
Photo Gallery
from Namche to Thyangboche
Map
of the Khumbu
The Gear
that got us there
Introduction
April 1: Kathmandu
April 2: Kathmandu
April 3: Kathmandu
April 4: Lukla and Phakding
April 5: Namche
April 6: Between Namche and Thyangboche
April 7: Thyangboche
April 8: Thyangboche
April 9: Dingboche
April 10: Dingboche
April 12: Lobuche
and
Beyond
Trek photos by Peter Potterfield, © 1997 The Zone Network. All rights Reserved.
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April 8, 1997
This Cloudless Morning,
This Glorious Spot
I'm awakened in my absurd cubicle by the sound of strange chants, horns
and gongs. Freddy Blume snores away, oblivious, but my interest is
piqued. Looking out the lodge
window I can see a couple of red-robed, head-shaved monks actually
hanging out a second-floor window of the monastery, shouting in that
strange way they have, blowing those Bronx-cheer horns and banging a
small
gong. The sky is a crystalline blue, and I'm thinking this could be
good.
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It looks like what a
Buddhist monastery high in the Himalaya should look like. |
I hurry to dress and run
outside, and the scene blows me away. Looking north, Mount Everest
stands
black and impossibly high above the long ridge of Nuptse, and Ama Dablam
is a vision draped in a mantle of new snow. Explorer Bill Tillman, one
of the first Europeans to come here, said, "It would be difficult to
imagine a finer site for worship or contemplation." He's still right,
it's a remarkable setting and a powerful place. This cloudless morning,
this glorious spot, has banished the depression of yesterday.
Later that day the rinpoche of the monastery, the head holy man, agrees
to see and bless the members of the expedition. We're first led into the
ornate main hall of the monastery, elaborately painted in Buddhist
motifs and dominated by the two story high Buddha. It looks like what a
Buddhist monastery high in the Himalaya should look like. A monk hands
each one of us khatas, into which we put a couple of hundred rupees and
fold them up. Everyone antes up, it would make no sense to gyp the
rinpoche when he's offered to bless the hazardous climb ahead.
Next we
are lead by a monk into a small chamber where the rinpoche sits at a
throne-like chair behind a spindly, ornate table. Two old but clearly
subservient monks sit on cushions before him. One by one, the rinpoche
greets us, takes the khatas from us, and shakes each one until the rupee
notes fall out on us and then to the floor. The rinpoche then places the
khata around our necks. Next he produces some red string, blows on it,
and another monk ties it around our necks. The rinpoche then claps his
hands sharply, twice, and we are dismissed.
   
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