Baked goods and Wi-Fi give Everest a touch of home

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EVEREST: Wi-Fi, baked goods and trendy coffee: gone are the days of deprivation at Everest base camp, with hipster perks and modern conveniences ensuring life is cushier than ever on the roof of the world.

The Khumbu glacier at the foot of Everest transforms every spring into a high-altitude metropolis of surprising luxury for the hundreds of climbers aiming for the peak of the world’s highest mountain.

Canned food and bulky satellite phones are a thing of the past.

Today’s climbers enjoy fresh salads, Instagram and creature comforts unthinkable when Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay first stood atop the 8,848 metre (29,029 foot) peak 65 years ago.

“The first question people ask when they arrive at base camp is where’s the Wi-Fi. The second question is where’s the hot shower,” said Everest veteran Russell Brice, owner of Himalayan Experience, one of the oldest and most established expedition operators.

The first intrepid teams to attempt Everest took a month to reach base camp on the Nepal side of the mountain.

The journey was cut to eight days with the construction of a small mountain airstrip at Lukla, the gateway to the Everest region.

Around 2,500 yaks make that journey at the beginning of the spring climbing season in April to turn the rock-strewn glacier into the world’s highest city for two months of the year.

Tents have carpeted floors and bouquets of plastic flowers. Piping hot showers running on solar power offer respite from the freezing temperatures outside.

A brigade of helicopters keeps the tent town stocked with daily deliveries of fresh supplies to cater for the 1,500 or so people at base camp.

Climbers who want a break from high altitude life can even hitch a heli ride back to Kathmandu for some R and R before returning to attempt the summit.

At Alpine Ascents’ camp, breakfast comes with Turkish drip coffee.

“Cappuccino machines don’t work at altitude,” director Gordon Janow explained.

Meanwhile, over at Seven Summit Treks’ camp, the smell of freshly baked cinnamon rolls from its bakery greets climbers returning from an acclimatisation run high on the mountain.

Fresh salads are served up by Adventure Consultants, a New Zealand-based operator, whose chef once worked in a restaurant with three Michelin stars in France.

“People seem to like simple foods. Of course being here is so far removed from cities and normal life that basic salads and fresh vegetables seem to keep everyone happy,” said chef James Perry.

He swapped a fully kitted-out kitchen in an ambassador’s residence in Brussels for two gas hobs and a temperamental oven at base camp.

“Each have their own peculiarities,” he replied diplomatically when asked who was more difficult to please: climbers or ambassadors?

Chef James Perry swapped a kitchen in an ambassador’s residence in Brussels for two gas hobs and a temperamental oven at base camp

‘Evolution’ of base camp

Greg Vernovage of International Mountain Guides, one of the largest teams on the mountain, said the modern-day perks were part of the natural “evolution” of base camp.

But others lament the direction it is going.

Everyone on “the Hill” used to know each other, veterans say, and shared everything from radio frequencies and weather forecasts to banter over an afternoon “guides’ brew”, whisky, honey and water.

Today, they say the village atmosphere is gone.

Basecamp is a warren of tents as more climbers than ever try to reach the top of the world.

Last year saw a record 373 permits granted to foreign climbers to venture up Everest from the Nepal side, and this year fell just shy of that.

Around 2,500 yaks make that journey at the beginning of the spring climbing season in April to turn the rock-strewn glacier into the world’s highest city for two months of the year

Money has also sown division in the once close-knit community.

Crowds are growing as prices drop, with bargain operators offering cheaper, and many fear unacceptably risky, ways for glory-chasers to the summit.

Foreign operators, most charging climbers around $65,000 to reach the summit, complain that Nepali outfits skirt safety and invite crowding by offering packages for as little as $20,000.

Nepali-run expedition groups reply that foreigners treat Everest like a colonial outpost and are threatened by the competition they represent.

The modern-day conveniences may make life at base camp easier, but reaching the summit remains as treacherous as ever.

Three climbers have died this year. Last year six perished.

Brice, of Himalayan experience, said anything that improved comfort, physically and mentally, was essential as climbers prepared to ascend almost to the cruising altitude of a jetliner.

“The psychological impact of how people feel will impact how they perform on the mountain,” he said.