After a rain-soaked
10-hour trek through
the middle mountains
of Nepal — about 80
miles south of
world-renowned Mt.
Everest — a hearty
but exhausted band
of California
Rotarians arrived in
the tiny village of
Chyangba, where 65
homes cling to steep
hillsides.
The 21-member group
of Rotary volunteers
had flown halfway
around the globe to
Kathmandu, Nepal’s
capital, and then
took a bumpy,
half-hour flight
aboard Yeti Airlines
(named after the
reputed mountain
creature) to Phaplu,
a village in
central-eastern
Nepal that would
serve as the group’s
trailhead.
There, they joined
75 Nepalese porters
and 21 donkeys that
would pack equipment
and supplies deep
into the mountains
where no vehicle
could travel.
When the Rotarians
walked into Chyangba,
they were greeted
with welcome banners
and smiling
villagers, who
helped them pitch
tents in hillside
cornfields and set
up dental and
medical treatment
areas at the local
school, which serves
as the village
center.
The September 2008
mission, organized
by the 49er
Breakfast Rotary
Club of Nevada City
and Rotary District
5190, brought dental
and medical care as
well as home and
school improvements
for the residents of
Chyangba, a very
remote village in a
nation where the per
capita income is
less than $470 per
year.
Multiple ethnic
groups inhabit
Chyangba (elev.
8,030 ft.), but the
primary residents
are Sherpa people,
who are well known
in the West for
their mountain
guiding expertise.
It was a mountain
guide connection
that led to this
Rotary project in
Nepal.
Dental care,
medical
screenings
During a week in
Chyangba, 325 local
residents registered
for dental and oral
surgical services
provided by
volunteer Rotarian
and non-Rotarian
specialists. Four
dentists and one
oral surgeon
performed 218
restorations and 312
tooth extractions,
while a dental
hygienist provided
X-rays and oral
hygiene.
Medical treatments
were administered to
more than 300
children and adults,
and included
antibiotics,
vitamins, pain and
anti-worm
medications.
Screenings helped a
four-year-old boy,
who was sent to
Kathmandu for cleft
palate correction,
and a seven-year-old
girl, who was
referred for cardiac
evaluation.
A vision evaluation
clinic provided
nearly 600 pairs of
corrective glasses
and sunglasses.
Medical and first
aid supplies also
were distributed to
representatives of
neighboring
villages.
Six volunteers built
eight school desks,
using hand-hewn
lumber from the
village. They also
built book shelves
and toilet seats and
completed numerous
building repairs.
In a region where
many residents cook
and heat with open
fires inside their
homes, the Rotarians
packed in and
installed two
smokeless stoves,
custom-made in
Kathmandu for $500
each. The volunteers
hoped the
demonstration
project would reduce
respiratory ailments
and irritated eyes
among villagers.
A school exchange
brought books,
drawings and posters
from sixth-graders
at Seven Hills
School, in Nevada
City, to the
children of Chyangba.
More than 100 books
were packed in.
Many hands
The Rotary
International
Service Project was
organized by 49er
Rotarians Barry
Turner, a dentist;
Hal DeGraw, a
lawyer; and Larry
Meek, a retired
educator who spent
three years as
principal of an
international school
in Kathmandu. There,
he was a member of
the Kathmandu
Mid-Town Rotary, one
of 70 Rotary clubs
in the mountainous
Asian nation.
Additional
participants
included 49er
Rotarians Harry
Auld, Mike Ferguson,
Steve Leighty and
Pamela Yazell. Other
volunteers were past
district governor
Bob Hartsfield and
his wife, Marge; Dan
and Patsy
Bibelheimer, Chuck
Franck, Karen
Leighty, Ken Marti,
Terry and Robin
Prechter, Larry and
Sue Sage, Sharyn
Turner, and Ed and
Barbara Weiss. All
are from Nevada City
and nearby towns.
Funded by 49er
Rotary and District
5190, the
International
Service Project was
budgeted at $10,000
and completed for
$9,840 in supplies
and equipment. Each
volunteer covered
his or her own
airfare of about
$2,000 and expenses
in Nepal of another
$1,500.
“This was my fourth
trip to Nepal,” said
Turner. “Even though
our connection with
Rotary International
adds a certain
comfort level,
traveling there is
still an adventure.”
“It turned out to be
a very interesting
and rewarding
project for each
volunteer,” said
Meek, who has
traveled to Nepal
several times.
“Anyone who goes to
that country leaves
a little bit of
their heart behind.
The people are just
wonderful.”
Climbing
Lobuche
Following the work,
the group returned
to Kathmandu, where
some members
returned home.
Others joined a
12-day guided trek
through the
Himalayas. A
five-member group of
climbers tackled an
ascent of Lobuche,
at 20,075 feet one
of the highest peaks
in the region.
“Without exception,
everyone in the
group talked about
going back,” Meek
added. “It makes me
really happy because
there are more
people to lend a
helping hand.”
Planning an
international
project
In celebration of
Rotary’s 100th
anniversary in 2005,
the Rotaract Club of
Kathmandu, Nepal,
sent Pem Dorjee
Sherpa, a
23-year-old Everest
guide and Chyangba
resident, and Moni
Mulepati of
Kathmandu to plant
the Rotary banner at
the highest point on
earth, the
29,035-foot summit
of Sagarmatha, or
Mt. Everest.
The world learned
later that Pem and
Moni planned to and
were married on the
top of Mt. Everest,
the first such
marriage ever. The
young couple quickly
became celebrities
in their native
land.
Nevada City 49er
Rotarian Larry Meek,
who had lived in
Nepal, invited the
couple to Nevada
City, where they
told their story to
Rotary members and
local students.
Their visit inspired
the formation of a
local Rotaract Club,
a Rotary
organization for
professionals ages
18 to 30.
While in Nevada
City, Pem met
dentist and former
49er Rotary
president Barry
Turner, an avid
mountain climber who
had been to Nepal
and was anxious to
return. Thus began
two years of
planning that
resulted in the 2008
international
project to take
dental care and
medical screening to
the remote village
of Chyangba.
Pem was in charge of
all travel and
outfitting
arrangements in
Nepal — his first
venture in
establishing his own
trekking company
Sherpa adventure
international.
He also organized
the climb of Lobuche
by a group of
Rotarians after the
Chyangba mission and
the trek through the
Lang Tang and
Helambu regions.
Dave Carter is a
49er Rotarian and
freelance writer who
lives in Nevada
City.