Saturday, 5 September 2015
A very high altitude day. After leaving Kargil (elevation 9,000 ft) we spent the entire at, but mostly above 10,000 ft.
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As we left Kargil we had a nice view of the town. |
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Our first stop was at Mulbek to see a large image of the Buddha carted into a granite boulder. Unfortunately, a willow tree now obscures most of the sculpture from view. |
Hauling firewood
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A few km past Mulbek and 2 or 3 km off the main road is the village of Gyel. It is built into a cliff of easily erodible sediments that accumulated at the bottom of a long-gone lake. |
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View from below. The houses are built into the steep slope below an overhanging cliff. |
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A man carries fodder to get livestock through the coming winter. |
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We saw many of these small donkeys loaded with cut grains to the point that it looked as if the grain bundles were moving all by themselves -- the donkey completely hidden. |
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As we climbed up to Namika La (12,200 ft) the views were stunning. |
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Sue at Fatu La (13,500 ft). Both passes had stupas and prayer flags. It was cool and breezy at these elevations. |
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The road descending from Fatu La had many twists, turns, and switchbacks. |
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A view of the Lamayuru Gonpa (monastery) -- our last stop of the day before getting to our hotel at Uletopo. |
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Stupas at the monastery. |
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Our guide, Rinchen, spins the prayer wheels as we walk around the largest stupa. |
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These stones are carved with compassion verses of the Buddha. As new ones are added, the older stones get incorporated into "mani walls" -- prayer walls. |
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A passageway in the monastery. |
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The area around the monastery is called "Moonland" because some thought that the desolate landscape resembled the moon. |
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