Posts Tagged With: Tibet

Day 90: Cuoqin (错勤) – September 15th

This part of the road, we were keeping our eye out for wildlife. The usual chubby groundhogs, field mice, wild donkeys and the deer have become part of the norm, but this time we’re on the lookout for the estranged wild yaks and the infamous Tibetan antelope (藏羚羊) which numbers less than 75,000 in the wild.

For the most part of the day, we were (unsuccessfully) chasing wild animals in the fields, and if not we would be chasing lakes. On the Tibetan plateau, there are many many lakes, some which are saintly, while others are just pristine and utterly beautiful. Nothing beats a landscape of a indigo blue that alters in colour from different viewing angles, with a group of glacier mountains serving as a backdrop!! We’re too spoiled!

There really isn’t much to say about the lakes, except I can guarantee you the pictures do no justice. We visited a freshwater lake ( 仁青扎布措 ), and also a saltwater lake (扎布娜措)! The saltwater lake was actually used to extract edible salt, and I’m sure they can fetch a nice and hefty price as ‘gourmet high-altitude Tibetan salt’ or something.

As we drove around the salt lake, our driver suddenly pulled off the ‘road’ and into a patch of grass, and loudly declared “LUNCH TIME!”. So it was there, next to 扎布娜措, where we feasted on freshly baked naan (from our nice host from last night, who made naan well past 2am as I could still smell the firewood burning in our mud hut) and lamb. Throw in a bit of local Yunnan pastries from our tour-mates, it couldn’t be beat!

On our way twisting and bumping to our destination, something came loose and the hydraulic-suspension broke off in the rear wheel! Ohhhh, the look on our drivers’ face. What used to be an invincible behemoth was now an fragile rodent, careful of the lightest bump. Fortunately, we made it to town, and a rather large town at that, and was able to fix the car up with a back-up hydraulic-suspension the driver had stowed away, and it was all done in about 1hr for the hefty sum of $180RMB! I can’t imagine how much it’d cost and how long it’d take for the mechanic to ship the parts in if this was anywhere in North America…. Sure, it’s not the best thing, but it was quick, efficient and it just works! 

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Day 89: Renduo (仁朵) – September 14th

It was one of those long days on the road, driving through the similar terrain we’ve been used to seeing. It really is strange how people can get ‘tired’ of such nice things. Instead spent most of the day dozing in and out of sleep from 7am all the way til 9pm.

At one point, the whole car turned to talking about ghost stories and folklore about driving through the Ali region, getting lost and running into a tribe of chainsaw-wielding man-eaters, or something like that. The stories went on for about half an hour as we drove by this massive field pasture….until the road suddenly stopped in front of this recently built house….our driver was actually LOST!!! We tried to knock on the door, but nobody was home. The house looking brand spanking new amongst a sea of muddy ruins, had this eerie aura of the beginning of a movie. And, as if on cue, the clouds gathered quickly and darkened from afar, shrouding us with a blanket of darkness and drizzling rain…perfect time for murder? Continue reading

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Day 88: Zanda (札达) – September 13th

A day of rest and eating, we headed back out of town by 6:30am to avoid getting caught by the stupid admissions people. The city doesn’t have electricity, and the roads are beaten, but the skies cleared up and the stars were once again in full bloom. When we went to bed the night before at around midnight, we were talkng with the motel owner and she said she was going to circumbambulate Mount Kailash too…. but she was going to start at 3am and come back before dinner time at 7pm… SO SHE’S GOING TO DO A 16HR HIKE WHILE SLEEPING 3 HOURS!?!?! These people are super crazy…mad respect.

Back on the road, we’ve seen some pretty fantastic scenery with dramatic changes in landscapes. From the standard mountainous grasslands to the tropical-like region, we were now heading straight into a desert-like region which was home to one of the more interesting parts of Tibetan history, the ancient kingdom of Guge (古格).

Driving in pitch darkness, our experienced driver guided us through hail and rain before the sun came up to warm us up. And not only that, but we were greeted by a set of DOUBLE RAINBOWS!!! The rainbows were set right around the road we were driving on, as if it was a welcome gate to an ancient palace. =) Cool

The landscapes here definitely interesting, and reminded us a bit of what we saw back in Zhangye. Driving down into the valleys, you get to see some pretty crazy looking rock formations before we got into the town. Like any other small town in Tibet, there was only one street with a few grocery shops, restaurants, a lot of military police and a monastery. We dined in for a bowl of noodles el fresco with the rock formations overlooking us. Pretty cool place, considering the surroundings!

The reason this village exists is most likely due to the ancient kingdom of Guge which was 15kms away. A river cuts far below in the valley, and historically this place was a paradise, lush and full of life from the river which has since receded to a sliver of what it used to be. The kingdom was built upon a mountain side, and it was hard to imagine any sort of civilization can sprout from such arid lands!

The castle, with several white and red buildings at the very top where the King was supposed to have lived, while at the middle of the hillside another white and red building stood out from the rocks, and these were temples dedicated to Buddhist teachings. At its peak, the castle region housed 5000 nobles and monks while there were over tens of thousands of peasants living in little caves dotting the landscape! It felt taking a step back into time and looking at the ruins of a once great civilization which was now extinct for well over 600 years.

As we climbed up towards the mountain top, we poked into caves and the ruins of homes. The temples were still intact, and had not been restored at all. For whatever reasons, they’ve been looted and ravaged but you can still feel the work of the amazing artisans that built these temples. Frescoes were beautifully drawn in the more Indian-Buddhist style of work, and statues exuded a sense of grandeur even in its destroyed state. The tour guide then left us to wander the whole mountain-side at our leisure, and we had the whole thing to ourselves! NOBODY WAS THERE. And for a Chinese tourist destination, this is definitely a CTE99.9 event.

Its amazing that the buildings still stood there at all! Being built out of sand and dirt, you can easily crumble a piece of wall by pressing on it, sorta like a really well made pie crust? Unfortunately, we broke off a few pieces before realizing we were destroying a piece of history and began to get extra careful.

At the top, you can overlook the whole surrounding, with nothing but sand mountains as far as the eye can see. Who would’ve thought to put the centre of ANYTHING here!?!? Mad respect to the architect who designed and built this thing as well, because due to the severe cold of the region (and its height), there was a ‘winter-home’ for the King, which was dug INTO the mountain. The entrance itself was rather well hidden, and after hunting around for a long time we found the entrance into this amazing cavern.

The steps down were at a 60degree angle of eroded dirt steps, so we had to be extra careful as we got further down. And once inside, we were completely astonished…. WHAT A SHITTY PLACE!!! The winter-home was a set of 6 interconnected caves which was about 4feet high, with holes dug out into the side which served as ‘windows’, except nothing was stopping you from a 400m drop down into the abyss…. I mean, if anyone didn’t like the King they could just gently nudge him out the window and all would be done!

We climbed back down, and had an interesting chat with a few ‘frescoe restoration workers’ that were sitting there. Outside of the compound, was another little piece of history. In this tiny little cave entrance the size of a car tire, apparently housed a burial ground for over 10000 villagers of the Guge empire when they were ransacked by its enemies. Under constant warfare, the empire was never fully in a peaceful state until it finally met its demise. And its enemies, as a way of degradation, had all the heads of the corpses removed….. When we climbed up close to the hole, you can still smell a distinct note of sour fermentation even though its been over 600 years since its happened……

All being said though, this historical ruin was extremely worth the visit. It was like Macchu Picchu in dirt form… and another looking glass for us to witness the remnants of what once was a bustling centre of life.

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Day 87: Circumbambulate Mount Kailash Final Leg (转山) – September 12th

Sleeping in high-altitude is hard, even for an easy sleepers, and it didn’t help to wake up at 2am to the sound of hail thundering on your shabby tent, feeling your face being wet and the outside of your sleeping bag (thankfully, fitted with Quantum Pertex fabric that’s light AND slightly waterproof!) being damp. Too tired to care!

At 9:30am, everyone was ready to tackle the rest of the trip, despite the foot of snow that’s covered the landscape. We were EXTREMELY lucky to have crossed the mountain pass the previous day, as it would NOT have been fun trying to so in slippery snow! Through a combination of a lot of meds and a lack of food, my stomach was churning badly, and the stupid host wouldn’t give us much hot water. I had to show him how much pain I was in before he subsided to filling 1 of 7 water bottles. JERK!

We walked at a brisk pace, and being mostly flat/downhill, there wasn’t much issue before we arrived at the first stop for lunch after 2hrs of walking. After eating a 200% markup of cup noodles and a infinite markup of hot water (its usually free), we were on our way again.

Friendly Note: Bring preserved veggies for hikes to make cup noodles taste infinitely better! Continue reading

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Day 86: Circumbambulate Mount Kailash (转山) – September 11th

Here’s our take on the ancient pilgrimage to Mount Kailash. For people with good health, the whole trip around the mountain is 52km and takes about 16hours. Starting at an elevation of 4700, the trek runs through a mountain pass at 5720m above sea level. Being a holy site for Buddhists, Jains and Hindus, there was an abundance of devout India people here as well. The only difference though, is they mostly ride yaks or horses for the trip, and they take 3 days. They come from low-altitude regions, and every year people die of altitude sickness as they are not well accustomed to the high-altitude…. talk about devotion.

A few Westerners also come for the trek, and they come decked out with full hiking gear full of food, sleeping systems and etc! It is said that, the less people carry, the less sins they have committed in their life. =P Continue reading

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Day 85: Mount Kailash (冈仁波齐峰) – September 10th

Sleeping in (one of few days!), we were on the road again and back into the great landscapes of Ali. On our way, we saw several packs of wild Tibetan donkeys. Apparently, these donkeys are the bane of nomads existence. Being a protected animal, hunting is disallowed, but when they pass by vegetation they pull the roots out and leaves nothing but patches of empty dirt! So all along the way, you see massive areas of fencing, keeping these donkeys out =P

History Note: Our destination, Mount Kailash (冈仁波齐) and Lake Manasarovar (玛旁雍错), is considered one of the holiest places for several religions including Buddhism, Jainism, Hinduism and the local Tibetan Bon religion. Almost daily, people from all over the world come to circumambulate the mountain. In Buddhism, to do so once, would be to cleanse yourself of all your sins for 500 years. For devout Buddhists, they would aim to circumbabulate the mountain 13 times. Folklore says that, a young woman accidentally drowned her child in the rivers, and to cleanse herself of this sin she continued to circumbabulate the mountain, and it wasn’t until the 13th time that her sins were cleansed. NOTE! If you come here in the year of the horse and circumbabulate once, it is equivalent to doing it 13 times… Again, don’t know why but that’s what they say.

As we got close towards the mountain and all passengers in a semi-drowsy mood, our Tibetan driver slowly raised his hand towards Mount Kailash and said “Everytime I come here, I feel so calm and serenity from within.”. We took a detour and visited the saintly lake of Lake Manasarovar and the ‘ghostly’ Lake Rakshastal. These two lakes, although separated by a mere 4kms, is vastly different. The saintly lake, is a freshwater lake full of fish and vegetation and in the shape of a circle, while the ghostly lake is a SALT WATER lake, where no life forms are found. The strangest part? THEY USED TO BE CONNECTED BY A RIVER! I’m no geologist, but this is pretty freakin’ cool!

So we wandered around the lakes, taking in the amazing scenery. Any day in Tibet, when you have blue skies, you’ll have some amazing scenery you’d wish you can take with you wherever you go… The only thing is it gets really chilly once the sun sets!!

Our Tibetan driver, continuing his awesomeness, managed to bypass two ticket booths and worked some off-road magic (almost hitting the ticket salesman in the meanwhile) and saved us $800 worth of tickets! Respect. Super awesome!

Tomorrow: Cleansing our sins!

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Day 84: Saga (萨嘎) – September 9th

The village itself is just like any recently renovated Chinese village, with a main street full of shops, KTV, bars and Sichuan cuisine. The coolest part about this village was that, it had a temple dedicated to the Princess Bhrikuti Devi back in 650CE, well over 1400 years ago!

Historical Note: One of the most powerful Tibetan ruler, Songtsan Gampo (棄宗弄贊), had two wives. One was the famous Wencheng Princess (文成公主) of the Tang dynasty, while the other was Princess Bhrikuti Devi of Nepal. One of his most important contributions to Tibetan history, is the fact that he introduced Buddhism into Tibet, and also invented the written Tibetan language as we know of today. Skills.

The temple, built in Nepalese style of architecture, definitely stood out even amongst monasteries. The coolest part though, is that there are TWO temples in this village that was built for the Princess’s arrival. The other temple is situated deep into the woods through several villages in a little place called Jeep Village (XXX)..hehe excuse the translation. The locals call this place, Heaven’s Valley, and we were quick to understand why. Crossing a suspension bridge towering 270m over the ravine below, we entered the village and were astonished by the lush environment it was in. Every household has a massive field, growing corn, apples, pears, some red droopy vegetable we’ve never seen, wheat. It felt like we were in a sweet piece of farmland, NOT in Tibet at all! Continue reading

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Day 83: Jilong Village (吉隆村) – September 8th

Reluctantly crawling out of our cozy sleeping bags and into a +5C tent at 7:15am was not fun, but getting outside to see morning glow of Mount Everest made it all better. We took some shots, then headed back inside for some hot water and cookies before climbing onto a ‘environmentally friendly’ vehicle and into the actual ‘base camp’ for Mount Everest on the Chinese border. Guarded by more border patrols (who we feel sorta bad for, being camped out in the middle of nowhere freezing cold with random tourists asking irrelevant questions), it felt like we could cross into Nepal anytime we’d like…. except you’d have to climb through the Himalayas, shouldn’t be that bad right?

On our way back out of EBC, we visited the world’s highest altitude monastery, Rongbusi (绒布寺). There’s about 30 or so lamas residing in there, and apparently there’s an even higher monastery, which is a cave where a single lama resides as he studies in solitude. There were also two very cute sheeps foraging around. Reminder: we’re about 5200m above sea level! Everytime we see goats/sheep, it always reminds us of the little guy Bacon back home….

Driving onto our next destination of Jilong Ravine, we passed by the typical Ali scenery: Green pasture fields full of nomads and their yaks/sheeps, roads bisecting mountainous ranges, and most awesome of all, the snow-capped Himalayas from afar. Before coming around Tibet, I always thought all mountains looked sorta like, well, mountains. That’s where you’re wrong, each mountain seems to have a different story to tell, a different eminence not really captured through the numerous pictures you’d see. On the road, we saw the Shisapangma, a mere 27m above 8000m..hehe. During this trip, we are fortunate enough to see 5 (although one never shown its true facade) of the world’s 14 “Eight-Thousanders” (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eight-thousander). We’ll see the 6th when we do the Annapurna Circuit in Nepal later in Oct. Continue reading

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