter shop of sorts here. It had very few items and the prices expectedly high. It had the headlamp (Qr165), CamelBak (Qr 365) and wide-bream hat (Qr75). Didn’t buy anything from that shop. Must remember to weigh as the number of essential items to bring seems to be growing.
Duffel bag – I decided to use the red foldable Yak travel bag. Actually after some packing, it seemed that it might be too small. Then again, if 15kg is all I can carry, it might be enough. Probably have to find another bag for the clothes that I would leave in the hotel. Bought 4 XL Ziploc bags so they should keep the things separated and dry.
Daypack – I had a bigger black Timberland backpack. The shoulder straps are thick and comfortable. However, the back lacked support (frame) and it didn’t have waist and sternum straps. If I were to place the waterbottles inside, they would all be at the bottom. Alternatively, I have a red Nike sports pack. The internal frame support was good and it had the special back layer that aided ventilation. However, it seemed small and would not hold the removed layers when I descend from the summit. Shoulder straps were also thinner. Contemplated about buying one but we seemed to have many such daybacks (laptop ones). Checked the web and figure out that one would cost about USD50 excluding shipping charges. After a few searches on the internet, I narrowed it down to the MountainSmith Hiker 2008 that cost about USD 79.95. I finally decided to buy the Vaude Gallery Air 30+5 because it was more for the outdoor trails rather than a dual purpose laptop daypack.
Trekking boots – I managed to get a soft comfortable pair from City Centre. This was a pair of Caterpillar brand. Cost me about Qr270 after the discount. The shoe was light compared to my previous pairs but it did have a thinner sole with shallow grooves. I hope they would be fine for the volcanic scree that is on Mt Kili and not slippery for Barranco Wall.
Lightweight shoes for use at camp area – will bring my old running shoes.
Clothing – I managed to scrimmage 2 jackets, one sweater, 1 pullover, one turtleneck, 1 track pants, 2 long johns, 2 pants, 1 exercise tights. I hope they are sufficient for the summit attempt. Will bring 4 shirts (3 short-sleeve and 1 long sleeve).
Socks – Looked around for quick a while but could not find thick synthetic ones that would wick away perspiration. I guess it is because it is summer here. Finally, happened to chance upon a store at the Filipino Souq that was selling Qr15 general walking socks from North Face. They felt fine and really I had no choice so I bought 3 pairs. Good thing they were on sale and so saved Qr9. Will bring 3 thicker ones and 3 thinner ones. Wear a combination of a thick and thin each day for comfort, then swop around the next day. Should last me 6 days on the trek. Wear 2 thick ones on the summit night.
Gloves – Hunted around but no luck – I guess it is unavailable for the same reasons as thick socks. Luckily for me, a friend had an inner pair and outer pair. In my desperation earlier, I had also purchased a polyester pair from Reebok that came with a scarf. I liked the material as it was almost fleece-like.
Hat, Balaclava – I found one hat and a synthetic pullover cap. Luckily the friend who lent me the gloves had a balaclava too. I also bought a white cloth that the Arabs wear on their head. Thought that would help to keep cool and prevent sunburn on the neck. I will wear it with my Outward Board Cap. Will bring the sun hat too and one scarf.
Knee Guards – Brought 2 of them to Doha, don’t know why but glad I did. I then bought an extra one for my left knee which seemed weaker (cheap one at QR10).
Walking poles and gaiters – Advertised for them on Qatarliving.com but had no luck. Searched the web and asked a friend to buy them for me in Singapore. However, after checking I found out that there weren’t much variety and they cost much more. I was also undecided if I wanted the Leki core tec PA SAS pole or the Black Diamond Spire Elliptical ones. Eventually I went with the BD and bought them online for USD100. Bought the gaiters too and 4 packs of heat warmer packs (2 in a pack) for hands and 1 pack of insole warmers for feet. Shipping cost me Qr70 and took 9 days to arrive.
Insulated water bottle parka or camelback. – Discovered the Outdoor Research 1 litre parka cost about USD15. Didn’t look at CamelBak hydration packs as they were out of my budget and I am unlikely to use them often. Still figuring out how to insulate my own bottles and skip the buying of the parka. I couldn’t find any insulated water bottle here at all in the shops. Eventually, I bought a 1-litre unbreakable thermos bottle that was on sale but could find any insulating material to wrap round it for the summit climb. I’ll just bring the thermos to use as a hot water bag for the night – heard it is really cold.
Headlamp – bought a cheap one for Qr25. It broke when I tried to put the batteries in. Still works. I will probably bring a small torch too just in case. Must remember to bring duct tape.
Water bottle. – Initially, I wanted to bring two 1 litre bottles and my half-litre squeezable bottle for the daypack and 1-litre thermos for the summit climb. Changed my mind and bought a platypus 2L and insulated tube from Basegear. I will place the squeezable bottle in the side pocket so that I will have about 2.8L of water all the time.
Camera and MP3 player. – I will bring the Panasonic Lumix F10, extra battery, charger and 3GB of SD cards. I’ll bring the iPod. Friends have advised to bring a disposable camera just in case. Should I or should I not ? Decided to buy the camera pouch too for clipping to the waist strap or shoulder strap.
Spare Batteries. Need for :
a) headlamp (2 AAA size)
b) torchlight (3 AA size)
Wallet. – Don’t bring. Need to just bring the following and put it inside passport holder (bring a small Ziploc bag for wallet and money) :
a) 100 QR money to take taxi to and fro airport (remember to book taxi to airport)
b) 2 credit cards (UOB and HSBC)
c) USD that I changed
Handphone and AA battery charger. – Decided to bring my old Motorola phone. If I lose or damage it I’ll have the excuse to switch back to buying a Nokia. J
Toiletries.
a) toilet paper
b) toothbrush and paste
c) disposable plastic cup for brushing teeth
d) pack of wet wipes
e) small towel
f) tube of hand wash
g) prickly heat powder
h) foot spray
i) spare glasses
j) tissue paper
k) body lotion
l) small mirror
m) small clip
Diamox – had a friend to check in Singapore. The pharmacies didn’t carry it and said it had to be prescribed. Friend checked the GPs and didn’t find them too. The shops here don’t have it. Finally I decided to go with Gingko Biloba and Tylenol Sinus which someone posted to have worked. Happened to have the Gingko but could not find the Tylenol. So I bought Panadol Sinus, hope they are the same. I could not find water purification pills too.
Other medication. – Will bring the regular panadol, Lemax for flu/cold, charcoal pills, lomotil, Po Chai pills for diarrhea, and plasters. Need to go find something for blisters. Found them but they cost a bomb – something like QR80.
Dried fruits. – Bought 2 pre-packed ones and then a freshly pack box of it. I will wait for the mixed nuts to be on discount in Carrefour before I buy. One stick of mentos would be heavenly in the cold weather.
Drink Mix. – Haven’t been able to find isotonic powder except one that came bundled with a free water bottle. Cost about Qr39. I did however buy a can of pineapple Tang powder mix which should be nice. Have mixed the 2 together for taste and purpose – best of both world – clever. J
Honey. – Remembered that I should bring a bottle of honey in case of constipation. I found a rare thing in Doha – small bottle of sweet Malaysian chilli sauce which I will bring too.
Others – Got my sunblock, lip salve, anti-malaria pills. Need to get insect repellent. Bring limes. Bring a freesbee. Small blue pillow. Bring strap for yoga mat.
Daypack (Day trekking up to Barafu Camp)
1. Dried fruits and nuts
2. Camera, spare battery, spare memory card
3. Platypus and squeezable bottle (mixed isotonic and Tang)
4. Notebook and pen
5. Mobile
Daypack (Summit)
- Dried fruits and nuts
- one stick of mentos
- Camera, spare battery, spare memory card (in a small Ziploc bag)
- Torchlight taped to shoulder strap
- Headlamp
- Platypus and squeezable bottle (mixed isotonic and Tang). Place platypus and camera stuff in a soft cooler bag with 2 heat packs activated inside a sock
- Mp3 player
- Heat packs one in each jacket pocket
- Strap for yoga mat
For Safari
- Binoculars
- Insect repellent
- Change of clothes
Found a good link for equipment list which breaks it down to essential, desirable, useful, and luxury items to pack for the trek :
http://images.google.com.sg/imgres?imgurl=http://www.cs.technion.ac.il/~gabik/Travels/Tanzania/Kilimanjaro_all.jpg&imgrefurl=http://www.cs.technion.ac.il/~gabik/Travels/Tanzania/Kilimanjaro.html&h=3849&w=4816&sz=5638&hl=en&start=39&um=1&tbnid=n28mfg5NVDjiZM:&tbnh=120&tbnw=150&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dkilimanjaro%26start%3D20%26ndsp%3D20%26um%3D1%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DN
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