Lhasa a Gyantse, Tibet

Gyantse, through the Heights of Tibet


Ice Spirituality
The Dzong of Tibet
Gyantse women
Nyenchen Thangla Mountains
Stupa that blesses the glacier
Residents of Gyantse
The Manla Reservoir
The Great Monastery
Gyantse Tibetan
blue ice river
Providential Terraces
Tibetan Mastiff
Floors of Kumbum
View over Gyantse
Nyenchen Thangla peak
Lake Yamdrok
Great Kumbum Temple
village of yamdrok
The final target is the Tibetan Everest Base Camp. On this first route, starting from Lhasa, we pass by the sacred lake of Yamdrok (4.441m) and the glacier of the Karo gorge (5.020m). In Gyantse, we surrender to the Tibetan-Buddhist splendor of the old citadel.

Three days after the flight from Chengdu to Lhasa, even having slept a measly four hours, we finally woke up free of symptoms of Altitude Sickness.

It's seven in the morning, the time breakfast at the Yak Cool Hotel is supposed to start. The only employee present gives us something not “cool”. The cook had been late, it would only be possible after eight.

Instead of waiting, we left immediately, in the new jeep assigned to the trip. We stopped, still in Lhasa, in a house of momos (Tibetan dumplings). Freshly made, still steaming, the delicacy guaranteed us the necessary energy for the exhausting journey that would follow.

We leave for the south. We cross the Liuwu Bridge and the Lhasa River which lends its name to the Tibetan capital. The river yields to another, the Yarlung Zangbo. Points to the Himalayan range.

We follow it and its intricacies for almost 200km and around six hours. In that distance and time, we ascended almost a thousand meters.

We abandoned him in Gangbacun. Many twists and turns later, we arrive at Zhamalongcun.

Yamdrok: One of the Great Roof Lakes of the World

Instead of a river, we're left with a hyperbolic lake ahead.

Stretching over 72km, Yamdrok is one of the three largest sacred lakes in Tibet.

On a dry and sunny day, as is the case with almost everyone in these corners of Asia's roof, from the top of the Gampa gorge (4790m), the lake glows in the shade of turquoise blue that its Tibetan name translates.

It is surrounded by arid slopes, of a yellowish brown that contrasts with the blue of the sky and the slightly darker blue of the lake.

From the privileged viewpoint of Gampa, the colors don't stop there.

Sacred as it is, the lake warrants the presence of long multicolored ribbons of Tibetan-Buddhist flags. ok of prayer.

Passing believers ensure its renewal.

They place them, there, on a prominent and windy top.

It is up to the wind to wave the flags in such a way as to bless and bring good fortune to all sentient beings.

Starting with the inhabitants of the villages that we glimpse on the other side, above terraces that, when winter ends, will generate providential crops.

At greater distances, whatever the season, imposing snowy peaks emerge.

These are the peaks of the Nyenchen Thangla mountain range.

We had a long way to go.

Lobsang, the Tibetan who guides us, decrees the end of contemplation and photographs, due to lunch, which was late.

We stopped in Nagarse, at a restaurant somewhat removed from the road.

A black Tibetan mastiff is watching us, basking in the sun, adorned with a red crown that someone had placed on it as a collar.

After the meal, we continued west.

The Karo Gorge Slope Glacier

After another hour of journey, already above 5000 meters, we are surprised by the sight of a glacier perched on a rocky slope.

It was the end of one of the tongues of an ice course that arrived there from the northern slopes of Mount Noijin Kangsang (7191m), one of the four sacred mountains of Tibet.

We leave the jeep. We walked over slippery gravel.

Even a stupa from which several fluttering tentacles of prayer flags extended.

At that altitude, each stride we completed felt like a step on the moon. Melted and out of breath, we arrived at the base of the stupa.

We were impressed by the deep cracks and other whimsical cuts of the ice river. In the middle of winter, the probability of seeing the collapse of its ablation wall was small.

Accordingly, under persistent pressure from Lobsang, we resumed our journey. Until Gyantse, other phenomena and wonders would justify stops.

On the edge of a village called Shagancun, the road progresses over jagged slopes and above a new lake, at intervals, by headlands that reveal an unexpected icy panorama.

The Great Ice Reservoir of Manla

We advanced along the Manla Reservoir, known as the first dam in Tibet, with three distinct arms, fed by the Chu River.

Located at a “mere” 4200 meters of altitude, but with its natural flow stopped, the reservoir preserved an ice cover that was largely smooth, with a glassy and reflective look.

We hope that the route will ascend again to ideal panoramic heights. In one of them, with one of the arms of the dam exposed and the road zigzagging down below, we complained to Lobsang, our rights as passengers and customers.

Lobsang agrees to stop. We follow the path of a red truck, from far away, in our direction.

When the car passes us in an obvious effort, we return to the jeep's grip and to the main destination of the afternoon, the city of Gyantse.

A Depressed Guide to Chinese Oppression

In this section, Lobsang and the driver again vent about the frustration in which they (and the Tibetans) lived due to the already long Chinese occupation.

And the destruction of the Tibetan culture and ethnicity that Beijing was rushing to replace with the Han ethnicity, the predominant one in China.

They felt doubly oppressed because they were forced to work for Chinese agencies and bosses.

China only allowed visits to Tibet if booked through Chinese agencies. We ourselves had no choice.

The problem was compounded, however, when Lobsang's frustration and depression made him, by default, shirk his responsibility to provide us with a decent trip through Tibet.

Whenever possible, Lobsang delayed morning departures. Throughout the day, he shortened the time in each place, thinking only of prolonging contact with other guides he knew, in villages that were not even on the initial itinerary.

Gyantse: a Majestic Fortress City

We arrived at Gyantse. The guide goes back to trying one of his subterfuges. A meaningless imposition that we only had twenty minutes to peek, after which we would move on.

Aware that it wasn't what was on the program, ecstatic with the monumental beauty of the city, we activated our own chronometer.

The Swede Jacob and the American Ryan who accompanied us noticed and agreed. Lobsang is forced to wait.

We were facing one of the most relevant historical cities in Tibet. The secular Gyantse deserved all the time and then some.

In order not to waste it, we almost ran from one side to the other, also moved by the disbelief of the scenery.

Gyantse arose in the heart of the Nyang Chu valley, on the ancient Chumbi trade routes that brought Tibetan wool to the kingdoms of Sikkim, Bhutan and parts of present-day India.

Gyantse: from Feudal Origins to the Inhabited City-Museum of Today

It was built during the XNUMXth century by Pelden Sangpo, a monarch of the region who sought to consolidate the fief that served him.

In 1390, the importance of Gyantse was already such that it justified the construction of the fortress (jong) that resists there.

We see it hovering, in a reddish hue, like an indelible mirage, on the crest of a sharp, rocky hill, surrounded by a 3km long wall.

This wall defends the monastery of Palcho and its incredible kumbum, a school structure sakya of Tibetan Buddhism.

It has six floors and 77 stacked chapels that contain over ten thousand murals.

For a long time, Gyantse was the third largest city in Tibet after Lhasa and Shigatse.

The Chinese invasion of Tibet in 1950 robbed Gyantse of its leading role.

The Chinese closed the old trade routes, to the detriment of Lhasa. During Mao Zedong's Cultural Revolution, they looted the monastery, temple kumbum and even the fort.

After the 1959 Tibetan uprising, around four hundred monks and other religious were imprisoned in the monastery.

Most of the local craftsmen were forced to flee the city. Even so, Gyantse's population later recovered from eight thousand to around twenty thousand inhabitants.

Unlike other settlements which, due to the influx of Chinese and the economic and cultural interference of Beijing, outnumbered it, Gyantse remains mainly Tibetan.

Its people reactivated part of the religious function of the monastery and temples.

They continue to walk the streets with their hairstyles and in their traditional costumes.

Once prodigious, the local multi-ethnic market, once visited by Nepalese, Bhutanese and even Muslims from Ladak and elsewhere, no longer makes sense.

The Unlikely Visit of the Four Western Outsiders

Gyantse subsists, above all, as a large inhabited museum city with a growing tourist demand.

At the height of winter, however, it would be just the four of us and a few other wild cats, the foreigners visiting Tibet.

The Tibetans watched them with delight and surprise.

Astonishment that the Swede Jacob, a man of almost two meters in height, redoubled.

We could have spent the whole week discovering Gyantse. Nearly three hours later, Lobsang had had enough. He came to meet us.

He complained about his manipulation of the trip.

About eight in the evening, we entered Shigatse.

Lhasa, Tibet

The Sino-Demolition of the Roof of the World

Any debate about sovereignty is incidental and a waste of time. Anyone who wants to be dazzled by the purity, affability and exoticism of Tibetan culture should visit the territory as soon as possible. The Han civilizational greed that moves China will soon bury millenary Tibet.
Lhasa, Tibet

Sera, the Monastery of the Sacred Debate

In few places in the world a dialect is used as vehemently as in the monastery of Sera. There, hundreds of monks, in Tibetan, engage in intense and raucous debates about the teachings of the Buddha.
Bhaktapur, Nepal

The Nepalese Masks of Life

The Newar Indigenous People of the Kathmandu Valley attach great importance to the Hindu and Buddhist religiosity that unites them with each other and with the Earth. Accordingly, he blesses their rites of passage with newar dances of men masked as deities. Even if repeated long ago from birth to reincarnation, these ancestral dances do not elude modernity and begin to see an end.
Lhasa, Tibet

When Buddhism Tires of Meditation

It is not only with silence and spiritual retreat that one seeks Nirvana. At the Sera Monastery, the young monks perfect their Buddhist knowledge with lively dialectical confrontations and crackling clapping of hands.
Dali, China

The Surrealist China of Dali

Embedded in a magical lakeside setting, the ancient capital of the Bai people has remained, until some time ago, a refuge for the backpacker community of travelers. The social and economic changes of China they fomented the invasion of Chinese to discover the southwest corner of the nation.
Bingling Yes, China

The Canyon of a Thousand Buddhas

For more than a millennium and at least seven dynasties, Chinese devotees have extolled their religious belief with the legacy of sculpture in a remote strait of the Yellow River. If you disembark in the Canyon of Thousand Buddhas, you may not find all the sculptures, but you will find a stunning Buddhist shrine.
Longsheng, China

Huang Luo: the Chinese Village of the Longest Hairs

In a multi-ethnic region covered with terraced rice paddies, the women of Huang Luo have surrendered to the same hairy obsession. They let the longest hair in the world grow, years on end, to an average length of 170 to 200 cm. Oddly enough, to keep them beautiful and shiny, they only use water and rice.
Huang Shan, China

Huang Shan: The Yellow Mountains of the Floating Peaks

The granitic peaks of the floating yellow mountains of Huang Shan, from which acrobat pines sprout, appear in artistic illustrations from China without count. The real scenery, in addition to being remote, remains hidden above the clouds for over 200 days.
Dunhuang, China

An Oasis in the China of the Sands

Thousands of kilometers west of Beijing, the Great Wall has its western end and the China and other. An unexpected splash of vegetable green breaks up the arid expanse all around. Announces Dunhuang, formerly crucial outpost on the Silk Road, today an intriguing city at the base of Asia's largest sand dunes.
Dali, China

Chinese Style Flash Mob

The time is set and the place is known. When the music starts playing, a crowd follows the choreography harmoniously until time runs out and everyone returns to their lives.
Annapurna Circuit: 8th Manang, Nepal

Manang: the Last Acclimatization in Civilization

Six days after leaving Besisahar we finally arrived in Manang (3519m). Located at the foot of the Annapurna III and Gangapurna Mountains, Manang is the civilization that pampers and prepares hikers for the ever-dreaded crossing of Thorong La Gorge (5416 m).
Annapurna Circuit: 13th - High camp a Thorong La to Muktinath, Nepal

At the height of the Annapurnas Circuit

At 5416m of altitude, the Thorong La Gorge is the great challenge and the main cause of anxiety on the itinerary. After having killed 2014 climbers in October 29, crossing it safely generates a relief worthy of double celebration.
Lijiang, China

A Gray City but Little

Seen from afar, its vast houses are dreary, but Lijiang's centuries-old sidewalks and canals are more folkloric than ever. This city once shone as the grandiose capital of the Naxi people. Today, floods of Chinese visitors who fight for the quasi-theme park it have become take it by storm.
Lijiang e Yangshuo, China

An Impressive China

One of the most respected Asian filmmakers, Zhang Yimou dedicated himself to large outdoor productions and co-authored the media ceremonies of the Beijing OG. But Yimou is also responsible for “Impressions”, a series of no less controversial stagings with stages in emblematic places.
Beijing, China

The Heart of the Great Dragon

It is the incoherent historic center of Maoist-Communist ideology and almost all Chinese aspire to visit it, but Tianamen Square will always be remembered as a macabre epitaph of the nation's aspirations.
Badaling, China

The Sino Invasion of the Great Wall of China

With the arrival of the hot days, hordes of Han visitors take over the Great Wall of China, the largest man-made structure. They go back to the era of imperial dynasties and celebrate the nation's newfound prominence.
Guilin, China

The Gateway to the Chinese Stone Kingdom

The immensity of jagged limestone hills around it is so majestic that the authorities of Beijing they print it on the back of the 20-yuan notes. Those who explore it almost always pass through Guilin. And even if this city in the province of Guangxi clashes with the exuberant nature around it, we also found its charms.
hippopotami, chobe national park, botswana
Safari
Chobe NP, Botswana

Chobe: A River on the Border of Life with Death

Chobe marks the divide between Botswana and three of its neighboring countries, Zambia, Zimbabwe and Namibia. But its capricious bed has a far more crucial function than this political delimitation.
Annapurna (circuit)
Annapurna Circuit: 5th - Ngawal a BragaNepal

Towards the Nepalese Braga

We spent another morning of glorious weather discovering Ngawal. There is a short journey towards Manang, the main town on the way to the zenith of the Annapurna circuit. We stayed for Braga (Braka). The hamlet would soon prove to be one of its most unforgettable places.
Engravings, Karnak Temple, Luxor, Egypt
Architecture & Design
luxor, Egypt

From Luxor to Thebes: Journey to Ancient Egypt

Thebes was raised as the new supreme capital of the Egyptian Empire, the seat of Amon, the God of Gods. Modern Luxor inherited the Temple of Karnak and its sumptuousness. Between one and the other flow the sacred Nile and millennia of dazzling history.
The small lighthouse at Kallur, highlighted in the capricious northern relief of the island of Kalsoy.
Adventure
Kalsoy, Faroe Islands

A Lighthouse at the End of the Faroese World

Kalsoy is one of the most isolated islands in the Faroe archipelago. Also known as “the flute” due to its long shape and the many tunnels that serve it, a mere 75 inhabitants inhabit it. Much less than the outsiders who visit it every year, attracted by the boreal wonder of its Kallur lighthouse.
Australia Day, Perth, Australian Flag
Ceremonies and Festivities
Perth, Australia

Australia Day: In Honor of the Foundation, Mourning for Invasion

26/1 is a controversial date in Australia. While British settlers celebrate it with barbecues and lots of beer, Aborigines celebrate the fact that they haven't been completely wiped out.
Lawless City, Transit of Hanoi, Under the Order of Chaos, Vietnam
Cities
Hanoi, Vietnam

Under the Order of Chaos

Hanoi has long ignored scant traffic lights, other traffic signs and decorative traffic lights. It lives in its own rhythm and in an order of chaos unattainable by the West.
Obese resident of Tupola Tapaau, a small island in Western Samoa.
Meal
Tonga, Western Samoa, Polynesia

XXL Pacific

For centuries, the natives of the Polynesian islands subsisted on land and sea. Until the intrusion of colonial powers and the subsequent introduction of fatty pieces of meat, fast food and sugary drinks have spawned a plague of diabetes and obesity. Today, while much of Tonga's national GDP, Western Samoa and neighbors is wasted on these “western poisons”, fishermen barely manage to sell their fish.
the projectionist
Culture
Sainte-Luce, Martinique

The Nostalgic Projectionist

From 1954 to 1983, Gérard Pierre screened many of the famous films arriving in Martinique. 30 years after the closing of the room in which he worked, it was still difficult for this nostalgic native to change his reel.
Reindeer Racing, Kings Cup, Inari, Finland
Sport
Inari, Finland

The Wackiest Race on the Top of the World

Finland's Lapps have been competing in the tow of their reindeer for centuries. In the final of the Kings Cup - Porokuninkuusajot - , they face each other at great speed, well above the Arctic Circle and well below zero.
The Toy Train story
Traveling
Siliguri a Darjeeling, India

The Himalayan Toy Train Still Running

Neither the steep slope of some stretches nor the modernity stop it. From Siliguri, in the tropical foothills of the great Asian mountain range, the Darjeeling, with its peaks in sight, the most famous of the Indian Toy Trains has ensured for 117 years, day after day, an arduous dream journey. Traveling through the area, we climb aboard and let ourselves be enchanted.
Vietnamese queue
Ethnic

Nha Trang-Doc Let, Vietnam

The Salt of the Vietnamese Land

In search of attractive coastlines in old Indochina, we become disillusioned with the roughness of Nha Trang's bathing area. And it is in the feminine and exotic work of the Hon Khoi salt flats that we find a more pleasant Vietnam.

Sunset, Avenue of Baobabs, Madagascar
Got2Globe Photo Portfolio

days like so many others

Selfie, Wall of China, Badaling, China
History
Badaling, China

The Sino Invasion of the Great Wall of China

With the arrival of the hot days, hordes of Han visitors take over the Great Wall of China, the largest man-made structure. They go back to the era of imperial dynasties and celebrate the nation's newfound prominence.
Windward Side, Saba, Dutch Caribbean, Netherlands
Islands
Saba, The Netherlands

The Mysterious Dutch Queen of Saba

With a mere 13km2, Saba goes unnoticed even by the most traveled. Little by little, above and below its countless slopes, we unveil this luxuriant Little Antille, tropical border, mountainous and volcanic roof of the shallowest european nation.
ala juumajarvi lake, oulanka national park, finland
Winter White
Kuusamo ao PN Oulanka, Finland

Under the Arctic's Icy Spell

We are at 66º North and at the gates of Lapland. In these parts, the white landscape belongs to everyone and to no one like the snow-covered trees, the atrocious cold and the endless night.
Cove, Big Sur, California, United States
Literature
Big Sur, USA

The Coast of All Refuges

Over 150km, the Californian coast is subjected to a vastness of mountains, ocean and fog. In this epic setting, hundreds of tormented souls follow in the footsteps of Jack Kerouac and Henri Miller.
Sampo Icebreaker, Kemi, Finland
Nature
Kemi, Finland

It's No "Love Boat". Breaks the Ice since 1961

Built to maintain waterways through the most extreme arctic winter, the icebreaker Sampo” fulfilled its mission between Finland and Sweden for 30 years. In 1988, he reformed and dedicated himself to shorter trips that allow passengers to float in a newly opened channel in the Gulf of Bothnia, in clothes that, more than special, seem spacey.
Sheki, Autumn in the Caucasus, Azerbaijan, Autumn Homes
Autumn
Sheki, Azerbaijan

autumn in the caucasus

Lost among the snowy mountains that separate Europe from Asia, Sheki is one of Azerbaijan's most iconic towns. Its largely silky history includes periods of great harshness. When we visited it, autumn pastels added color to a peculiar post-Soviet and Muslim life.
Glass Bottom Boats, Kabira Bay, Ishigaki
Natural Parks
Ishigaki, Japan

The Exotic Japanese Tropics

Ishigaki is one of the last islands in the stepping stone that stretches between Honshu and Taiwan. Ishigakijima is home to some of the most amazing beaches and coastal scenery in these parts of the Pacific Ocean. More and more Japanese who visit them enjoy them with little or no bathing.
Seljalandsfoss Escape
UNESCO World Heritage
Iceland

The Island of Fire, Ice and Waterfalls

Europe's supreme cascade rushes into Iceland. But it's not the only one. On this boreal island, with constant rain or snow and in the midst of battle between volcanoes and glaciers, endless torrents crash.
Heroes Acre Monument, Zimbabwe
Characters
Harare, Zimbabwewe

The Last Rales of Surreal Mugabué

In 2015, Zimbabwe's first lady Grace Mugabe said the 91-year-old president would rule until the age of 100 in a special wheelchair. Shortly thereafter, it began to insinuate itself into his succession. But in recent days, the generals have finally precipitated the removal of Robert Mugabe, who has replaced him with former Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa.
Tombolo and Punta Catedral, Manuel António National Park, Costa Rica
Beaches
PN Manuel Antonio, Costa Rica

Costa Rica's Little-Big National Park

The reasons for the under 28 are well known national parks Costa Ricans have become the most popular. The fauna and flora of PN Manuel António proliferate in a tiny and eccentric patch of jungle. As if that wasn't enough, it is limited to four of the best typical beaches.
Detail of the Kamakhya temple in Guwahati, Assam, India.
Religion
Guwahati, India

The City that Worships Kamakhya and the Fertility

Guwahati is the largest city in the state of Assam and in North East India. It is also one of the fastest growing in the world. For Hindus and devout believers in Tantra, it will be no coincidence that Kamakhya, the mother goddess of creation, is worshiped there.
On Rails
On Rails

Train Travel: The World Best on Rails

No way to travel is as repetitive and enriching as going on rails. Climb aboard these disparate carriages and trains and enjoy the best scenery in the world on Rails.
emperor akihito waves, emperor without empire, tokyo, japan
Society
Tokyo, Japan

The Emperor Without Empire

After the capitulation in World War II, Japan underwent a constitution that ended one of the longest empires in history. The Japanese emperor is, today, the only monarch to reign without empire.
Casario, uptown, Fianarantsoa, ​​Madagascar
Daily life
Fianarantsoa, Madagascar

The Malagasy City of Good Education

Fianarantsoa was founded in 1831 by Ranavalona Iª, a queen of the then predominant Merina ethnic group. Ranavalona Iª was seen by European contemporaries as isolationist, tyrant and cruel. The monarch's reputation aside, when we enter it, its old southern capital remains as the academic, intellectual and religious center of Madagascar.
female and cub, grizzly footsteps, katmai national park, alaska
Wildlife
PN Katmai, Alaska

In the Footsteps of the Grizzly Man

Timothy Treadwell spent summers on end with the bears of Katmai. Traveling through Alaska, we followed some of its trails, but unlike the species' crazy protector, we never went too far.
The Sounds, Fiordland National Park, New Zealand
Scenic Flights
Fiordland, New Zealand

The Fjords of the Antipodes

A geological quirk made the Fiordland region the rawest and most imposing in New Zealand. Year after year, many thousands of visitors worship the sub-domain slashed between Te Anau and Milford Sound.