An expedition to climb in the mountains of Iraq is a rare opportunity and one that I figured would not come around too often. It was the Easter before my University finals but I certainly knew which to put first. Attempting Iraq's highest peak, Cheekah Dar in the Zagros mountains of Kurdistan, certainly had priority over my degree at Newcastle University - it was only 10 days without revision! The expedition was run by Secret Compass, an expedition provider I had been working for part time during university and I had the opportunity to tag along. Our proposed target,Cheekah Dar, has only ever been climbed twice before; once in summer and for the first time in Winter just last year.
Landing in the city of Erbil, a settlement dating back to 6,000BC in the country's North, was surreal. From the extremely heavily fortified airport to the modern town built around the ancient dilapidated settlement, everything was a bit chaotic. Shops sell army surplus rather than souvenirs and the few westerners around are there for the oil industry or working for NGOs, they aren't tourists! We planned to head to the mountain town of Choman and then up towards Cheekah Dar but things didn't exactly go to plan, as you might expect in such a country.
Having left Erbil and spent a night in the mountains above Choman we were contacted by the local police and called to meet them. This rather inconvenient and unwanted meeting led to a further meeting several hours drive away with the family who controlled the area - all we really wanted to do was head in to the mountains, we weren't particularly happy. Negotiations were carried out at a hill top mansion surrounded by security and high fences, the owners of which drove two brand new Range Rovers - it was more like Cheshire than Iraq and certainly seemed fairly dodgy! We were told that we would have to climb Mt. Halgurd, Iraq's second highest peak. Cheekah Dar lies on the border with Iran, we were informed that it's patrolled by the Iranians and in an area regularly bombed by the Turkish Airforce - both a little hard to believe. Despite our frustrations we had to abide by their rules and were soon on our way back to the mountains.
What we hadn't realised was that we'd spend that night in the local police station rather than in our tents; a safety measure we were told, but just an inconvenience to us. Despite restrictions on our movements the locals were incredibly friendly, inviting us to their houses and entertaining us with both music and a show and tell involving an array of guns! The majority of the Kurdish people we encountered were incredibly pleased to see visitors, and are keen to increase tourism in the area, reinforcing the fact that Kurdistan is a fairly autonomous and much safer region of Iraq.







