By 1934, despite mountaineers having got
near to the summit of Mount Everest, no one had even reached the foot of Nanda Devi, the highest mountain in the
British Empire, even though many attempts had been made.
Preparations and travel Shipton asked
Karma Paul, who had been on Everest expeditions since 1922, to engage three
Sherpas and he appointed
Ang Tharkay, Pasang Bhotia and Kusang Namgir, all of whom had been on the
1933 expedition. Equipment and supplies were basic and the plan was to eat in the same way as the Sherpas –
chapatis, rice and
tsampa – luxuries taken were tea, lentils and
ghee. On 6 April 1934 Shipton and Tilman sailed from
Liverpool on the cargo vessel SS
Mahsud bound for
Calcutta. They met the Sherpas who had travelled from
Darjeeling and the five men went by train to
Kathgodam and continued by lorry to
Ranikhet where they arrived on 9 May. They arranged to take on a dozen
Doti porters, purchased food at the market and were driven by lorry to
Baijnath where they were met by the porters. A ten-day trek took them to
Joshimath from where the exploration towards the Sanctuary started.
Through the upper Rishi Ganga gorge Using the route discovered by
Graham, they followed the
Dhauli river, passing the foot of the
Rishi Ganga gorge, and climbed the Lata hills north of the gorge to reach a
trig station set up by the
Survey of India, the last in the area. This served as the basis for their own surveying which they saw as one of their main purposes. They traversed the Duraishi and Dibrughita high grazing areas and descended to just below the confluence of the Rhamani and the Rishi rivers, halfway up the gorge and eight days march from Joshimath. Base camp was set up near the confluence of the two rivers and here the porters were paid off. At this point the gorge is a box canyon for a distance of about with walls rising above the river. The five men relayed five hundredweight () of supplies along the perilous cliffs, sometimes overhanging the river, at various heights above the bed of the gorge but in doing so lost a rucksack with nearly all their lentils, which removed their staple food and would reduce their expedition by two days. For seven days they ascended the upper gorge, repeatedly being forced to cross and re-cross the river. On 4 June they reached an impasse on the north bank so Tilman and Ang Tharkay reconnoitred a buttress to the south which appeared to be insurmountable. From the north bank they appeared "like ants on a gigantic wall" but at the end of the day they returned to camp having found a clear path beyond the buttress. They named the location "Pisgah" because from there they could see the summit of Nanda Devi. Two days later the team became the first people to enter the Sanctuary. They had taken nine days to cover four miles and success had always been in doubt.
Exploring the Sanctuary The monsoon was expected in about three weeks and the gorge would then be completely closed with floods so their exploration of the Sanctuary could only be brief. They had difficulty crossing the Rishi – at this point is the confluence of a northern and southern arm at a height of about . To the north the river emerges from a large glacier and it was in this direction they started their survey. They saw for the first time the vast northern face of Nanda Devi – an unbroken sweep of . They reached the rim of the northeastern encircling mountains at over and looked over to the east to the
Milam Glacier hoping there might be an alternative way out of the Sanctuary. They also went to the northernmost part of the ring but while they were exploring the foothills of
Changabang the weather deteriorated and the Sherpas effectively took the lead when both Europeans were ill. On 24 June the monsoon arrived and they started their retreat, urged on by the Sherpas. In heavy rain they descended the gorge to the Rhamani river in two days. This river had become torrential and they were forced upstream to where they found an easy crossing point and a route back to Dibrughita from where they raced back to civilisation. In a letter Shipton wrote of the Sanctuary "There was a tremendous variety of birds and any amount of game – most of which can never have seen a man, and stared at us incredulously. I was glad we did not have guns – it would have been a crime to shoot them. It was perhaps the most wonderful three weeks of my life, and I shall never forget a moment of it...".
Badrinath–Gaumukh crossing Back at Joshimath on 2 July and expecting travel through the gorge would not be possible before 10 August, they embarked on a crossing from
Badrinath to
Gaumukh. The sources of the three main rivers that together form the
Ganges: the
Bhagirathi,
Mandakini and
Alaknanda, each have temples –
Gangotri,
Kedarnath and
Badrinath – that are the destinations for Hindu pilgrims. This region is very mountainous and the watershed had never been crossed. Leaving Joshimah for Badrinath, the party hired porters and set off on 12 July for the Bhagirath Kharak glacier. Finding there was no pass at the head of the glacier they explored four subsidiary glaciers entering from the south-west but none were passable. Instead, they headed north to the Arwa River – climbing a peak on the way – to where a previous expedition had reached the watershed but had not completed a traverse. The team found a way over the watershed and, guided by the sight of
Shivling, descended the Chaturangi Glacier to the snout of the
Gangotri Glacier at Gaumukh. With insufficient food to include Gangotri on their itinerary, they returned to Badrinath via the Arwa valley.
Badrinath–Kedarnath crossing There was a legend of a high priest who used to hold services in the Badrinath and Kedernath temples both on the same day. Tradition told that, to avoid the hundred-mile journey using known tracks, he would take a shortcut over the mountains, a distance of less than three miles. Wanting to explore this crossing, the party set off up the
Satopanth Glacier on 4 August, knowing it would delay their return to the Sanctuary. It took difficult route-finding and awkward ice climbing to reach the head of the glacier. Eventually they were able to see to the west of the divide to discover that they were at the head of the Kedarnath valley (as Tilman had predicted) and not the Gangotri Glacier (as Shipton had expected). Immediately they were faced by an ice precipice of hundreds of feet with ice pinnacles and crevasses. Shipton and Tilman felt they might have to turn back but the Sherpas were determined and eventually it was Ang Tharkay who found a route down, albeit a most difficult one. What they presumed would be a two-day trek to Kedarnath turned out to be a far more serious journey. There was a precipice of , scrub and jungle that had to be cut through, and rivers that were almost impossible to cross. Eventually, and after over a week, they reached villages where they could get food but when they reached the pilgrims' road to Kedarnath they decided there was no time to go north on the trail to the temple and they turned south instead, taking the pilgrim route back to Joshimath.
The Sanctuary revisited They left Joshimath on 30 August with a group of porters they had hired locally, at
Mana. So enthusiastic were the porters that thirteen accompanied the team up the Rishi Ganga gorge and into the Sanctuary itself. Shipton "came to have a considerable respect for them as cragsmen" and was sorry that they had to leave. This time the team explored the southern part of the basin especially looking for a way out over the rim so as to avoid a fourth passage of the gorge. The col discovered by Longstaff in 1905 seemed less suitable than one further south, spotted by
Hugh Ruttledge in 1932. However they were distracted by Trisul East (now called
Maiktoli, ) which looked technically straightforward so, while Tilman continued surveying with Pasang, the other three made the first ascent of the peak in conditions, according to Shipton, "almost up to Everest standards". The three men had to share a two-man tent so, at night, when one turned they all had to. The Sherpas found this tremendously funny – Shipton less so. On their return, Shipton and Tilman explored a subsidiary ridge to the south ridge of Nanda Devi itself merely thinking it might provide a good view of the southern Sanctuary. At they had to turn back but they had decided that this ridge gave a good chance of reaching the summit for a suitably prepared expedition. On 17 September the entire party started the climb to Ruttledge's col to look down the precipice and icefall to the
Sunderdhunga Glacier. It took two days to discover a route down the precipice and Ang Tharkay was the person who found the way that was at last successful. Descending the valley they reached the
Pindar River. At last reaching Sameswar they were able to board a bus to
Ranikhet and they went their separate ways at
Bareilly with Shipton writing his book
Nanda Devi on his six-week voyage home. ==Mount Everest intervenes==