|
Two-Second Travelogue June,
July, & August 2001
June 2001 (June photos)June 1 - Pokhara - Maggie: I miss Greece. June 2 - Pokhara - We just heard that nearly all the Nepal royal
family was murdered last night. This could be interesting. -- Mark June 3 - Pokhara - Today I bought a kukuri. A kukuri is a traditional
Nepalese knife used by the Nepalese Army and by Nepalis on the farm and
in the kitchen. It looks like a thick, heavy, one-sided dagger but bent.
Every day I went to the bookstore and tried to trade all our books for
the kukuri. When the value of the books reached the value of the kukuri,
they still didn't accept the trade, and they asked for more. I tried several
times to convince them, but when they didn't agree, I took the books to
other shops and sold them. I sold some of them for 450 rupees. But the
other four books were only worth 250, and I couldn't get any other store
to buy them. The shop with the kukuri took the four books and the 450
rupees for the kukuri. After I bought the kukuri, I told the people what
I had done. They laughed, because they never thought I would go sell my
other books to other stores. -- Tote June 4 - Pokhara to Galeswor - We walked for an hour after being
on the bus for five hours. The bus ride was scary and interesting. The
scary part was being 4 or 5 feet away from a cliff with no room for a
car to pass you. The interesting part was having a goat on the bus with
its owner right in the doorway. We've walked across two suspension bridges.
One of the suspension bridges was metal. I think that one was the scarier
bridge. My dad thinks that the wood suspension bridge is scarier, but
I think the wood one is more fun. The coolest part about it is the rock
that covers up the hole in the bridge. These bridges move so much I don't
like to stand in the middle. -- Maggie June 5 - Galeswor to Tatopani - We walked 5 or 6 hours down a
rocky pathway. Me and Duncan played "obstacle trek challenge."
We went through "Slippery Stone Stairway,""Cliff Creek
Crossing," and "Wrath of Slippery Stones." After that we
went through "Mud Bath,""One Wrong Move," "Mucky
Mire,""Spike Rock Peak," and "Slideaway Ledge."
We beat the other teams, but we don't know who will come in first. --
Maggie June 7 - Tatopani to Ghasa - Today is Maggie's birthday. Just
like Duncan's, which was in Venkateshwara, it was a good day. We walked
through the Kali Gandaki gorge until we came to a waterfall. To cross
the water coming off the waterfall we had to go on an old bridge. One
side of the bridge had broken. Some friends told us that there was a place
near the waterfall that you could swim in. Of course we went. Duncan and
I built small dams. Later in the day we went through an area where a bridge
had fallen out, and we had to take an older bridge. Later we met some
Nepali students whose friend had fallen off the older bridge and drowned.
So far the trek is Coooool!!! -- Tote June 8 - Ghasa to Kalopani - I find myself looking high up in
the sky, where there couldn't possibly be a mountain, to look for mountains,
and sometimes I see one. Here, there is an incredible peak outside every
single window. Tonight, we drank yeasty, local rice "beer" with
Kris and Veerle, two wonderful Belgians nearing the end of their yearlong
cycling trip. (Veerle says they don't mind us, because we are "travellers"
and not tourists.) We taught Kris and Veerle to play Hearts, and they
immediately trounced us. At the next table, some Nepali teachers urged
us to try the local distilled beverage which they were drinking hot. It
wasn't bad stuff but not very good either. -- Mark June 9 - Kalopani to Marpha - After asking a mule train guy which
way to go, we went down a path into the riverbed, which looked like a
lake bed at this point. We walked along the path but eventually had to
wade across the stream. Later, in the center of the path, there were strings
of prayer wheels. (You spin them clockwise.) Marpha is a town that looks
like stone heaps taken right from the mountains. -- Tote June 10 - Marpha to Kagbeni - Marpha reminds me of a pueblo. Tons
of stone buildings tossed onto each other. Roofs rimmed with wood for
fires. Prayer flags along tall poles snap and crack in the wind that sweeps
endlessly down this arid canyon pulling dust in its wake. In the monastery
perched atop the town, prayer wheels are spun. Their rattling and sometimes
squeaking scattered on the breeze along with the prayers sealed inside.
Intricately painted and carved Buddha statues meditate behind images of
the royal family. The cliffs and bluffs surrounding Marpha on three sides
protect the town from the airborne dust. The river, steely gray, still
rushes in its rocky bed beyond apple orchards and mule caravan paths.
Bathed in dust and hulls from threshed grain, the path winds on past tablets
in Tibetan calligraphy and low, bland-colored brush. -- Duncan June 11 - Kagbeni - Typical trekkers, we've been staying at "guest
houses" along the way. The rooms are simple but very cheap - last
night, for a double and a triple room, we paid $1.60. Tonight we will
pay about $2.10. Though the rooms are cheap, you are expected to eat in
the guesthouse. The innkeeper really makes money on the meals. In general,
all the guest houses in a town charge the same prices for lodging and
for food. Often the menu is produced by some local tourist committee and
is exactly the same in every guest house. The idea is that innkeepers
will compete by increasing quality rather than decreasing prices, though
I am not sure that all the innkeepers realize this. So, the game is to
find the cleanest, nicest rooms, inspect the common toilets and bath,
and then guess about whether the food will be good or not. Generally,
a good innkeeper has both tidy rooms and good food. The innkeepers encourage
us to order dinner and to choose a time we'd like to eat as soon as we
set down our backpacks. It's rather elegant to begin dinner at the appointed
time, though the different dishes arrive in fits and starts. The innkeeper
keeps a list of everything ordered in a book, and at the end of the stay,
the innkeeper and I sit down with the calculator and the list and add
everything up. It's been extraordinarily convenient and hassle-free. --
Mark Accomodation here is cheap, but food is expensive. A 650 ml bottle of beer costs half again as much as our rooms (of course the bottle of beer had to come by mule train!), so Mark and I (and Kris and Veerle) have now sampled cider (hard), chhyang from rice, chhyang from wheat, and roxie (distilled chhyang?) My favorite has been the apple cider which tastes like Liberian palm wine. -- MonicaJune 12 - Kagbeni to Muktinath - Overlooking Muktinath, a heap of temples, chortens, creeks, and prayer flags, is a Scottish-style hill on which we found blue and yellow mini-prayer flags, as well as printed prayers on small pieces of paper and a long white prayer flag. From the hill, amongst the kelly green leaved trees and thick webs of all kinds of prayer flags can be seen the golden top of a pagoda-style temple ringed with all sizes of hanging bells and a semi-circle of metal bulls' heads spitting forth streams of holy water that cascade down beneath the prayer flags and join into a stream that once turned a water-propelled prayer wheel, no longer spinning since it lost its paddles. -- Duncan Today we went on a hike to Muktinath. Muktinath has a couple monasteries and a long, long line of prayer wheels. The couple of last ones were made out of powdered milk cans. We found lots of prayer flags and spider web-types of things tied to trees. Most of the temples weren't that interesting but I liked to ding the bells, if I could reach them. The bells were very decorated. Some of the bells had little metal statues on the top, and some of them were plain. On the way back from Muktinath, I saw some people wearing scarves. I decided I want to get a loom when I get back home. I thought it was cool, and I could make blankets and a scarf. -- Maggie As the sun sets, it's twilight, and we're upstairs in the dining hall looking out the windows at village life and the stunning snowcapped peaks in every direction. The clouds are continuously shifting and evolving; exposing, hiding, revealing, then masking again. I suspect that during trekking season maybe there are cloudless blue skies, with spectacular peaks clearly visible at all times. I'm sure it would be beautiful and awesome, but I cannot help but appreciate the continuously shifting quality of the the panorama we've been seeing. It's magical and mysterious. You never know what is about to loom out or when a stunning peak is obscured and a peak to its left or right is revealed. After visiting the temples today, I slowly ascended the hill and found a rock to sit upon near Maggie and Mark. A saddhu joins us; his companions go on . . . two of them running and laughing together. Our friend smiles . . . beaming . . . then he runs. . . Mark runs after him, comes back breathing hard. I'm drawn back to the temples and shrines. I want to ring bells and place flowers picked on the hillside beside images and statues. -- Monica We have visited many poor and dirty places but, I cannot recall seeing dirtier people than those in Muktinath. In Bombay, women picking through trash heaps wore clean, brightly colored saris. The towns in the Kali Gandaki valley were neat and tidy. Here, middle-aged women running prosperous hotels wear soiled dresses and prepare our food with grimy hands. Faces and hands are filthy. Though there's plenty of clean, running water, the children look as though they have never been bathed, had their noses wiped, or changed clothes. There is enough dung in the kitchen to make it look and smell like a corral, and the adults watch kids poop on the doorstep. It doesn't help that an open sewer runs through a ditch down the middle of the main path through town or that a drizzle has turned the place into a mud slick. -- Mark June 13 - Muktinath to Jomsom - The kids amaze me almost every
day. Today, Maggie didn't just accompany me on my search for a place to
stay. While I checked one place, she insisted on checking out other places
on her own. She just walked in by herself and asked to look at the rooms.
Then she examined the toilets and bathrooms, priced dal bhat on the menu,
and gave me a full report. I cannot imagine what the innkeepers thought,
but they showed her everything she wanted to see. (Among the things she
noticed was that one room had a "reading light that Mom would like.")
-- Mark Everyone predicts trouble in Kathmandu. As if on cue, shortly after the telecast ends, the power goes out in Pokhara. Delayed paying the bill, I stumble up the rocky street to our hotel alone. The hotel is absolutely silent. There's not a single member of the staff around. I feel my way to the kids' room where Monica has found a flashlight and is putting the children to bed by its weak light. I wonder whether it wouldn't be wiser to all sleep in the same room tonight. I go out to buy candles, and the shopkeeper talks in murmers. After I light two candles for the kids, the power comes back on. Maggie is already asleep, but the rest of us are relieved. -- MarkJune 15 - Pokhara - Yesterday, Maggie walked around town by herself shopping for a Nepali jacket. Many places started at Rs 650; she bargained them down to Rs 400. Last evening she found a used one for Rs 300, but when she took her brothers to look at it, they discovered several holes and torn seams. Today, she finally talked one shop down to Rs 300 for a new one. She stopped at the shop about every hour all day long to check on the progress. Finally, tonight she turned up wearing it. She is, needless to say, very happy. -- Monica The owner of our hotel has just returned from Kathmandu. He says no one believes that the crown prince did the shooting. Everyone believes it is a conspiracy. He showed us a picture he just purchased of the royal family. In Pokhara, the police driving around town packed 7 or 8 in an SUV, apparently a show of force. Passing knots of men chatting, one can hear the names of the deceased king and of the new king. There's no trouble, and no one seems particularly concerned about violence. -- Mark June 16 - Pokhara - I finally found a place to connect our computer
to the internet, and at a comparatively reasonable rate. Unfortunately
the connection was so slow, Duncan and I calculated it would take nearly
16 hours to post all the new photos. -- Mark Nobody believes what the top snobs said: the crown prince, drunk, got into combat fatigues (that happened to be in his closet) and picked up a rifle that shoots 15 rounds per second (that's from his closet, too) and went down to the billiard hall and started shooting people and then himself. -- Duncan June 17 - Pokhara to Kathmandu - We left Pokhara early. We arrived
in Kathmandu after only a couple delays and a couple scheduled stops:
breakfast and a flat tire and then the stop where we were all lined up
on both sides of the giant crane which had arrived an hour or so before
we did to hoist a truck out of the river. The truck had plunged off the
cliff two days before, killing two people and two are missing. After an
hour of milling around trading rumors, the crane withdrew. The truck remained
embedded in the riverbank. Our final stop was for lunch: 5 dal bhat. --
Monica June 18 - Kathmandu - Kathmandu is terribly touristy. The streets
are lined with ugly gold-decorated kukuris and superexpensive prayer wheels.
The stench of incense fills the air, along with the incessant honking,
chatter, and the "Yes . . . ?", "Look sir?", "You
like this?", "Your shoes are broken. I fix?", and, as always,
"rickshaw?" We're back in a city and, like math, even if you
don't do it for a while, you get sick of it just as fast. -- Duncan June 19 - Kathmandu - Maggie discovered that the woman selling
tea across the street will fill the glasses from our room for Rs 7, so
this morning, I went over to get a couple glasses. While I was waiting,
I chatted with a taxi driver and played with a little boy and his dog.
Just when I I was thinking how wonderful the world was, the little boy
began trying to jam a key into the dog's eye. -- Mark June 20 - Kathmandu - Monica: "Nobody can appreciate
that the mother, who was trying to circumambulate, was rammed by a big
black ram!" June 21 - Kathmandu - We walked a few kilometers through Kathmandu neighborhoods to see the great white dome at Swayambhunath, watch for monkeys that supposedly slide down bannisters, ring bells, spin prayer wheels, look out at Kathmandu, and gaze on big gold statues. We also heard garnet-robed monks chanting, playing cards and throwing garbage out the monastery's windows. Despite a wrong turn that landed us on muddy paths and roads threaded between rice paddies, we made it back in time to go to the orientation meeting for our Tibet tour. (The only way to go to Tibet is with an overpriced, government-sponsored tour. We have never been on a tour, so everything about it is a bit disorienting.) That all made for a great day, but what was even better was my purchase of a tape containing Bob Seger singing "K, K, K, K, Kathmandu!" For the last few days, I have done my best to embarrass the children by singing this song on crowded K, K, K, K, K, Kathmandu streets. It is amazing how the dulcet sound of my singing infallibly draws an admiring crowd. The children and Monica (who was perhaps misled by my unique interpretation of the song) thought I had made it up. So, everywhere we went last night, I put on the tape for their edification. (It also contains a rendition of "Cotton Eye Joe." The music store fellow believes the line "Where did you come from, Cotton Eye Joe?" is "Where did you come from? Kathmandu!") -- Mark June 22 - Kathmandu - I am behind on the photo captions but ahead on selecting my new career - rickshaw driver, singer, or monk - hmmm. While the crew went off to Bhaktipur, I spent the day working on a brief and doing errands to get ready for our Tibet trip. While I'm working in the hotel room, I hear newsboys hawking papers. I find it amusing that Kathmandu has many more newspapers than any U.S. city. -- Mark June 23 - Kathmandu to Nyalam, Tibet - We drove through part of
Nepal to the border. After doing Nepal immigrations we crossed a bridge.
On the exact middle of the bridge there was a red line. On one side it
said China; on the other side was written Nepal. We could not get through,
because the original permit was supposed to be brought by the Tibetan
tour guide, but he was late. So, we waited for hours. When we finally
got past, we rode a truck to the Chinese customs where we filled out a
couple little sheets and some police checked our bags. I must tell you
(Marco Polo-style) about the truck ride. First we got in and put our bags
in the center, but to add to the confusion of getting situated and making
sure everything is on (including people), Chinese and Tibetan moneychangers
got on. Then someone said that three people had to get off. As soon as
three got off, Tibetans started to get on. When we arrived at customs,
we found out that a person from out group had gotten out of the truck,
was left behind, and had to take a taxi to customs. -- Tote We spent the first day of the tour trying to get accustomed to being part of a tour. Other than surrendering all planning and nearly all decision-making to our guides, the biggest adjustment is to the other members of our group -- a Belgian who endures our cliffside trip in the bed of a wildly pitching truck with the aid of sips of whiskey from a hip flask and innumerable cigarettes; a Dutch girl whose high-pitched squeaks and squeals seem designed to emphasize her helplessness; and the Australian woman who shouts at the Tibetan guide, because she doesn't have a room with an attached bath and shower, though it's nearly midnight and nothing of the sort exists within 100 kilometers. The kids have no problem washing up in a metal basin using hot water from a thermos. At this stage, most of us are known by nationalities. This started, because neither the guides nor the border guards can cope with all the Western names, so they look for people by saying their nationality. (Image an unsmiling, uniformed Chinese border guard who has just kept 45 people waiting in the rain and sun and briefly in the middle of a small stream trying to say "Venezuela.") We are an exception; we're known as "the family." -- MarkMom and I stayed in a room together. We couldn't even step on the floor without shoes it was so dirty. We had to be careful not to let the blankets touch us. We were glad to have our sleep sacks. -- Maggie June 24 - Nyalam to Latse - Today we stopped for lunch in a
tiny town. All the restaurants were very expensive, so we decided to stop
in a small place and order some local food which we thought would be less
expensive. We ordered momos, and Maggie remembered that in Tibet people
ate something called tsampa, so we ordered some. The lady didn't understand
English that well so it took a little time to communicate. When we were
done ordering, we heard the squelch of a Tibetan tea maker. After about
five minutes she brought in the Tibetan tea, and Mom instantly poured
some into her glass. Tibetan tea is a buttery, salty broth that for some
reason is called tea. I first thought that a salty, buttery tea was the
worst drink in the world, but it was actually pretty good - until it gets
cold. Then the lady came in with a hide bag. She reached over to our table
and took the thermos of Tibetan tea. I had no idea what she was going
to do, and when she poured it into the leather bag, I was ready to see
it run out onto the floor. I was even more surprised when she started
squeezing the bag like she was mixing something. Soon she reached into
the bag and grabbed a handful of greyish dough. This was the tsampa. Dad
was the first to taste it. He picked at it, but the lady instantly pulled
another clump from the bag and showed Dad how to eat it by taking a big
bite out of the clump. Tsampa is very good when it's warm, and surprisingly,
does not taste like the buttered tea. After eating a lot of the tsampa,
you couldn't eat another bit of it for at least two days afterwards. --
Tote June 25 - Latse to Xigatse - We went to a monastery called Tashilhunpo.
I liked seeing the first chapel because it had a giant staute of Buddha,
and it was full of prayer flags. There are also pillars with nails hammered
into them, where people left necklaces, rings, bracelets, and watches.
I don't know why they left that stuff. I also liked seeing the monks chant,
and I thought I would like to make robes like theirs, so I could wear
it for Halloween and for fun. When they were chanting, more monks came
in with huge pitchers of yak butter tea. They poured them into clay bowls
for the monks, when they were chanting. There was one monk that held some
giant sticks of incense all together. They burned the whole time the monks
were chanting. It smelled like tsampa. Tsampa is barley flour, sugar,
and hot water mixed together in a leather bag made out of yak. Tibetan
people eat it every day. I've tried tsampa but did not like it at all.
The monks were wearing dark, red, long skirts and dark red vests. They
also had a dark red cloth hanging over one shoulder. When they were chanting,
they wore yellow-brown poncho-robes. When they walked in, they had on
their hats. They were yellowish-brown and looked like the Tibetan hats
that the yellow hat sect wears. The monks were any age boys and men. They
sat while they chanted. Sometimes they rocked back and forth, and sometimes
they looked behind them and saw us. -- Maggie Fortunately, we get to spend the afternoon in the Tashilumpo Monastery. It's my first exposure to Tibetan Buddhism, and I love it. I am also fascinated by the juxtaposition at Tashilumpo of Tibetan Buddhism and Chinese efforts to pervert it. The giant and unmistakably serene statue of "the present Buddha" makes me want to just sit quietly for six or seven years. (Our guide explains, softly, that what distinguishes Tibetan Buddhism from other strains is Tibetan Buddhism's emphasis on "the compassionate Buddha.") The enormous and unmistakably arrogant efforts of the Chinese to subvert the whole thing make me want to strangle someone. June 26 - Xigatse to Gyantse - Since we arrived at midday, we
had time to eat lunch, then spend the long afternoon and early evening
touring, painting, drawing, and learning some Tibetan. From the giant
chorten known as the Gyantse Kumbum we could see the old, walled fort
atop a neighboring hill. -- Monica June 27 - Gyantse to Lhasa - My children just amaze me. Today was Maggie's turn. She shamed me into going swimming in a frigid lake in the Himalayas. When she heard me joking about taking a dip, she ran back to the bus, pulled her suit out of her backpack, and headed down to the lake. Once I realized she was going to call my bluff, I had to go too. Talk about cold. . . -- Mark June 28 - Lhasa - Me and Tote got a monk robe that I'm going to
wear for Halloween. My brothers are looking for a ghost dagger. A ghost
dagger is to pin down bad spirits and to pin down bad weather. In Tibetan
a ghost dagger is called a pudaba. -- Maggie June 29 - Lhasa - Today was the last day of our organized tour.
We went to a big monastery, Drepung, in the morning, and the Summer Palace
(of the Dalai Lama) in the afternoon. Yesterday we went to the Potala
(Winter palace) and the Jokhang Temple, a pilgrimage site that Tote and
I circumambulated while waiting for our dinner tonight. The Potala was
run-down. It seemed like any old monastery with more burial stupas. The
Summer Palace was a palace, not just a religious center. It was open,
airy, and light. The Potala was dim, cramped, and blackened. I liked the
Potala's exterior architecture best but not inside. I like how the Summer
Palace was made up of smaller buildings inside of a big park. I really
liked two pavilions built on a rectangular pond. -- Duncan The king taught them about religion, and the Tibetans made a religion about nature and elements. Tibet went on until the 28th king's time when a group of Indians came and tried to convert them to be Buddhist. The Indians gave them lots of holy books and after a while they left unsuccessfully. When the 38th king, Susungampo, discovered the books, he sent 21 men to India to learn Sanskrit - the books were written in Sanskrit. Twenty of the 21 died on the way. After a while one came back with all the Indian masters and translated the holy books into the newly invented Tibetan script. Then the masters used magic to prove that Buddhism is great and converted them all. -- Tote June 30 - Lhasa - It's fun when you go to a pilgrim site to do
what the pilgrims do. Tonight, we went the Jokhang Temple to see the evening
festivities. When we went inside, we went pretty directly to the Shakyamuni
statue brought from Nepal by the Nepalese princess that married King Songtsen
Gampo. Just when we started to circumambulate it, a guy gave Tote a whole
handful of money and me a small handful of money. I gave Doozer some of
it. We threw the money on the altar, bowed, and touched our heads to the
dais. Then we walked around to behind the statue, and following some monks'
leads, Tote and I touched our heads to the feet of a big statue behind
the Shakyamuni. When we came around the right side of the statue, the
same guy gave Maggie a white scarf to throw on the altar. Then we walked
around to the front, bowed again, and walked out of the little chapel.
We also watched some monks chanting. The monks were not serious. They had bags of candy, nuts, and tsampa. One monk walked up, prayed, walked out. A monk walked up, prayed, and walked out. Another monk walked up, prayed, but prayed too long, so another monk rolled up a ball of tsampa and threw it at him. Some monk finishes eating. He crumples up his bag, looks around, pulls up his cushion and puts it under. Maggie saw a monk put a nut on the back of his hand. He smacked the back of his hand and caught the nut in his mouth. -- DuncanTibet is stunningly beautiful; learning about Tibetan Buddism is fascinating; trying to speak Tibetan is challenging and rewarding; the weather has been lovely - mostly sunny with that "dry, high mountains, summertime" cool; and Tibetans have been friendly. -- Monica Is it really possible for the Tibetan version of "How much does it cost?" to baffle someone who runs a market stall in Tibet, even someone whose first language is Chinese? -- Mark July 2001 (July photos) (back to top)July 1 - Lhasa - Today we walked around, circumambulated, on a traditional pilgrimage route, old Lhasa. That means going through, all the way, the Chinese area of town. Ugly, wide streets lined with white-tiled buildings, green, yellow, and red-tiled sidewalks. The streets are lined with stores selling food, clothes, and unexpected things like bootlegged computer games. (Games cost about $1; Windows NT or 2000 costs about $6.50.) I love the old buildings, the Potala etc., but every view of them is marred by the ugly Chinese buildings. A new line to my favorite food list: I got two hot dogs from two different street meat vendors. They were stuck on sticks, cut up the sides, boiled in hot oil, and spiced totally. -- DuncanWe walked the Lingkhor Kora. It was once one of the three sacred circumambulations, or paths around a sacred site, in Lhasa. Unfortunately this one now leads one down wide, sterile streets lined with white-tiled buildings - apparently the hallmark of Chinese Tibetan culture - and patrolled by mini-skirted Chinese girls wearing fat-soled high heels. There were a few interesting stretches, but in the main, our walk was an exploration of ugly, modern Chinese buildings and unconsciously hysterically funny Chinese "art." The main intersections in Lhasa feature goofy Soviet-style monuments. There's a charming one near our hotel. Its centerpiece is a couple squat figures wearing goofy hats with earmuffs - I believe the goofy hats signify the misshapen creatures are members of the Chinese military -- holding aloft a Chinese flag. One instant, I found it knee-slappingly funny; the next I wanted to attack it with a hammer. (There's a billboard on one of the main Lhasa streets showing an old woman hugging an earmuffed guy. It's funny, but since it isn't carved from stone and plopped in the middle of an intersection, it is simply stupid. This stone thing is genuinely offensive.) There's also "The Jewels of the Plateau," a pair of golden yaks plopped down in Lhasa's main intersection. The yaks were created to celebrate the 40th anniversary of Tibet's "liberation." (The Chinese also celebrated the 40th anniversary by confining all foreign tourists to their rooms, banning journalists, and declaring martial law. Even today, the yaks have their own guard.) Am I the only one who thinks that the yaks look Chinese? Check out the photo. -- Mark July 2 - Lhasa - First, I will tell you about burial. When a kid dies they cremate them. (In Hinduism kids are buried, so it is exactly the opposite.) When a regular person dies a lama comes and makes a hole in the person's head. This allows the spirit to escape. After the spirit is free, a special person comes and crushes all the bones. The person then rolls the body up and puts it in a bag. The son of the person who crushes the bones then carries the bag on his back and circumambulates a temple and brings the body to a sky burial on a special area of a mountain. When they arrive, they put the body in a special spot where birds can eat it as an offering. This burial is called sky burial. If a lama dies, he is cremated. The lama's ashes are placed in a pot inside a stupa. The most interesting is for a Dalai Lama, Penchan Lama, and really special lamas or monks. The great person is covered in clay after a large ceremony. Then the body is moved into a position (like all the statues.) After the clay has hardened, they paint it and put the special person in a richly decorated stupa. The Penchan Lama is in the top of their stupa, and everyone else (the Dalai Lama and so on) is put next to their stupa. If someone is put to death by a machine (a gun, knife, etc.), their body is thrown into a river. When someone dies of disease, they are buried far underground. When a person commits suicide, they are cremated, but during the ceremony they read different books. -- Tote Monica really put her finger on the problem of being a tourist in Chinese-occupied Tibet - it's the contrast between the two cultures. On our other stops, we haven't really been faced with two different and largely separate cultures and peoples living in one place. In Lhasa we are. Until now our "cultural clashes" have occured only when we crossed borders. The French trains were primitive; the Spanish ones delightful. When we left India, we were stunned by how clean Nepal was. When we visited Muktinath, a Tibetan village in Nepal, we were appalled at the how dirty the children were. Almost every time we crossed a border, we needed to adjust to different customs, prices, and personalities. Here in Lhasa, we are bounced back and forth between China and Tibet with no time to adjust whatsoever. In the economic game, the Chinese are clearly the winners. In this cultural ping pong game, the Chinese are undoubtedly the losers. Tibetans say "Hello." They smile and ask questions, though they know we can't really understand. Tibetans say "please, have a seat." They offer some of whatever they are drinking or eating. If they are not eating or drinking, they run off to make tea. They don't quibble if all you have is a large denomination bill and you are a yuan short; they simply ignore the difference in your favor. Though we don't speak Tibetan, Tibetans generally make an effort to understand our amalgam of sign language, Tibetan, and English. Tibetans even respond to my rudimentary Chinese. We have never had a misunderstanding about price. -- Mark July 3 - Lhasa - Monica: Tote! Don't worry. People are used
to having moms do stupid things. July 4 - Lhasa to Chengdu - July 5 - Chengdu - Banner: "Cities should be clean like
souls should be pure." July 6 - Chengdu - The people here have been wonderful to us.
(It's such a stunning contrast to the Chinese parts of Tibet!) Maggie
and I went to English Corner. It's a spot near the river where those learning
English gather twice a week to speak English with each other. (The riverfront
has been revamped and is now home to all sorts of activities. This morning,
the "English Corner" was home to a ballroom dancing class -
it looked like the cha cha to me - and some sort of martial arts thing
involving flags on sticks.) The English Corner was packed. Curious people,
standing four deep, rapidly surrounded us. We were asked all the standard
questions and then discussed the soccer situation in China. -- Mark While questioning why only foreigners were required to pay for a ticket to the Monastery, I learned from watching the ticket seller that spitting on the ground and whacking one's ear are ways of expressing . . . well, bad things. -- Mark July 8 - Emei Shan, Elephant Pool Monastery - When we got to the
monastery where we are staying, we saw bunches of monkeys. Duncan and
Tote yelled down to Mom, "You better put your camera away or else
the monkeys will grab it!" Once the boys started throwing rocks at
the monkeys but not hitting them. They threw one more rock near the monkeys,
and two of the monkeys started fighting. They grabbed onto each other
like a human would. They clenched their teeth and pulled their lips back
over their gums. The monastery had dim lights. After putting my bag down,
I went right out there to help the boys keep the monkeys away. Awhile
later, after dinner, we found a camp for the monkeys called "Monkey
Hall." The monkeys kept people out of their rooms and up and about
by squealing, jumping off walls, and scaring people. It reminded me of
the monkey man in India. Dinner was only 20 yuan for all of us to eat
as much as we wanted. They had a giant bucket of rice, and you could go
back to the kitchen for more broth, vegetables, and sauces. I ate a lot
of rice and broth. After we ate we were supposed to clean our own dishes,
so we went outside to a sink and washed out bowls and chopsticks. After
doing that, we went back to keep the monkeys away and then we went back
in and Mom said, "Time for a big experience. It's time to wash our
feet." And I told my mom, "No. I'm not going there to wash my
feet!" But I went anyway. We filled wooden buckets with boiling hot
water and went to the sink to put in some cold water. We stuck our feet
in there, sudsed them up, and rinsed them off. And I've had clean feet
ever since. -- Maggie July 9 - Emei Shan to Chengdu - We just got back from climbing
Mt. Emei. It was a pilgrim/tourist route. We got to see the classic Chinese
mountains and mist while walking eternal stairways on green vegetable
hills, in the rain. The entire path was stone stairs, for three days.
The mist prevented any good vistas but made for cool hiking. We slept
in a monastery the second night that was infested with monkeys. One pulled
a girl's bag off of its handles and ran off. A guy with a hammer got it
back. -- Duncan Here in China, although I joined the elderly pilgrims prostrating themselves before the more garishly painted Buddhas and watched as children and young couples lit fat red candles and thick, long sticks of hot pink incense, the sense of reverential respect seems different than in India, Nepal, or Tibet and more Western. In India, the Hinduism seemed ever-present and playful. In Nepal, the combination of Hindu-Buddhism seemed somewhat more serious and a bit more distant from everyday life. In Tibet, the gompas, chortens, and monasteries held a very strong, pervasive sense of being surrounded by otherworldly forms and ancient reminders of our transitory time here. My sense of Buddhism in China, so far, is that it is more like Christianity in the West. It's not all encompassing, and it doesn't delve down to one's core. Most people wear it like a cloak, to be put on and taken off when convenient and necessary. One needs to remember and make time for the observance of religion . . . very different from the perpetually swirling, colorful and rich versions of religion as life in India, Nepal, and Tibet. -- MonicaWe're about halfway around the world from New Jersey. From here on, we are undoubtedly headed toward home. We are all aware we are getting near the end. Sometimes we're sad; sometimes we're excited; and sometimes we're just confused. Maybe that rule about no random movements wasn't such a bad idea. Every now and then I turn around and find someone standing very close to me, grinning in embarrassment. People usually start laughing. I have obviously interrupted someone comparing their height to mine. Several people on the trail measured their feet against mine and laughed at how big mine were. -- MarkJuly 10 - Chengdu to Xian - The plane ride was short and when we arrived in Xian, we easily took a bus to close to our hotel. We were close but far enough, so we tried to get a taxi. When a red one stopped (out of the six that drove past), we found that he didn't want to take us. We tried some more and found out we had to take a green taxi, because the red ones couldn't take five passengers. So we did. -- Tote The children have definitely become confident travelers. This is good and bad. I am always glad to see them become more competent. On the other hand, we are now represented in every negotiation with a cab driver or in a hotel or restaurant or bus station etc. by three and sometimes four people. The kids are usually much tougher (and a great deal louder) than I am. -- Mark Unable to get train tickets, we flew here from Chengdu. Chengdu was cheerful; colorful; delicious Sechuan spicy food (hot pot parties); modern - emphasis on progressive; and tidy. Xi'an is more rubble-strewn, wet with rain, people seem more reserved, food is definitely less tasty. -- Monica July 11 - Xian - Signs we have seen: Please don't take food and drink to the frolic hall, cooperation amerce violator for 50 yuan.I've been sitting here at a table overlooking the loud hub-bub of a typical indoor waterworld. The children are all having a marvelous time. Mark made a foray to purchase train tickets. It was his second or third try. He's just returned giving me a complete account. He had to go through a government hotel travel agent, because at the station he was told the train we wanted wasn't available. We have found very little English spoken here in Xi'an, and there's almost no written English. July 12 - Xian to Beijing - We have been
on many trains, but this one is the cleanest, best run one of the entire
trip. We are in second-class, but we have white lace curtains and clean
sheets and towels and comforters; the food is inexpensive; the dining
car comfortable; the windows are large and clean; the ride is smooth;
and the bathrooms are clean. -- Mark July 13 - Xian to Beijing - July 15 - Beijing - My favorite food in Beijing is the meat stuff
we had with a friend named Jackie. It was chewy, but I liked to suck off
all the barbeque sauce and put the meat on top of my rice. -- Maggie
July 17 - Beijing - I was surprised to find that the Forbidden
City was so stark. It contained tidy buildings and paving stones, surprisingly
no gardens and nature; and you couldn't go in and tour the buildings.
I need to get a book out of the library to learn about it. It seemed a
very calm place, aside from the 4 million people jammed in there with
us. -- Monica July 18 - Beijing - We went to the Summer Palace. A friend suggested
we go in the evening, so we did, but when we got there, the ticket office
was closed, and we couldn't get in. On the street, there were people in
white vans. They said that they could bring us in for money. Dad talked
them down to 40 yuan. When we got close to a side gate, they shut the
windows hurriedly and slowed. The co-driver got out and opened the little
door. We drove in and then to the right. Then we drove past to pick up
the co-driver, parked behind some trees, where they told us to hop out
quickly. Then the co-driver walked with us for a while. Dad tried to give
him the money, but he wouldn't take it until no one was around. Then he
disappeared. -- Tote July 19 - Beijing - July 20 - Beijing to Hong Kong - These Chinese trains are great!
Again, we're in second-class. Our car is immaculate. The staff is wonderful:
One of the young women stops to chat in English, fold an origami crocodile,
and - nearly beyond belief - instantaneously solves a couple of Tote's
math problems. -- Mark July 21 - Beijing to Hong Kong - We've spent most of the day,
since our arrival saying, "Wow! They have [fill in the blank]. But,
it's so expensive!" -- Mark July 23 - Hong Kong - Some people think of Hong Kong as the Dim
Sum Capital. I know it as the City of Outrageously-priced, Ugly Clothes.
It was a nightmare trying to shop for some new clothes. I don't want to
buy a fringed, rainbow, cropped t-shirt with the word "DISCO"
splashed across the front. But the people here don't seem to mind....they
sport a giant Tweety Bird or a tight-fitting glittering, sparkly "University
of Dayton" across their chests. Why a thin, polyester, sleeveless
shirt here costs upwards of US$8 is beyond me! But Dim Sum, on the other
hand, is delicious. The food markets are fun; the Chinese medicine shops
are fascinating; the constant flow of people is exciting to be a part
of. It took me until today to come to some kind of understanding of Hong
Kong. Maybe it was culture shock, or maybe me gearing down to return home,
but the excitement and adventure of a new place eluded me. Today it finally
kicked on . . . I felt I could be here awhile. -- Monica July 25 - Hong Kong to Kuala Lumpur - I suppose we are gradually preparing for re-entry. The prices in Hong Kong were certainly up to U.S. standards. The kids are currently playing Zelda on a seatback game/movie/TV/news console. (The color and resolution are amazing.) I have just finished catching up on the baseball news in USA Today. (I hadn't really noticed just how bad the Rockies really are.) I suppose the only thing missing is talk radio, though there's enough news about the Bush Administration in the paper to reassure me that whackos are still alive and flourishing in the U.S. (It is interesting to visit so many countries focused on the future while the U.S. seems fixated on returning to the 1950's.) -- MarkJuly 26 - Kuala Lumpur - The most fun here has been sitting outside in the evenings and watching the steady flow of shoppers thronging the market stalls, and the other tourists dining on satay and hot pot along the streets of Chinatown . . . colored lights and constant motion of people and cars; aromas of spicy, tropical Asian food; modern music from the CD vendors; laughter and chatter from other diners; colorful fruits on display; humid heat; shoppers exclaiming over "bargains"; and the children feeling comfortable and independent. They've become such competent and enthusiastic travellers! The people we've met here have been charming, relaxed, easygoing with warm smiles - and fun. -- Monica July 27 - Kuala Lumpur - July 29 - Manila - We're perched above the beauty of Manila Bay.
I have been stunned by the beauty, and the adventure, and novelty, and
the mystery of so many places and people this year. There is so much left
to see, and so much left to do, and so much left to discover. . . Yet,
this trip, like all trips, must end. (I suppose it is in part this knowledge
that has made the trip so wonderful: We didn't want to waste a day by
overlooking what it brought that was new and interesting and beautiful.)
It's not romantic - in fact, it's downright sappy -- but I confess that
I found the greatest beauties, joys, and mysteries not in the places we
visited but in spending time with Monica and the children. -- Mark July 31 - Manila - It's our last day of our big trip. We have a very nice hotel room. It's two rooms, connected together. We watched videos. We watched "Dr. Doolittle." I thought it was a good movie. The pool has a waterfall. It is a very fancy hotel. Each morning a guy comes in and checks our minibar and brings us a newspaper. -- Maggie Strange. Tomorrow is so simple, and I'm a bit disappointed. All we need
to do is find our way through a few airports. No pondering a sketchy city
map to figure out where we might be arriving. I don't need to sort what
I'll need tomorrow and what will get stashed in my secret pockets. No
need to figure out where we might stay, trying to envision what the guidebook
authors had in mind when they wrote "large, comfortable rooms"
for one place and "cleaner than usual but charming" for another.
No need to scope out the best way to get ourselves and our luggage wherever
we're going or to steel myself for the usual hotel survey and string of
bargaining sessions to get the best deal. No need to figure out where
to find a new currency or how to do the conversion to dollars. -- Mark August 2001 (August photos) (back to top) August 1- Manila to Tokyo to Minneapolis to Chicago to DeKalb
- August 2 - DeKalb - We're talking some serious jet lag. Monica
slept until 2 PM. I woke up at 5 AM and collapsed at 2 PM. -- Mark August 4 - DeKalb - Ah, it's nice to be back! Like loud noise,
dirt, ruddy-faced drunks, and spending your evenings sitting in 90+ degree
heat and 90% humidity while muscle cars roar past in circles? Try dirt
track racing in Freeport, Illinois. Cousin Jay told us to buy the small
beers rather than the large because the big ones get warm and sludgy before
you can drink them. Even in the time it takes to drink a small one, a
layer of dirt collects at the bottom. (I'm afraid I'm still so jet lagged
I nodded off during this little bit of Americana despite the roar of the
cars and of the folks sitting behind us.) -- Mark August 9 - DeKalb - Today Tote learned one of the key facts of life: Kite string is never tied to the spool. With help he managed to get his kite out of the tree. -- Mark August 11 - DeKalb - From the Boone County Fair's description of one of the fair queen candidates: "Melinda is studying cosmetology and will be attending Rock Valley College this fall. Melinda plans to peruse a career as a Lawyer. Melinda also studies and is passionate about dance, for which she has won many awards." August 13 - DeKalb to York, Nebraska - August 14 - York to Denver - We're home! |
|||
Travelogue: TOP | By Country | Aug 00 | Sept 00 | Oct 00 | Nov 00 | Dec 00 | Jan 01 | Feb 01 | Mar 01 | Apr 01 | May 01 | Jun 01 | Jul 01 | Aug 01 | |