(Alle tijden zijn fietstijden)
Tuesday September 16th, Lhasa
In one of my restless, jet lagged periods last night in Kathmandu
I worried about not making it as far as Lhasa today and the logistical
mess this would create. Entry to Tibet is only via a group visa
and the flights can be arbitrarily handled – if a bigger
tour group comes along and needs seats – they usually end
up with them. My fears are groundless – since the company
running our tour has a specific “know everyone” troubleshooter
who manages our check-in at the airport. The perils of doing it
yourself become clear as a shouting match ensues at the next kiosk
where a woman argues about the particulars of her visa and her
right to enter Tibet. She even goes so far as to walk behind the
counter and berate the staff. This is a source of amusement to
some passengers and embarrassment to others.
The flight is a 90 minute hop – and views
of Everest and Kangchangjunga occur at the mid-point. Lhasa is
about 12,800 feet so as we land the high-speed approach is a bit
unnerving. The plane rattles to a stop and we queue for a SARS
checks and customs – glad to see our bikes slide out of
the planes belly onto a luggage cart. After customs our Tibetan
guide – a requirement for every tour group, meets us. He
offers each of us a khata – the traditional white prayer
scarf. The luggage is squeezed onto the bus and we pile in for
the 100 km drive to Lhasa.
The road is well paved and follows the bank of
the Brahamaputra (known in Tibetan as the Tsangpo) – which
eventually joins the Ganges. It’s a wide brown river –
currently running high and flowing fast. The river and flood plains
are surrounded by steep slopes of dull brown with periodic patches
of low-lying, olive drab vegetation. There are very few trees
in sight – usually willows planted beside mud-walled village
building. The bright sunlight, filtered by 12,000 feet less atmosphere,
creates vivid black shadows in the gullies.
As we drive it’s clear that the harvest
is being brought in. Hand gathered bundles of golden yellow barley
are stacked in fields and in courtyards women with long sticks
are tossing the barley into the air to separate the barley from
the chaff. I look forward to cycling back along this road in a
few days time.
The road crosses the river and buildings sprout
up as we enter the edge of Lhasa. Passing a cement factory a large
wide boulevard begins – dominated by Manadarin billboards.
We weave through this modern Chinese city – spying the Potala
palace rising up above these modern streets. A few turns later
the bus turns into a narrow alley and then the courtyard of the
Dhood Gu Hotel – at the edge of the old Tibetan quarter.
Here there are vendors on the street – more Tibetan faces
than Han Chinese and the traffic is primarily on foot or cycle.
The hotel is decorated in traditional ornate
Tibetan style. As we wait in the lobby we examine all the surfaces,
intricately painted with Buddhas, animals and abstract patterns.
The rooms are similarly ornate – but posses all the modern
conveniences of a western hotel room.
After settling in, Julie and I are restless –
so we head out in search of water – to ensure we don’t
get dehydrated at this altitude. With our yuan from the hotel
desk fresh in hand we find a small hole-in-the-wall shop and with
sign language get water. We then head down the narrow streets
in search of the Barkor – a pilgrimage circuit around the
Jokang – one of Tibetan Buddisms holiest temples.
We come to a slightly wider, carefully paved
street with a steady flow of people in one direction. The Barkor.
Buddists always walk around (circumambulate) temples clockwise
– hence the one way pedestrian traffic on this circuit.
The street is clean, smoothly paved and lined with stalls on both
sides. These are genuine market stalls, which sell everything
from shoes, blenders and daily items to items for tourists and
pilgrims. As we amble around the Barkor we come to the entrance
of the Jokang. Several dozen pilgrims are mumbling prayers and
then ritually prostrating themselves before the temple –
wooden blocks strapped to their palms to allow them to slide forward
on the stone. The sounds of the chanting mix with the sounds of
the wood sliding on the stone and we watch – mesmerized
by the display of piety. Set back from the temple is a hut with
an array of butter lamps – bracketed by large stone ovens
– chortens – in which offerings of juniper are burning.
The sweet smell wafts over the temple and the pilgrims.
After a break in the hotel room our group returns
to wander the Barkor and find a spot for dinner. At one corner
of the Barkor we ascend several rickety fire escapes and come
to a rooftop restaurant that overlooks the activities below. Here
we sample Thukpa – a soup of noodles and Yak meat –
and munch chapattis. Below us people circulate around the Jokang.
A pair of men in leather aprons with blocks on their hands appear
and slowly, body length by body length, pray, prostrate and step
forward. Dinner finishes and we walk past groups of monks sitting,
chanting and begging as we navigate the dark streets back to the
Dhood Gu.
Wednesday September 17, 2003 – Lhasa
Over breakfast at the hotel we exchange symptoms and assess the
altitude’s effect on us. Between a mix of altitude headaches
and frequent trips to the bathroom – all the water we’re
drinking – no one is too bright this morning. At 3am I read
the side effects for Diamox – sometimes used to relieve
altitude sickness and instead opt for Tylenol.
Prior to breakfast I headed up to the rooftop
– the exertion of climbing the stairs very noticeable. The
Potala was dimly lit and obscured by the smoke from various roof
top chortens consuming their offering of juniper branches. Then
after the easier downstairs walk I find the breakfast room empty
so I head to the Barkor to do a Kora (a circumambulation). In
the early morning the path has a very different feel as there
are Tibetans briskly walking around the Barkor chanting under
their breath with fingers on prayer beads ticking off the mantras.
Groups of monks sit and chant - the voices becoming almost musical.
Tibetans hand out Mao notes as they pass by as an offering to
the monks.
After breakfast we rendezvous in the lobby with
our Tibetan guide Suni. This morning we’re off to the Jokang
temple at the center of the Barkor. At the entrance kiosk we get
a business card sized CD-ROM as our admission ticket – and
odd juxtaposition to the small wooden table in the courtyard and
the building itself. Moving through the courtyard we enter a crush
of pilgrims doing a circuit of the temple itself. The path around
the inner perimeter takes us past a number of small chapels –
each with a Buddha statue in the center and many more in the surrounding
walls. We press into one – stopping in the three-foot wide
aisle to listen to the guide while pilgrims carrying small chalices
filled with butter and a wick burning brightly press past us to
navigate around the Buddha. Many stop to pour small offerings
of melted butter into a large butter lamp before the Buddha where
several dozen wicks burn and provide the light for the small temple.
I try to follow the guide’s explanations about the specific
Buddha represented here and the various manifestations around
the perimeter but soon lose the thread of the discussion and instead
examine some of the figures in more detail.
We move on past a number of other small temples/chapels
and come to the entranceway into the main central chamber. Alcoves
on each side contain large butter lamps and protector Buddhas
that look out for travellers. In the main chamber are two twenty-foot
high statues and before them the floor is torn up. Monks move
about carefully selecting boards and then shimming each to the
correct height. Around this scene is another circuit of pilgrims
with butter lamps and within alcoves in the main temple are more
figures and butter lamps. The flickering lights cast shadows over
the weathered faces of the Tibetan pilgrims – a sight which
has been constant here for hundreds of years.
After many explanations of Buddhas and their
manifestations and becoming saturated with the smell of butter
lamps, we emerge at a staircase which takes us up to the roof
of the Jokang. From here is a clear view of the Potala palace
and the ability to look out over the pilgrims prostrating themselves
in front of the Jokang.
After lunch we head to the summer palace of the
Dalia Lama – the Norbulinka. It’s a walled garden
area with a number of buildings. The first building we enter is
the summer palace of the eight Dalai Lama. There are rooms, which
are richly adorned but sparsely furnished. Two monks chant and
one strikes a large temple drum rhythmically – the drumming
starts as we enter and then fades away as we exit.
Most interesting is the summer palace of the
thirteenth and fourteenth (present) Dalia Lama. Again the furniture
is very simple. A flat platform for sitting on and studying. Still
present is the huge circa 1940s console radio the 14th Dalai Lama
had brought from India. Also present is the 500 kg gold throne
of the 13th DL. It’s hard to understand why this was not
melted down during the Cultural Revolution.
We wonder around the gardens – enjoying
the pleasant day. An opera rehearsal is underway and we stop to
watch the strange costumes and listen to the unfamiliar music.
Thursday September 18th – Lhasa
I continue to wake before the sunrise so I again find myself wandering
the dark alleys leading through the Tibetan quarter and end up
at the Barkor. I do two fast paced koras to see how I have adapted
to the altitude and manage to make myself feel light headed.
Over breakfast we agree that the altitude is
inducing dreams, which are both more frequent and vivid than usual.
The increased frequency is likely due to the fact that deep sleep
eludes us. As breathing slows the body recognizes the lack of
oxygen and either briefly wakes you or stops the descent into
sounder sleep.
After breakfast we dig our bike boxes out of
the storeroom and drag them into the courtyard. Then for an hour
we help each other extract the machines and complete the minor
re-assembly required to make them rideable. The hotel guard and
staff look on with interest as we complete the task and then wheel
the completed bikes back inside.
A small bus pulls into the courtyard –
a minor feat given the narrow width of the alley it must navigate
to get here. We and another group pile in for the drive to the
Potala. The path through the alley is reversed and then the bus
pulls out onto the wide four-lane modern boulevard that leads
down to the Potala. There are bike lanes – separated by
a metal barrier on both sides – to protect the pedi-cabs
and bicycle riders. We pass beneath the Potala – it’s
red and white buildings looming above and then pull onto a cobblestone
road, which leads us up behind the hill on which it is perched.
Tour groups get to start at the top and walk down in the mornings.
In the afternoon individual pilgrims must start at the bottom
and climb the 150 meters of steps to the top.
After a brief dispute that our tour guide is
not licensed to lead us into the Potala we enter the bottom of
the red palace. The Potala dates from “The Great 5th Dalai
Lama” who started construction in the 15th century. His
death was concealed for 18 years to ensure the palace was completed
(“no really, he’s just meditating and can’t
be disturbed” – in fact his cloak was used as a substitute
for him in all the required religious appearances – referred
to as “inviting the clothes”).
We tour through butter-lamp illuminated prayer
halls and temples. In one room are the funeral monuments –
stupas – for the 5th through 9th Dalai Lamas. The fifth’s
is a tall gold clad conical structure rising many meters above
us – embedded with a myriad of precious stones. Hanging
down beside it are large ornate cylindrical cloth hangings. They
are doubtless quite colourful – but in the dim light this
is inferred. Some have been restored since the Cultural Revolution
and all were restored after Mongols sacked the place in the 17th
century.
Many of the chambers have walls lined with cubby
holes in which are nested Tibetan prayer books. These are stacks
of woodblock-printed paper protected by a board and then placed
in a cloth covering. I feel a strong affiliation with these repositories.
The specific texts include the treatises describing the path to
enlightenment for Mahanyana Buddhists – who believe enlightenment
can be achieved in a single lifetime – only 408 books for
those who wish to take the fast lane.
We continue through the red palace – climbing
narrow rickety stairs and passing through audience chambers and
personal rooms for past Dalai Lamas. Each chamber has butter lamps
and many pilgrims are carrying yellow plastic bags of yak butter
and they spoon some into each butter lamp as they go. In some
small window nooks monks reciting prayers can be seen. Once home
to thousands of monks the Potala is now staffed by a few hundred
– all selected by the Chinese for correct political thought.
As we get to the top of the red palace we come
to the rooms of the 13th and 14th (present) Dalai Lama. The rooms
are ornately decorated but posses only simple furnishings- small
cloth-covered wooden benches. A large yellow hat sits atop the
Dalai Lamas audience platform and it is almost buried beneath
a pile of white prayer scarves left as offerings. The Chinese
tour guide for the following group describes the rooms only as
those belonging to the 13th Dalai Lama – following the party
line of omitting all mention of the present Dalai Lama.
Descending we reverse down the narrow steep stairs.
Looking up in to the ceilings the construction material can be
seen. Wide square wooden beams hold up boards running perpendicular.
Piled on these boards is a mix of rock and mortar, which form
the floor for the story above. It astonishes me that five stories
of building can be supported in this way. One last staircase takes
us down into a sunny courtyard. Here we can see the way into some
of the rooms of the white palace – closed to tourists. It
consists of about a thousand rooms – which were used for
the governing of Tibet prior to communist rule. We cross the courtyard
and then start the descent down the hill to street level.
Lunch at the hotel is very tasty (lentil dal
and chapattis) and then it’s off to the Barkor to do some
bargaining. Over dinner last night we ended up deciding to get
some colored prayer scarves to mimic the jerseys of the Tour de
France. Yellow for the first to camp, spotted for the best climber,
red for last and so on. In front of the Jokang we find the necessary
colors and after some fruitless bargaining we get the ones we
need. I then head off to get some prayer chalices and cymbals
– getting some discount and then end up with a pair of prayer
beads. The Tibetan woman at the stay pulls on my sleeve as I try
and leave and keeps trying to sell me more item– “
I have no money, very poor” she insists. The prayer beads
result from my attempt to offer a price so low she will let me
escape – instead I end up with beads not for her initial
price of 150 yuan – but for 30.
Other odd sights compete for attention as we
amble around. Two goats being slapped in the face with a plastic
bag by a women who s trying to discourage them from chewing up
the juniper she is selling to pilgrims…
In the evening the hotel shows another part of
itself. First I’m asked to move to a different room –
which I good-naturedly do. Then after much more huddled conversation
between the guides and the manager I’m asked to move into
a large three bedroom with the guides. I agree – since otherwise
the group would have to switch hotels due to some booking confusion
with another group. In fact, our entire group shuffles rooms at
least once before dinner. The hotel manager is so delighted by
our helpfulness – since we have helped him avoid a confrontation
with a rather intractable group of Germans – that we’re
offered free dinner at the hotel.
We settle in the dining room and the waiter –
in an ornate Tibetan jacket – comes by to take our orders.
Life is simpler for the kitchen when the same order is placed
by more than one. His very polite smile becomes an enormous grin
when three of six order tomato soup. “Oh, VERY GOOD sirs”
and he volunteers to bring tomato soup for all. Three main dishes
arrive but several curry dishes “curry ring rice”
have ended up at another table by mistake – where they are
promptly eaten. The waiter hovers around us – picking up
on our concern and finally, after about an hour, two portions
of curry ring rice appear – instead of the required three.
Our guide points this out – we agree to share them between
three – but meanwhile the waiter has gone in search of anything
and scurries around us with rice and dal forcing food onto our
plates against our wishes. In the interludes between these dishes
Mark starts to pull quotes from Faulty Towers including “Just
don’t mention the war” which sets us all off. Between
the fatigue, a lot of walking and the poor sleep we’ve all
been getting we end up with tears of laughter rolling down our
faces. None of us can look the waiter in the face for the duration
of the dinner – at risk of setting of another chain reaction
of laughter. Two and half hours later we shuffle out of the restaurant
as a fourteen person German tour groups sets down. We can only
imagine the chaos that will follow.
Friday September 19th – Lhasa
Today is the first day on the bike – a warm up ride to the
monasteries at the edge of Lhasa. Some of my cycling gear was
sent via truck overland to Lhasa – but the truck has not
appeared yet. The lack of a helmet is a concern – the lack
of bike clothing more easily adapted to. Bike shoes I have –
since they were squeezed into the bike box. From the hotel courtyard
we ride the short alleyway to the main street. Here I wait and
following the guide slip across the traffic and into the bike
lane on the opposite side.
The route to Sera takes us along a sequence of
modern roads. Vehicle traffic is modest and manageable as long
as I keep a careful watch. The road leads out towards the hills
on the north side of Lhasa. We pass a section where more modern
concrete blocks of three story apartment buildings are being constructed
then ride a short dirt road to the main entranceway of Sera.
Sera is the best-preserved monastery in the Lhasa
area. Leaving the bikes to be watched over by the driver of the
jeep, which conveyed our Tibetan guide, we amble through a series
of meditation rooms and small temples. The Buddha statues and
butter lamps are becoming a remarkably routine sight – since
we have been saturated with them for the past several days. The
main audience chamber of the monastery is an impressive sight.
Dull red pillars subdivide the large dark space. Continuous rows
of cushions run across the width of the hall. At the center of
one end is the abbot’s throne – a four-foot high cushioned
platform with a small set of steps on one side.
Also impressive in Sera is the book printing
room. The walls are lined with cubbyholes filled with wood plates
on which the pages of prayer books are carved. In a patch of sunlight
a monk sits rubbing ink on a plate with a sponge, then deftly
dropping a sheet onto the block and quickly rubbing a roller along
the back. The sheet is then quickly lifted and dropped onto a
nearby pile. Each sheet takes about five seconds as the monk moves
in a steady rhythm.
From Sera we opt to cycle on to Drepung. The
route takes us on an expressway around the northern edge of Lhasa
lined with drab Chinese apartment blocks. The jeep paces us and
at one point the guides jokes he’ll pay 100 Yuan to the
winner. I use this as an excuse to push myself and the pace –
and soon I’m humming along at 30 kph and developing a mild
headache from the exertion. I ease up and look back to see Julie
catching up. We head down a dirt side road and see a monastery
– but it’s Napping. The road turns left and we Drepung
several hundred meters above us. We head onto the uphill dirt
road and settle in for the climb. Within five minutes Rajesh,
the Nepali guide, rolls by apparently effortlessly. The path steepens
and I drop gears and slowly climb to the top. I leave my bike
in Rajesh’s care and get us some Sprite’s at the monastery
gift shop. Within a few minutes we’re all assembled and
we set out into the monastery.
Drepung is a large site climbing up the side
of a hill overlooking Lhasa. We climb many steps past former monk
living quarters. The audience chambers and temples are all at
the top of the complex. Formerly the home of 10,000 monks –
it is now staffed by 700. It was shelled when the Dalai Lama escaped
to India – since it was the monastery closely associated
with him. The interior merges together in my mind with all the
monasteries and places I’ve seen over the past three days.
At the top buildings – the Abbot’s living quarters
– we look down at the long set of steps to the parking lot
below where we see our bikes leaning against a wall.
We descend to the bikes and then ride down from
the hillside. In a quick blur of switchback and turns we emerge
on the Chinese streets and ride back along the bike lanes to the
Tibetan quarter and the hotel courtyard.
For our final Lhasa meal we head over to the
Dunya – a place we have collectively adopted over the past
four days. I decide it’s time to sample butter tea –
so I order some – as well as a Lhasa beer in case the tea
lives up to its ghastly reputation. Lacking a source of indigenous
sugar, the Tibetans historically put salt in their tea and add
yak butter as a source of nourishment. It arrives and the group
watches me expectantly. I try it and then share it around. It’s
more like a slightly burnt creamy soup than tea – but as
long as you think of it as soup it reasonably palatable.
Saturday September 20 – Lhasa to Base of
Khampa La
[80 km, 5h 30min]
Today the cycling adventure begins! We leave
Lhasa for the 1100 km trek to Kathmandu. We anxiously pace about
in the hotel lobby – checking our bags get loaded onto the
truck – confirming we have cameras, water, sunscreen with
us. Things get sorted out and then we’re again out on the
busy Chinese boulevards. We weave along the bike lanes –
sometimes shifting to the road to bypass slow pedi-cabs or pedestrians.
Several intersections create a bit of chaos as we try to pick
a line through traffic to the next road. We stop in front of the
Potala for a picture and then continue for an hour through the
streets.
Finally we cross the wide, brown waters of Brahmaputra/Tsangpo
river and turn west onto the Friendship highway. Barley fields
bracket the road with their golden harvest cut and neatly stacked.
Beyond this narrow ribbon of fertile valley bottom are steep hills
of brown rubble dotted with small dull green plants. In some places
the hillsides look like gravel – in others huge swaths of
sand.
As I ride along the tarmac I see small clusters
of farming villages. In the courtyards the barley is being brought
in. Some have automatic threshers – sending the barley arching
into a pile. Others have groups of old ladies lifting the barley
into the wind with ten-foot long poles and letting the chaff blow
away. Groups of children run to the roadside and shout “Hello”
or “Tashi Deleg” – some holding their hand out
for a “high five”. I spy one pair who have caked their
hands in wet mud and I cease participating in high fives after
that.
We take a break to re-group and instantly we
are surrounded by Tibetan children curious about our bikes and
us. Pressing on - the road continues and the riding becomes routine.
I drift forwards and backwards within our group as I stop to take
pictures of the fields and the hills. The effort of riding is
a bit different – since even a modest uphill slope leaves
me gasping for air – and recovery from a burst of speed
takes far longer – leading me to try and ride at a steady
and even pace.
We come to the bridge across the river, which
leads to the airport. The small village at this junction affords
us a place to stop for lunch. We find a small Chinese restaurant
(i.e. a table in a small concrete blocked room) and with a bit
of sign language it’s agreed that they will bring us some
type of food. While we wait our bikes are subjected to a serious
examination by the locals. Mine ends up upside down – so
Rajesh can check my disc brakes are still running true. This leads
to a string of Chinese children who come by and spin the tires
on my bike. Fried rice appears and I shovel in the rice while
keeping one eye on my bicycle outside.
Crossing the bridge we pass the pair of Chinese
soldiers who have the unenviable job of standing at attention
at the mid-point of the bridge. At the far end, instead of turning
towards the airport we turn the other way onto the sandy road
leading to Khamba La - the first pass – a task for tomorrow.
This road is less travelled – since there is a more direct
way to the next major town, Shigatse. The dirt road climbs through
a mud-walled farming village and more kids run to the side of
the road to shout hello. At the top of the small rise there is
a Tibetan Mastif in my path. The guidebook has warned about dogs
– so I approach slowly with my cranks horizontal and legs
unmoving. The dog wanders to the ditch to sniff – far more
interested in the prospect of food than in me.
The road continues on – separated from
the Tsangpo by barley fields. Looking ahead I see the road branch
to the left into a side valley. The road then starts to climb.
After about gaining 50 meters in height I spot our first campsite
of the trip – on a shelf of rocky land about 30 meters wide
and a hundred meters long. Already the crew is setting up tents.
I pull up and look across the valley. On the far side is a mass
of dark clouds and a wall of rain moving towards us. It reaches
us in about twenty minutes – greatly diminished in force
– still enough to send us briefly into our tents.
The sun returns and we emerge. I pull out my
novel but the scenery is too distracting. Tibetan kids cluster
around to stare as I make notes in my journal – trying out
their one English word “hello” repeatedly. They grow
bored and take an old seatless bicycle of theirs and wash it in
a nearby pit. Mads is restless so he rides his bike up to the
next rocky terrace ten meters above and then searches for a way
down the steep slope back to us. He starts down in great form
and then hits a rock near the bottom and flips off into a pile
of thorny plants. He spends much of dinner searching out thorns
in his arms and shoulders and working them out from under his
skin.
After a lazy few hours watching the shadows creep
into the valley we’re ushered into the dining tent. Perching
on small stools the six of us watch in amazement as a three-course
meal is offered. Soup, fried curried vegetables, rice and spinach/garlic
dal, fried chicken, tea and fresh fruit. During the meal we generate
an audience of Tibetan kids joined by several adults. As they
press almost all the way into the tent Mads generates a mock shout
at the kids to make them move back. As dusk falls the kids head
back to the village.
We sip tea in the tent and exchange stories about
backgrounds and how we found the trip and why on earth we think
it’s a good idea. Like me, Julie is here for a decade birthday
(30 versus my 40) and Mark and Sue have it as a deferred 40th.
Both Mark and Sue had travelled in India before meeting –
and oddly enough were engaged 10 days after meeting for the first
time. Our conversation then turns to tomorrow’s main attraction
– our first big pass. It’s a 1200-meter climb starting
at an elevation of about 3700 meters.
Sunday September 21, 2003 – Near Nagartse
[72km, 6h 30min]
The climb starts well. The grade is modest and
the road wanders along the side of the valley. Looking down the
valley and seeing that the only way out is to climb over the walls
at the end – the route seems somewhat daunting. I have donned
my heart rate monitor and attached the readout to my handlebars.
Since the guidebook predicts a climb of five hours – I set
a goal of keeping my heart rate at 140. The climb continues and
the group spreads out a bit as our paces vary. The road is a mix
of gravel and dirt wide enough for about one and half vehicles
– although somehow vehicles find a way to pass each other.
As we climb up the valley walls – one side is always a steeply
sloping drop, which as we climb becomes more and more likely to
be a fatal.
After two hours of peddling uphill it does appear
we are about halfway up but as we get higher we get a little slower
and bit more light-headed. Now instead of simply riding near the
edge in order to let a vehicle pass I typically come to a stop
and wave them by. For the final hour of the climb the progress
is more stop and go. An objective is set “I’ll just
ride to that next switchback” and then once met a short
break is the reward. Finally a cluster of prayer flags comes into
view – as well as some jeeps stopping so tourists can take
in the view. On the far side is another long valley system and
in the bottom is Yamdrok Tso – a turquoise lake fed by the
winter snow – with no natural drainage. At the pass a man
with a yak tries to get me to have my picture taken (for a fee)
but I decline. From starting at 9am I am now at the pass at 1:15pm.
The computer records 3 hours and 45 minutes of uphill cycling.
The descent to the shore of Yamdrok Tso –
a drop of 500 meters – passes in an instant – even
with my innate caution on downhills I swoop around the swichbacks
and around the blind ridge corners. On the shores I find the truck
– with kitchen tent set up and mattress set out in the sun.
I flop down and drink several cups of warm juice as the others
pull in. Yaks graze around us and two old yak herders sit on their
heels and watch the spectacle of our group.
By 2pm lunch has been consumed and we must now
ride along the shore of the lake on sandy roads for about 40km
to our camp. I head out and follow the road as it winds along
ridges in the valley wall. As side valleys come into view so do
some snow-capped peaks in the distance. Then the road turns and
they disappear again. The shore of the lake is still about 600
meters higher than last night’s camp and a slight headache
starts as I ride in the afternoon sun. The final ten kilometres
seem endless and the shadows in the valley lengthen. Finally I
see the truck and our tents on a small smooth patch of pasture
near the road. I pull up and flop onto a mat and watch as sheep
are herded past our camp down to the water.
By the time we have dinner it’s getting
late and my hunger has abated. I force myself to chew through
some of the food – since I know I’ll need the fuel
for tomorrow – there is another pass to face.
Monday September 22 – Nagartse to Simi
La
[67km, 4h 20min]
What a miserable night! After force-feeding myself
dinner I tried to settle down in my sleeping bag. The zipper jammed
and in my exhausted state it took me ten minutes to fiddle with
it. A headache started to build coupled with a head cold. All
the water I’ve been drinking forced me outside twice and
then the Tibetan Mastif choir broke out in a chorus of howls and
barks for three hours. Thirty minutes in I fish out some earplugs
– but they fail to muffle the howls. I am dreading the next
pass in my current state. At 4am I finally remember the cold medication
and dig it out. I then wake at 7am and wait for the warm cup of
tea that signals the start of the day.
By 9am I am on the bike. The road starts along
a flat section, passes a village and disappears down the floor
of a side valley with an imposing ridge at the end. The wind is
cold and I feel very disconnected from what I’m doing –
a bit like I’ve had one too many drinks. We advance along
the road towards the imposing ridge only to discover that the
road skirts the bottom of the ridge and turns behind it and begins
a modest climb. We continue down a series of narrow valleys climbing
in a slow but steady fashion. A glacier-clad peak comes into view
on the left and later another appears on the right. Oddly, as
the climb progresses the lightheaded feeling dissipates –
although I’m careful to watch the heart rate monitor and
adjust my pace accordingly. I stop to photograph a large cascading
glacier. I find my climbing pace and before I realize it I have
prayer flags and the snowy summit of a 7000m peak in sight. Odd
that despite such a miserable night this 5000m pass comes more
easily than the one before.
After a few pictures on the windy pass Mads,
Rajesh and I elect to descend to the lunch spot to get out of
the wind. The road descends along a valley and with no major switchbacks
or blind corners the descent screams. Mads stops at a small teashop
to hand over his GPS to Rajesh and very pushy kids who touch everything
on my bike mob us. One motions to my watch and optimistically
holds out a quartz crystal in exchange. I grin and shake my head
and then re-start the descent dropping several hundred meters
to the lunch truck in no time at all. I huddle behind a rock as
protection from the wind and enjoy a mug of warm mango tang.
The descent continues after lunch with more long,
relatively straight descents until the gully we’re in opens
out into an expansive plane of barley fields. I glance back casually
and brake to a stop – since behind us is now an unobstructed
view of the 7000m peak we glimpsed from the pass. Now that we’re
lower it dominates the valley. As each other rider comes out of
the gully I motion to look behind and they all stop astonished
at the view and reach for their cameras.
The descent now becomes gentler and weaves down
through small villages, past people harvesting barley and then
the road begins to follow the central river of this valley system.
In places the road has been washed out and the jeeps have churned
the surface into huge ridges of rocks and mud. At one village
a stream a foot deep runs across the road and as I pedal out the
other side there is a gauntlet of children. I weave and accelerate
– avoiding the two boys who have sticks and are eying my
spokes.
Continuing along the valley I start to anticipate
the camp at each bend in the road. At lunch the advice was camp
would be about 52 kms on. When I hit kilometre 60 I begin to wonder.
I stop and sit on a rock and watch the stream flow by. I much
through a Clif bar and then head off again. Finally at kilometre
67 – just before the end of the valley and the next pass
– camp is located.
The camp is on a river shelf near a small stream
coming from the valley wall. Above us are two small caves in the
rock wall and goats picking their way down the impossibly steep
wall. I watch for a while – wondering if I’ll see
a goat “crash” – but they’re way too agile
and experienced. Below us is a seemingly abandoned mud walled
village but when I go to explore later I see several large dogs
milling about – a sure sign that it is - in fact - inhabited.
I get cleaned up and then we swap stories over our afternoon tea.
Mark jokes that the only way to film his progress up today’s
pass is with time lapse photography – but the truth is at
this altitude that applies to all of us. We’ve all managed
two big passes in two days and we’re very satisfied with
that. Tomorrow pass is significantly lower and should take less
than an hour. We are not afraid.
Tuesday September 23 – Before Simi La
[36km, 2h]
Finally! A good nights sleep at the campsite.
The morning is cold and our breakfast table is set out in the
open – exposed to a frigid wind. In between toast and oatmeal
I dart to the tent to warn up out of the wind. It’s clear
the sun will lurk behind the eastern ridge of the valley for a
while – so we bundle up and set out on the bikes.
The road is flat to the end of the valley and
then it turns into a canyon on the right. The rounds the back
of the canyon and then up to Simi La. The slope of the road on
the far wall seems dauntingly steep – but once we reach
it it’s not so bad. Within 30 minutes we’re at the
top of this pass. The far side drops towards a reservoir and the
road clings to the side of the valley wall. It’s a sheer
drop from the road to the reservoir – so I keep my speed
under control. A slight climb on the far side then leads to a
quick descent with some deeply rutted, perfectly banked 180-degree
switchbacks. At the bottom is a small village associated with
the hydro dam. Several new buildings are under construction –
following the traditional pattern of ornate beams and window ledges
surrounded by mud bricks.
The road heads out into a wide sandy valley and
heads towards Gyantse. We power along the road following a descending
river with the blur of golden barley in our peripheral vision.
After 20km the valley turns north and the town becomes visible
in the distance – dominated by a large fort (Dzong in Tibetan)
where Younghusband first used canons against the Tibetans. The
fort grows larger and the sandy road becomes a dusty Chinese street.
Livestock and pedestrians create an obstacle course for both our
bikes and the occasional truck. All the signs are in Mandarin
and eventually we find the one for the Wu Tse – and duck
through the alley into the Hotel’s courtyard. It’s
been a short day and it’s noon when I dump my stuff into
the very small hotel room.
In the afternoon – after standing under
a thin trickle of water pretending it’s a shower –
we head out to a Buddhist temple – the Kunbum. The streets
along the base of the fort become dirtier and dustier and the
buildings switch from Chinese to Tibetan. Houses on one side are
being pulled apart – blocks of mud thrown from the roof
– to make way for new apartments. As we reach the gate for
the Kunbum a small girl tugs at my sleeve and motions towards
a crippled old woman on a wheelbarrow nearby.
The Kunbum is a temple of temples. Each of its
nine floors has dozens of small shrines to different Buddhas and
their manifestations. It’s impossible to take it all in
– so we weave through the interior from rickety staircase
to small ladder and finally emerge at an outside platform just
below the large looming eyes painted near the top of the structure.
It’s a three-meter wide circular path in the open air –
with no railing and an eight-story drop to the ground.
Later in the hotel we watch a large British jeep
tour group come in for dinner and their guide playing super-waiter
– ensuring everyone has ordered. We decide that the experience
of camping in the valleys allows us a much more intimate connection
with the countryside. The food is better too.
Wednesday September 24th – Gyantse
[92km, 3h 45min]
Another good nights sleep – thanks to the
earplugs shutting out the noise from the courtyard. At breakfast
the sole choice is tea or coffee – after which toast and
some grey eggs appear. As each new person comes to the table the
coffee spills – since the table is too low for the chairs
and everyone bangs their knees. We agree that it’s worth
delaying our cycling departure to allow us to tour the fort.
We pile into the jeep and head out onto the dusty
street, weaving against the tide of cattle and sheep heading to
market. The jeep pulls into an alley and the driver negotiates
a skinny road – with a wall on one side and a 10-foot drop
into a ditch on the other. The road then climbs steeply up to
the fort – weaving through walled streets and past sleeping
dogs.
The view from the top draws our attention –
views of the Kumbum and the stacks of barley in the fields around
Gyantse. Next we tour through the exhibits at the entrance. There
is the “Museum of Anti-British” which details how
the brave Tibetan “brothers” fought against the evil
Younghusband to defend the sanctity of the Chinese motherland.
The translation is littered with errors – both linguistic
and factual. Next we climb through rooms within the fort and take
in the views along its walls. Again, safety is not a concern –
sheer drops just off the path are common. If you fall –
it’s your own fault. It’s easy to see why the Tibetans
felt so invincible in such a place – pity about the British
artillery. At the top the route down is a very steep, very long
set of stairs – a dramatic finish.
Returning to the hotel we change back to cycling
gear and prepare to ride to Shigatse – where tomorrow we
will have a rest day. From the courtyard we cycle out and weave
through donkey carts and pedestrians making our way to the paved
highway. The highway has little traffic and a gentle tailwind.
After several days of dirt roads, we’re in cycling heaven
and we spend the first 30 minutes pushing along at 28 kph. Today
is a 93 km day – with lunch at about kilometre 60.
I roll along – sometimes chatting with
who ever is nearby – sometimes in a gap and left to my own
thoughts – or even better the lack thereof. The road is
nestled in a valley perhaps 10 km wide – bracketed by foothills
which anywhere else in the world would be called mountains. This
is one of the major valleys in Tibet and it has a number of concrete
lined irrigation canals to maximize the use of the water running
down the valley.
Children run to the side of the road and call
out hello. One places a stick on the road and motions for me to
jump it – but I’m more focused on the kid with his
hands behind his back. Sure enough as I go by he tries to throw
his stick into my spokes – but it bounces out.
I’ve developed a sore throat and a high
altitude cough, which kicks in whenever I stop cycling. The road
rolls by slowly and eventually I see Mads in the middle of a village
waving me into a small mud walled courtyard where the truck has
set up for lunch. There is already a crowd of Tibetans –
and my bike is a new source of fascination. I lean it against
the truck – careful to remove water bottles and computer
before leaving it. Julie arrives and Mads suggests we head into
the Tibetan house to have a drink of juice.
It takes a moment for my eyes to adapt to the
dimly lit interior. The building has mud walls. On one wall is
a cast iron stove with an old black kettle simmering over a Yak
dung fire. Several low padded seats – which I assume also
serve as beds – line two other walls. By the grimy window
sits an old woman using a homemade spinning wheel to create strands
of wool. A power bar hangs from the ceiling – attached to
a boom box and a television. The television is turned on for our
entertainment – bad Chinese pop songs. The ceiling is supported
by a central beam on an ornate pillar which in turn supports cross
braces on top of which are piles of sticks covered with mud. After
the juice we head back to the courtyard – where the table
has been set for lunch. As we eat the Tibetan men examine the
bikes, clicking shifters and squeezing bikes – the woman
have dispersed – obviously they have work to do.
After lunch we head back to the paved road. Mads
and Julie must have had steroids in their SPAM – since they
rocket on ahead. Mark, Sue and I end up spread out over several
kilometres. I’m trying to just disconnect from the goal
and peddle the bike – letting the speed be whatever it will.
I try to study the landscape to distract myself from my dry throat
and the heartburn caused by lunch. Finally the road enters Shigatse
and the jeep is waiting at the edge of town to lead us to our
hotel (again a Wu Tse). As I snack and wait for the others I watch
a Chinese man and his son sit on the curb and stare hard at my
bike – pointing out various features to each other.
The path to the hotel is a bit convoluted and
Shigatse has busy, wide streets. We watch carefully and try to
avoid being separated by buses pulling in and out of traffic.
The hotel is a modern, tile-covered building – very touristy.
I dump my gear in the room and head for the shower. Tomorrow is
a rest day and I look forward to a day’s break from the
bike before we start heading towards Everest.
Thursday September 25th – Shigatse
Our Tibetan guide is missing in action – with Lhasa beer
the presumed culprit. So instead of visiting the Tashilhunpo monastery
this morning we will visit this home of the Panchen Lama in the
afternoon. Actually it’s not quite clear whose home it is
– since the Dalai Lama and the Chinese government disagree
on who the Panchen Lama is. China has a boy sequestered in Beijing
– while the child selected by the DL is now in India. This
is viewed by some as a blunder by the DL – since he and
the Chinese had agreed independently on a child – but since
the DL jumped the gun and announced it first the Chinese could
not let him have the definitive word on the subject and promptly
selected a new one.
The streets of Shigatse are busy with trucks,
pedi-cabs and pedestrians. We wander to a smoke-filled Internet
café and type emails as Chinese adolescents play loud,
violent games and “lock and load” booms in a theatrical
voice. Several outdoor stores catch our attention. As I convert
the price of a Gore-Tex jacket I wonder if I’ve dropped
a factor of ten – but no – the price really is $28.
The explanation is that these are made in China and workers make
some on the side for internal sale. I can find no flaws in the
jackets – so I get a pair of his and hers jackets. Next
we have coffee in tall glasses at a sidewalk café and then
return to the hotel to see if the Tibetan guide has made an appearance.
There is no guide – but we get a replacement
– Mads has bumped into someone he worked with on a previous
trip. We head off to the Tashilhunpo and note the recently constructed
mock-Tibetan buildings built in front of the monastery to promote
tourism. The complex itself is interesting – since it was
comparatively spared during the excesses of the anti-Tibetan purges
of the late 50’s and the Cultural Revolution, which followed.
Many of the college and monk residence buildings are intact and
we wander through narrow alleys between these buildings as we
climb up to the larger temples on the hillside above. The highlight
is the second largest Buddha in the world – standing 26
meters high. The copper clad form is sheltered in a five-story
building.
For dinner we avoid the hotel – and it’s
tepid noodles of the night before and head out to a “Tashi”
Tibetan restaurant – the closest thing to a restaurant chain
– there being several cities which have such restaurants
– keying on name recognition of the one in Lhasa “as
listed in Lonely Planet”. We’re joined by a pair of
Danish women on a jeep tour – again a fortieth birthday
excursion – Tibet seems to attract us forty year olds. After
dinner we walk back and stop in a night market. Clustered around
a small metal table on rickety chairs we sample some spicy meat
and flat bread. Even with Mads ordering half strength spice –
I’m quickly reaching for the bottle of Lhasa beer to quench
the burning. Meanwhile, our Tibetan guide has slunk back to the
hotel so we are ready to resume our cycling tomorrow.
Friday September 26 – Shigatse to Lhatse
[73km, 4h 20min]
I emerge from my tent after the days ride from
Shigatse and look at a pair of old shoes two feet away. Looking
up I meet the eyes of a teenaged boy with a large sack filled
with Yak dung. He stares impassively at me and after a polite
smile I find a stool to settle on the record the events of today.
Half a dozen Tibetan children cluster around and watch as I set
pen to paper.
The day’s ride was the hardest so far –
in spite of the fact that we got a 30km jump start in the truck.
The ride out of Shigatse was bizarre. First it ended at a huge
pile of dirt blocking a major intersection. Back-tracking, the
truck found a dirt road and then appeared to be driving cross
country along the river flood plain. Some traffic in the opposite
direction appeared and it became clear this was the detour around
the road construction. Good thing we’re in the truck –
the road surface is very bumpy and loose. After thirty minutes
of off-roading we get back on a more typical dirt road and drive
to the base of the Tra La – a very modest pass.
The minor pass is dispensed with in about ten
minutes – it’s really just a hill with good marketing.
The road surface becomes sandy and progress is made with more
effort. I am tempted to get off and check my tires have not gone
soft – but I know that it’s just the sand playing
games with my head. The valley is a narrow one – two or
three kilometres wide with a thin stream – running the opposite
direction to us – a sign we will be subtly climbing as we
go along the valley. I press on – sand sapping my strength
– watching the odometer increment towards 30 kilometres
– the target for our lunch spot. At kilometre 40 I find
the truck in a small farming village – tucked in behind
a large stone wall designed to deflect the wind. This was the
nearest spot at which water could be found to cook lunch.
After lunch we returned to the sandy road. A
few short paved sections boosted my spirits – but the endless
slightly uphill sandy road continued to sap my strength. Some
of this is the rebound from the rest day – everything just
seems harder than it should. At one point I get off and sit cross-legged
on a hillock and watch the river valley. I try to absorb the surroundings
and munch through a Clif bar and not think about getting back
on the bike. Rajesh and Mark come and join me in my sloth. I finally
find the energy to re-mount the bike and on I go. The stops become
more frequent but I finally pull around a bend in the valley wall
and see the tents on a grassy portion of the river plain. I collapse
onto a mattress pad and for ten minutes the only movement I can
muster is to accept some red liquorice from Julie. I finally stagger
back to my feet and into the tent to change. Over dinner Mark
notes that his computer indicates about 2000 feet of climbing
– all of it up and down modest sandy slopes along the river.
Just beyond the campsite we watch the sun set on the Lhampa La
– a more significant pass and tomorrows
Saturday September 27 – Over Lhampa La
[59km, 3h 50min]
I stand with a cup of sweet milky tea in my hand
and watch the sun rise and its light creep onto the surrounding
hills – including the slope leading to Lhampa La. The sky
changes from a deep purple to blue as the line of sunlight moves
across the valley. The show continues as we sit at the breakfast
table.
From the camp we get a good view of the road
up to the pass – watching the clouds of dust created by
jeeps. The climb is about 350 meters and with a steady effort
we’re at the top in an hour. The far side holds another
valley with a single snow capped peaked visible in the distance.
I switch to descent mode (jacket sealed up, shocks dialled up)
and start the quick, twisty descent. There is the usual fatal
drop on one side and a lot of blind corners as the road hugs the
ridges of the valley wall. I try to look ahead down the valley
and anticipate vehicles – but a bus still manages to surprise
me at one corner – and I veer quickly to the edge taking
care to leave some margin for myself.
The road rushes down into a wide valley and the
first ten kilometres on the valley floor are paved. I push the
pedals happily – watching the barley being brought in and
Yaks pulling ploughs to turn over fields, which have been harvested.
In some places women and children are sweeping the field with
straw brooms to recover any kernels, which have fallen off while
the barley was gathered.
Before the usual lunch distance, I pull over
at a small rock outcropping and wait for the others. The truck
has not passed me yet and I don’t want to inadvertently
ride past where it will stop. The jeep pulls by and gives an update.
The truck is out of commission and needs a part – which
the jeep will go ahead to get. The group of us will ride to Lhatse
and find a spot for lunch.
Lhatse appears after another 15 kilometres. It’s
a one-street town with a few dingy hotels and Chinese restaurants.
The jeep has pulled up at a “Tashi” and we lock the
bikes in the courtyard and head in – getting the last table
for lunch. Lhatse is a popular lunch stop for Jeep tours on their
way to Everest base camp or Mount Kailash. I watch the German
tour group as they pay and return to their bus – mobbed
by beggars and women offering crystals through the bus windows.
None of them thought to accost us as we arrived on our bikes.
I am again grateful not to be seeing Tibet through the windows
of a bus.
After lunch we ride on, past a checkpoint and
turn into a steep sided gorge – the start of the climb to
Gyatso La – a 900 meter climb that we’ll leave most
of for tomorrow. The gorge has large slate slabs in its walls
and the villagers have collected stacks of two inch thick slate
two feet wide by up to eight feet long. These are used for roof
sections on the mud houses and to make windbreaks. The first five
kilometres of the climb up the gorge pass very slowly and finally
I pull level with our camp.
We have a quiet afternoon in the camp –
our early arrival has left all of us time for a nap. Over tea
we remark how it’s hard not to countdown the days to the
end of the trip and to remember to focus on each day. I spend
some time just sitting – absorbing the surrounding gorge.
The guides – being guides – go rabbiting up the valley
wall to see if they can glimpse the Himalayas from here. They
return several hours later having climbed up and down about 2000
feet.
Sunday September 28 – Over Gyatso La
[31km, 4h 10min]
In the shadow filled gorge part way up Gyatso
La the usual morning routine unfolds. As Dawa passes tea into
my tent I emerge from my sleeping bag. In the 4 degree interior
I wriggle out of the down cocoon and into some wind pants and
my heavy weight cycling jersey. As the tea is consumed the contents
of the tent find their way into the duffel bag and I emerge into
the chill morning.
As I munch on toast I look forward to the view
of the Himalayas that today will offer – snow and ice capped
peaks. As breakfast finishes we load bottles on the bikes and
set off up the shady gorge. The guidebook says it’s 20 kms
to the summit – but Mads is certain that 14km is closer
to the correct figure. With that in mind I follow the road as
it ascends a series of overlapping ridges – which block
the view up to the pass. Mads pulls away and I follow the dictates
of the heart rate monitor – but I feel good. The distance
slowly ticks away and finally the sun reaches the floor of the
gorge. A headwind begins and the vehicle traffic starts to increase
– each jeep and truck kicking up a huge cloud of slate dust.
Each time I reach to pull up my neck warmer to cover my mouth
and the bike veers in response.
After a strong initial 10 kilometres my pace
slows. Two riders from the Australian group pull past me with
a “hello”. The 14km point comes and goes and it’s
clear there is still a LONG way left. The stops become more frequent
– any pretext will do – pee, picture, food. The ascent
has now become an exercise in suffering. Mark passes by and I
watch him disappear above me. I feel the thin air. A glimpse of
a snowy peak causes a momentary surge of energy, which quickly
abates. As I pass a Chinese army camp – walled concrete
– I wave to the poor soul standing at attention by the gate.
I notice a small stream in the ditch beside the road and become
mesmerized by the flow of the water. “Water over stones”
becomes my mindless mantra as I try to make my uphill progress
as inevitable as water falling over stones. The gorge opens into
a wide sloping plain. Each switchback on the skyline looks to
be the last until I reach it and see the next one. Finally - after
I have given up hope – I see the prayer flags and a few
snowy rock spires on the skyline. With this incentive I find the
energy to push to the top.
The view is a complete letdown. There are several
large peaks poking up – but not the horizon-to-horizon spectacle
my imagination had constructed. Mark and I take some pictures
and Susan and Julie appear. Switching to downhill mode we set
off.
There is a strong headwind but the first few
minutes see me drop quickly down from the pass. The grade softens
and I now have to peddle to overcome the wind and the rocks on
the road. Soon I have to peddle all the time to make any progress
downhill. This sucks! After six more kilometres of this terrible
road surface we come to our rocky, windy lunch spot – and
it’s now 2 pm. Lunch finishes at 3pm and with more of “the
world’s worst downhill” ahead of us – we all
agree it’s time to get in the jeep.
The resulting roller coaster ride down into the
valley is made more frightening by the huge clouds of dust that
obscure our view of the switchbacks and the edge of the road.
Eventually we make our way to a small town, Xegar (also known
as New Tingri) where we stop for gas – and to get our permits
in order for Everest. Now we experience the life of a jeep tourist.
Beggars cluster around our jeep and a grandmother makes her two
grandkids do a pathetic song and dance routine for us. We all
try to ignore these intrusions and look forward to getting on
our way.
The jeep then takes us to the entrance to the
Everest area. At the checkpoint there are difficulties, as one
of drivers does not have his paperwork in order. As we wait, several
old Tibetan men – spinning wool in their fingers –
watch us as we sit in the jeep. One walks up and presses his forehead
against the glass for a better view of the interior. Odd, since
they must get a lot of tourist traffic. Finally it’s agreed
our Tibetan guide Suni will stay behind as a deposit/hostage while
we get driven to the campsite and then the driver will return
to sort things out.
The jeep enters the Everest area and climbs up
onto a perfect green plateau overlooking a small village at the
base of Gyatso La. We’re camping here - as are the Australians.
We stretch out on mats as the camp is set up – our efforts
to help rebuffed.
Monday September 29 – Over Gyatso La
[44km, 4h]
I awake early and again enjoy sipping my tea
in solitude as I watch the sky lighten. Today another pass and
at 800 meters a non-trivial one. Fortunately the road is a good
one – having been revamped in the past two years. The ascent
is gradual with a long series of switchbacks and good visibility
to the switchbacks above. My guess is the climb will take about
three hours of pedalling.
The road twists back and forth across the back
wall of this valley. Looking up it’s clear this pass is
very high. I pull over and sit on a concrete turn barrier –
its very presence a clue that this is special road. Given all
the jeep tours to Everest base camp they must have been deemed
worthwhile – more for show than anything else. I can now
look down onto the top of the hill beside our campsite. I have
climbed four or five hundred meters but there is still a long
way to go. I drink some water – being careful to take only
one swallow before breathing – otherwise I will get out
of breath at this altitude.
After about 2hours and forty-five minutes a long,
final switchback leads me to the top. The road goes through a
small tunnel of prayer flags. The horizon on the far side is limited
to a few glaciers poking down through the clouds. Once again there
is no view of the Himalayas – despite a plaque, which shows
the locations of Everest, Makalu and Cho Oyu. We huddle behind
a wall out of the wind and eat lunch hoping to outwait the clouds.
We’re rewarded with a brief view of Cho Oyu before we start
down.
The route down is wild. After dropping along
a ridge we switch back and hundreds of meters below is a network
of switchbacks with jeeps puffing up dust – like something
in a child’s race set. A few more ridges down, I’m
in this serpentine switchback system – the wind resisting
me in one direction and pushing me along after the turns. Each
corner requires careful navigation of the large, banked ruts left
by the vehicles. The switchbacks then lengthen and the descent
steepens – the bike racing along the bumpy surface. The
road then drops further into a valley and I plunge downwards –
stopping only to photograph rock formations, old ruined forts
and a small village perched on a terrace. At the bottom of the
valley is our camp on a flood plain beside a small stream.
After changing I sit writing in the dining tent.
The doorway is walled with Tibetan children all quietly saying
“hello” – hoping for a response. I smile a few
times, write for a while and then grow tired of being stared at.
I realize it’s just the same instinct that leads to “People
Magazine” – the desire to see how the other live.
The children are dusty and dressed in a variety of hand-me-downs
and knitted sweaters. Each has a backpack and schoolbooks –
including an English primer. Another sign that this is a well
tended location – likely due to the tourist traffic.
Tiring of being on display I wander out onto
the dry flood plain and scrounge for some rocks. I find some interesting
– almost volcanic rocks – although Mark’s guess
is they’re limestone. As I head into the tent at dusk a
herd of goats pass by the tent on their way to the stream and
then into their pen down at the village.
Tuesday September 30th – To Ronkbuk
[44km, 4h]
I’m up early as usual and I notice a pack
of dogs on the far side of the stream approaching the camp. It
become clear which is the leader and after I make a display of
picking up a stone – some become nervous and walk farther
around before passing by the camp. Breakfast comes and goes –
and the kids return to scope us out further on their way to school.
Tiring of the attention we gather our stuff and head for the bikes.
The route starts with a short descent to the
village and then we turn onto a dirt road following a wide valley.
The barley fields and children calling now seem very routine and
normal. Kilometre markers countdown the distance – but it’s
not clear if the distance is to Rongbuk or base camp – a
difference of about eight klicks. The next marker I spy reads
48 km. Today we’ll climb about 800 meters – which
should require about five hours on the bike.
Soon after the village the road degrades into
the endless bumps of washer-board. For kilometre after kilometre
we try to find one side or a tire rut which minimizes all the
up and down – to little avail. The bikes chatter along and
our speed drops as we push towards the end of the main valley
and the turn into the Rongbuk valley.
At lunch we commiserate about the road. Realizing
there is much suffering still ahead I head out early. If anything,
the road quality gets even worse as I make it to the end of the
main valley. The road turns south and starts to climb –
with a headwind to add to the day’s fun. I ride along looking
at the blue-grey of the cascading glacier-fed stream. I stop and
sit by the road staring at the water as I refuel with Gatorade
and energy bars. I continue in my quest to find a smooth path
on the road – but it is futile – a lot of energy is
going into climbing and descending an endless sequence of two-inch
bumps.
The valley is cloudy and a few raindrops start
to fall. The road steepens and a series of switchbacks start.
I do these in pairs - stopping at the end of each minor objective
to recover some strength. The jeep pulls up – some have
elected to sit out a few kilometres of the bumpy road –
and I debate joining them. Suni assures me the camp is at kilometre
7 (and not 0) so I decide to press on the final five kilometres.
I observe my speed – 4 km/hr – and realize the final
stretch could take over an hour.
After a few more washer-board sections and switchbacks
the road sweeps around a ridge and I can see the flank of Everest
poking out through the clouds. There follows a bone rattling descent
across the ridgeline and then I sweep around a corner and see
the prayer flags of Rongbuk – with our tents flapping in
the wind just behind.
As I pull up to the truck Mads confesses that
the road was perhaps the worst he’s ever ridden. I concur
and decide I need a new word since “sucks” doesn’t
properly sum up what a miserable experience riding that road was.
I escape the fierce wind by crawling into the
tent to change into warm clothes and my down jacket. I have developed
an unnatural affection for the down jacket and my sleeping bag.
I may have to sleep in them when I get home. I poke out my nose
– take a few pictures of Everest – mostly obscured
by cloud – and then retreat under a blanket of down and
doze. Chicken noodle soup is delivered to my tent (thanks Dawa!)
and soon I have warmed up and I’m ready to explore a bit
more.
The summit of Everest teases us from the clouds
– it’s a long way up – 4000 meters above the
monastery. The valley frames Everest beautifully – with
dull grey moraines bracketing the white slopes. Behind us is the
highest monastery in the world – actually a nunnery too.
It’s very modest – perhaps three stone buildings.
The old guest house – a mud walled structure is on the opposing
side of the road and then there is a pink, tiled modern Chinese
hotel - so much for buildings which match the natural environment.
On the other side of the valley is a cluster of yak-skin tents
and several hundred meters above those are the black forms of
yaks wandering the high walls in search of small alpine plants.
I return to my tent and leave the door open –
with its view of Everest. With a sleeping bag draped over me I
watch for an hour as the mountain drifts in and out of the clouds.
I look at the summit pyramid and the snow being carried away by
the wind. If it’s 50 kph here – it must be insane
up there. The ridges and faces look steep and difficult.
Wednesday October 1 – Rongbuk/Everest Base
Camp
A cold night at Rongbuk. I step outside at midnight
to pee with bare legs – too lazy to find something in the
dark. Back in the tent it’s hard to get warm and my perpetual
head cold makes it hard to get back to sleep. I become convinced
my feet are higher than my head – that I’m sleeping
on a slope – a common delusion of altitude. I reverse my
orientation in the tent – but still I toss and turn. Finally
I get out the light, find some clothes to sleep in and take a
cold pill. I then sleep until 7am – when I notice it’s
about two degrees in the tent.
The valley has clouded in again. Tea is offered
and I sip, watching the frost on the sides of the valley produce
low lying clouds as the sun falls on it. Above us, there are several
snow-covered ridges which show their fluted features as the light
plays across them. We watch carefully from the dining tent for
a better view of Everest – the sun is slowly burning off
the clouds. From time to time the view seems better than before
and we pull out our cameras. Finally after breakfast the sun rises
over the ridge and the clouds disperse. We take pictures of bikes
and Everest, people and Everest, Everest and Everest…
Today is a rest day with a walk up to the base
camp planned. We head out on a trail high on the moraine. The
progress is slow – enforced by the altitude. The trail takes
us beneath the ruins of the former nunnery – artillery was
used to demolish it during the Cultural Revolution. Further on
is a prayer chorten with a tiny Buddha figure set in a rock alcove.
Beyond that is a small hermitage – Mads checks but the door
is locked.
As we work our way along the ups and downs of
the moraine, Everest appears and disappears from view. After about
two hours of shuffling along the prayer flag mound, which denotes
the base, camp appears. Here the wind is steady and forceful.
I pass by the small permanent tents, which serve tea to the jeep
tours, and slowly climb up the prayer mound. The flags boom in
the steady wind and I hold out my arms to see how far I can lean
into the wind before I fall over. Over the din of the flags we
ask each other to take pictures of us with the mountain. Then
we head down to the warmth of the tea tent below.
Inside we’re offered some green tea from
a large flowery thermos. A kettle is on a small stove and I watch
as the tea girl opens the grate and crumbles in another piece
of dried yak dung. Another tour group is warming a can of fish
on the stove and passing around bread. Dawa arrives and serves
us soup, fried potatoes, fish and fruit salad – drawing
many interested glances from the other travellers. The jeep then
takes us back to the camp, where we idle the afternoon writing
in journals, napping and sipping tea.
Thursday October 2 – Down Pang La to Tingri
[48km, 3h 30min]
The morning temperature in the tent is 2 degrees
– but I have slept well. Two things contribute to this success.
First, I pushed all my bags against the tent zipper to seal any
leaks of cold air. Second, I dedicated a Nalgene bottle –
the yellow one – to collect pee during the night. No trips
outside.
I read a book by the dimming headlamp –
the fresh batteries are on the truck – and tea arrives.
The now very usual breakfast ritual ensues and we prepare for
a jeep ride to the top of Pang La – since it would make
for a very long day to climb that pass and get all the way to
Tingri. We’re dressed for cycling – but it’s
minus 5 degrees and the cold is soaking in. We help out taking
down tents and then walk over to the side of the valley where
the sun will make its first appearance.
The jeep ride up to Pang La rivals any amusement
park ride I have been on. The road is extremely rocky and in places
the jeep has trouble climbing some of the short rocky sections.
I regard the ascent as un-rideable – except that we pass
the Australians on their way up. We’re shaken and slammed
around inside the jeep and then emerge on a broad featureless
gravel plain – the unspectacular top of Pang La. As the
bikes are unloaded I try to capture the rocks on film. I had always
assumed the Himalayas were thrusting granite spears – the
reality is that they are heaps of rubble. I cannot imagine trying
to climb up stuff like this.
The route down from Pang La is a road across
this rocky surface. The domed top of the pass drops down - growing
steeper until it runs out onto a flat section a hundred meters
below. Mark heads off with me next. The grade steepens and I need
to put my weight further back – behind the seat. Mark lets
out a whoop and decides to go for it. As I brake and balance,
I see Mark pulling away - blistering down the hill. Then something
goes wrong and he pitches over the handlebars. At what we later
learn is 64 kph, he pitches headfirst into the gravel. After the
first bounce the helmet, Mark and the bike all fly off in different
directions. Mark tumbles head over heel several times then gets
flipped around in random directions and slides to a stop several
hundred feet downhill from where he launched. He pushes up to
his elbows and then slumps down again.
I move down the hill as quickly as I can –
pulling up beside him and then waving to Mads as I call out to
Mark. He is conscious – which surprises me. As I pull off
my backpack I can see his back and rear is torn and bloody –
no lycra remaining and blood is running down from his scalp. I
pull out a bandage and start to wrap him in a space blanket as
Mads pulls up. Together we check to see if anything is broken
– remarkably nothing seems to be. Julie and Sue appear and
the truck pulls up. Everyone stays very calm and finds a role
with a minimum of fuss. After a more careful check for broken
bones – we share out the first aid supplies. Julie, Susan
and Mads start the slow process of cleaning wounds as I scurry
about looking for more clothing and making sure Mark’s feet
stay higher than his head so that he doesn’t go any deeper
into shock. After forty-five minutes of cleaning and applying
gauze, Mark is lifted into the back seat of the jeep and Susan
and Mads climb in. The jeep then slowly pulls away.
Julie, Rajesh, Manos and I are left with our
bikes and the rest of this steep hill. Still a bit shaky from
the incident we walk the bikes down much of the way. After a short
ride we come to a boulder field and end up carrying the bikes
over fifty meters of rough stones. The road then continues its
descent and this time the wind is in our favour. A strong 30-40
kph wind pushes us down the rough roads and onto a series of sandy
ridges, which cut along the edge of a river gorge.
We come to a rocky stream crossing – a
ten-foot width of what looks to me like eighteen inches of glacial
fed fun. Looking around we see no alternative – so we strip
off shoes and socks and push our bikes through. Julie wins the
lottery – just as she’s about to start across a truck
comes by and she hops in. The wind dries out my feet quickly and
soon the wind is pushing me down the valley again.
When I can forget about Mark and stop worrying
if he has a serious head injury – the ride is fun. Downhill,
tailwind, and ridges, some bumps – what’s not to like.
Several small villages create some confusion. Barley is stacked
in piles in the main square creating a maze through which we navigate.
I barrel along the downhills and at one point catch up with our
jeep. They have to take it slow – since the bumps are inducing
nausea. Not too surprising – if I was lying down in the
jeep I would doubtless be car sick under the best of circumstances.
As we near Tingri – now visible at the
end of the valley – I look back. Amazing. The peaks of Everest
and Cho Oyu perfectly frame the valley. A very dramatic vista
indeed.
Our dirt road turns into a paved road, which
very soon after the transition enters the small town of Tingri.
There is no hospital here – so the jeep pulls into the Snow
Leopard Inn. Mark is helped to a room and the jeep heads out in
search of a doctor. Mark seems to be brightening up – and
insists on seeing each of us - and thanking us for our help.
Camp awaits – so we head out of Tingri.
It should be twelve kilometres – despite Rajesh insisting
it’s about six. I have learned my lesson from Gyatso La!
I push against a headwind and manage to disconnect from the physical
effort and find a place where I’m just riding the bike.
Finally I come to the tents set up on a putting-green perfect
piece of pasture behind some abandoned mud structures. To the
south, Everest and Cho Oyu are prominent in the afternoon sun.
Mads arrives in the jeep and we are all relieved to hear that
the doctor’s assessment of Mads is positive. No major head
injury or broken bones.
After tea and soup we decide to try the local
hot springs – a cluster of concrete buildings on the far
wall of the valley. We walk into the courtyard and see a concrete
walled pool of brown water – perhaps eight meters by three
meters. A Chinese man is soaking already. The owner shows us a
shower – a nozzle pointing out over a dirty ceramic floor
and we opt to head straight for the “hot tub”. I enter
the brown water, sliding over the algae on the rocky bottom and
find a hot spot. I soak as the others hurl bits of algae at each
other and even go so far as to immerse their heads in the water.
No thanks.
Friday October 3 – Over LaLung La
[ 60km, 4 hours]
Tea arrives and I note that it’s a tropical
6 degrees in the tent. I pack up my stuff between sips of tea
and don a layer of Gore Tex to screen me from the wind as I settle
at our open-air breakfast table. The sun first lights up the summits
of Everest and Cho Oyu – their golden tops peeking over
the valley walls.
Rajesh appears and the logistics of the day are
discussed. He will box up Sue and Marks bike and then collect
then from the Snow Leopard hotel and they will start on their
drive back to Kathmandu – hopefully reaching the border
by the end of today. A spare jeep has been located and it will
support Julie, Mads, Manos and I for the ride up to LaLung La
– a significant climb.
The morning is calm and it’s a relaxing
ride along the edge of the valley. At several places the river
widens into a lake and a variety of Himalayan ducks float along.
I realize this is our last day in a Tibetan valley and that from
LaLung La we should have a view of the Himalayas so I look forward
to the endless climb. The valley rolls by with views of Yaks pulling
plows, mud bricks cut out of the valley floor and left to dry
in the sun. Small villages and ruins of old monasteries dot the
valley floor. Several times it looks like the valley ends and
the climb must start – but each time the road ducks behind
a ridge and the valley continues on in a different direction.
The valley narrows to a gorge and focuses the developing wind.
I ride into the headwind for another five kilometres and then
find the truck pulled over by the stream.
The usual crowds of children and adults mill
around and watch us. One woman has something wrapped in a coat.
She uncovers it and I decline the offer to purchase the raw hind
leg of goat – complete with hoof. Three young girls appear.
They have wide ornate, silver belts and calm, expressionless faces.
One shyly shows an amazing fossil of a spiral shell.
Mark’s jeep pulls up and we cluster around
and Mark jokes with us about being sorry to deprive us of his
company. He’s alert but is clearly very uncomfortable moving
from one side to another. His forehead is covered with patches
of gauze, which poke out from a bandana on his head. Sue joins
us at the lunch table and outlines their plan to get to Kathmandu
and then delay their return while Mark grows some new skin and
the swelling and bruising go down. With any luck we should see
them again in Nepal before we fly home.
The headwind continues after lunch – but
Mads, Manos and I are still game. We plod into the wind –
a relentless 30 kph – like a hand pushing us back. The road
threads through ridges toward the pass and even before the climb
starts our progress is slow. I mentally settle in for a three-hour
climb. Ahead, Manos and Mads have stopped at a small bridge. They’ve
had enough fun for one day. Not wanting to hold up the group I
agree to pack it in and we shoe-horn all the bikes into the jeep
and start the drive up to LaLung La.
The jeep climbs and climbs. Long switchbacks
weave around the end of the valley and we can look down onto an
enormous open plain where the road turns to Mount Kailash. It
becomes clear that riding this stretch up to the top would have
been soul-destroying and probably would have taken more like four
or five hours. As we round a ridge near the top the massive snow
covered Shishapangma comes into view. At more than 8000 meters
it’s a “name-brand” summit – all the more
dramatic as it towers over the dull brown Tibetan plateau.
At the top of the pass we pull out the bikes
for the brief 7km descent to camp between the pass of LaLung La
and Trang La. The first gentle part of the downhill requires pedalling
into the wind – then the road tilts down and I coast through
bumpy switchbacks. Down below – nestled in the valley I
can see our tents set up beside a small river – across the
road from a cluster of buildings. Near our tents are some yak
skin tents with smoke drifting up from a stovepipe in their center.
At camp we sit watching the valley – too
lazy at first to get our gear from the truck and change. Two old
Tibetan women – their faces a mass of wrinkles - come and
sit beside us. They chatter to each other. One dons Julie’s
bike helmet and then both dissolve into giggles.
After some tea and fresh clothes I settle cross-legged
on a small grass mound. They seem to grow up like mushrooms. Yaks,
sheep and goats are descending down the ridges as dusk approaches.
One of the goatherds comes by on his way to get water from the
stream – as does his father a few minutes later. They move
from tent to tent checking us out – offering grins and “hello”.
Saturday October 4th – Over Trang La to
Nyalam
[67km, 4 hours 30 min]
The valley floor is coated with a thick layer
of frost as I watch the sun touch the summit of Shishipangma.
The sheep start to move about. The dogs which serenaded us for
much of the night scamper about and bark at each other. I take
a few pictures in the dim morning light – hoping for the
best. Over breakfast the village kids return to gawk at us and
motion for food. I think about how the boy sleeping in the Yak
tent must be about the same age as my sons – and how through
the simple lottery of where you’re born the life you lead
is so different. It’s not a depressing thought – I
simply acknowledge it for what it is – obviously an easier
thing to accept when you’re the one with the privileged
outcome.
Today’s climb to Trang La is written up
as 7.7km and 500 meters up – Taking us up above 5000 meters.
As we emerge from the valley to the wide uphill plain a freezing
headwind greets us. As my fingers and toes turn to ice I get a
glimpse of snow-covered peaks on the horizon. I stop and warm
fingers between my thighs to get some feeling back. A few kilometres
more and I reach the large cluster of prayer flags. For once,
the view is extraordinary. Cho Oyu and Shishipangma are prominent
and a handful of other snow and ice capped peaks complete the
skyline. This is the view I have been dreaming of.
The mandatory pictures are taken and we study
the dark, deep valley between peaks. This is where the road to
Kathmandu cuts through the mountains. You don’t so much
cross the Himalayas as you avoid them by sneaking through these
deep valleys. The descent off the Tibetan plateau starts with
quick descents and sharp turns. Stops are required to warm cold
fingers – to ensure some hand strength is left for braking.
The guides avoid a long sequence of switchbacks by barrelling
cross-country down from the pass. Julie and I – mindful
of Mark’s outcome – stay on the road and continue
the descent. The lunch truck passes by and sets a target of a
lunch stop in the next five kilometres. We ride along the road
– now hugging the side of the river gorge. With the river
a hundred meters below and the road chiselled out of the gorge
wall a spot for lunch will be tough. After about seven kilometres
the truck comes into view. A small side road drops down to the
river. We’re glad to bounce down the hillside to the truck
– but the ride back up to the road after lunch will be a
different matter.
Twenty-five kilometres remain before we get to
the campsite past Nyalam – although we still have another
500 meters to descend – so we hope for the best. Mads and
I continue – although at our own paces. Our route alternates
pleasant downhill sections with sandy climbs across ridgelines,
which cut into the valley. The inevitable headwind develops and
some of the climbs force me down into the granny gear. The valley
narrows to a gorge and the steep walls now start to support small
scruffy trees – the first hint of green vegetation in weeks.
At one village a Yak prances onto the road –
an odd sight for such a typically mellow and slow moving creature.
Then a string of Tibetans are pulled onto the road – connected
to the Yak by a rope. I stop well clear of this little drama and
watch as they try to cajole the Yak into a stone-walled pen on
the far side. After a brief tug of war the Yak goes in the right
direction and the road is clear.
The trees on the gorge walls increase in stature
and the road crosses a bridge and into the town of Nyalam. The
concrete main road is well kept and the buildings seem reasonably
modern. Mads stops at the China Telecom office to check that trucks
will meet us at the border tomorrow and is assured everything
is arranged. I go in search of a chocolate bar – but come
up empty.
Cycling out of town we see the traffic is at
a complete standstill. On the left side of the road is an eight-foot
deep three-foot wide ditch with a large drainage pipe. We push
our bikes along the two-foot margin between the ditch and the
line of motionless vehicles. Ahead of us a Yak crosses the road
and at the edge of the ditch jumps back as the dirt crumbles away.
It becomes agitated and tries again – finally finding a
pedestrian bridge - some planks covered with sheet metal. It steps
carefully and I expect it to crash down – but the bridge
holds the weight. I push my bike forward again.
The source of the obstruction becomes clear.
A loader is filling in the ditch and the vehicles just have to
wait. Carrying bikes we climb uphill around the obstruction and
then continue a few kilometres to a knoll looking down the gorge.
The road down is imposing – clinging to the wall and dropping
steeply. A small terrace below us holds a few tents and when our
truck clears the traffic jam it will set up there. Above this
the gorge wall rises up and up. A snow covered peak looms above
and a hanging glacier is the source of a small stream which runs
down past the terrace where we will camp. Mads finds a nook out
of the wind with a great view of the valley and we settle there
– sipping from our water bottles and soaking up the scenery
– waiting until the truck passes by.
The camp is set up on the terrace. I wander out
of the tent past the truck and five feet away there is a very
large yak standing among our bicycles. It wanders up to the kitchen
tent a licks some powdered dish soap out of a bowl. A head pokes
out of the kitchen tent – Badiman spys the yak and shouts
at – making it move off to the stream. Its large tongue
flicks in and out - it bellows – clearly it is not a happy
yak. It wanders back but a few well-thrown rocks persuade it to
keep its distance.
Sunday October 5th – Descent to Nepal
[64km, 4hours]
In order to get through customs – 40km
away we have agreed on an early start. I emerge from tent to discover
that the brief rain in the night has resulted in snow deposited
on the hills around us. The morning is very crisp and I done Gore
Tex everything to hold off the chill. I clip into the bike and
set off on the steep road dropping down through the gorge.
The sandy surface forces attention to the road.
Periodically a stream from the gorge wall washes across the road
and I need to guess which path is most likely to allow me to get
across with dry feet. The gorge drops even faster than the road
and soon I am a hundred meters above a raging snow fed stream.
The road switches back and eventually crosses the river and I
stop to warm my hands.
After 15 kilometres I stop to examine the surroundings.
I have lost a lot of altitude. The air is warmer and for the first
time I notice that the vegetation has a smell – a sharp
contrast to the almost odourless Tibetan plateau. It’s also
become noticeably humid. The road continues to plunge along the
edge of the spectacular gorge – with walls now towering
several thousand feet above on each side. I know that there are
huge mountains on each side – but these can’t be seen
– since I am deep inside the gorge.
After 90 minutes I have covered the 33 km to
the Chinese border town of Zhangmu. It’s concrete main street
switches back down the steep gorge wall. We glide down through
the small amount of traffic - passing modern concrete block buildings
perched on the slopes. A dozen switchbacks later we pull up at
Chinese customs. Forms are filled out – queues are negotiated
and in about an hour we are ready for the 12km descent to the
river and the bridge to Nepal.
The descent is muddy, steep and rocky. It ends
up being a fun puzzle – avoiding the jeeps, picking a line
through the muddy rocks and keeping the bike under control. At
the final switchback before the bridge we wait for our truck.
Our luggage must be carried across the border by a shuttle truck
(or porters). Several other trucks unload and then attempt to
turn around to return uphill. With a sequence of whistles and
thumps they jitter back and forth – sometimes with wheels
right on the edge of the drop-off. We bid our Tibetan guide and
driver farewell and head over the bridge to Nepali customs. That
simple task out of the way we find a restaurant and wait for the
luggage transfer.
As we work our way through bowls of Thukpa –
Dawa comes by and explains to Mads that it’s a Hindu holy
day and there is no sign of our Nepali vehicles. This explains
all the red paste smeared on everyone’s foreheads and the
red powder rubbed on the wheels of the trucks. The usual baggage
handler is on vacation and things appear to have fallen apart.
Other tourists relying on the public bus are nervous – some
need to fly out from Kathmandu tomorrow – taxis are offered
at outrageous prices.
Julie and I wander down the main street –
which takes all of ten minutes to explore. After a short discussion,
Mads suggestion that we ride on – and find a hotel if our
truck does not appear – seems preferable to sitting here.
Off we go down the river valley. The first portion of the road
is rocky and has a number of water crossings – but with
the lower altitude the water is pleasantly warm – as I learn
when I stall out in eighteen inches of water after hitting a submerged
rock. I strip off wind pants and for the first time ride in bike
shorts. After 20 kilometres of descent the paved road begins and
we wail down the valley. Caution is required since washouts can
appear at anytime and in some places they are steep and very muddy.
In one place there is an eight-foot mound of rock over the road
– and I assume this is the cause of our trucks delay –
until I see the nose of a bus pushing up to the sky and then thumping
down on my side of the mound.
One village has a novel set of speed bumps at
the entrance to town. Two eight-foot planks are lying on the road
– offset to require steering around them. Each has an array
of three-inch nails sticking up into the air.
The valley becomes greener and lusher as we decend.
Rice terraces line the steep walls. A suspension bridge beside
a resort advertises the world’s longest bungee jump –
one hundred and sixty meters. Further on we see several towers
of bamboo from which swings have been constructed. Part of the
religious days events include spending some time with your feet
not touching the ground. Some teens swing aggressively skyward
– causing the bamboo to sway and flex.
After two hours we find ourselves in Barahbise.
Mads has found a phone and requested a jeep to take us farther
– since this small town has no suitable hotel. In the two
hours it takes for the jeep to come we watch and listen as Hindu
music is cranked out and children put on dancing display for a
phalanx of villagers. We go in search of Nepali tea and sit on
a small bench by the side of the main road – watching two
children chase each other around and over some parked buses.
The jeep arrives at dusk and whisks us down valley
roads. As it gets dark I become convinced that we will either
be killed on the hairpin bends or run someone over in one of the
villages. The sharp turns and bumps quickly have me clenching
my teeth hoping to hold off the growing nausea. I nearly ask for
us to pull over but we reach the bottom and then start to climb
and the slower speed is more tolerable. We climb up to Dhulikhel
– a long 22 km climb of 1200m that will now not be cycled.
My stomach unkinks as the lights of the village come into view.
As we pull into the courtyard Mads asks if Julie had a good nap
– since she has been so quiet. Julie admits to hanging on
for dear life and trying to keep her lunch down.
The hotel rooms are large and opulent. I shower
and then don the same dirty cycling clothes I arrived in –
since the luggage is still at the border. Julie and I choose simple,
familiar dinners to pamper our sore stomachs.
Monday October 6th – Dhulikhel to Kathmandu
[32 km, 1hour 45 minutes]
On the balcony of the Himalayan Horizons I watch
the clouds in the rice-terraced valley below. I am now getting
wound up about the return trip – Julie and I fly out tomorrow.
I shower again – more for the novelty of it – since
I am again in the same set of dirty bike clothes at the end of
it. I return to the balcony and the other riders heads poke out
and we head off for breakfast and bikes.
The road is paved and busy – trucks and
cyclists whizzing past. There is a bike lane and Mads reminds
us to ride on the left now that we are back in Nepal. A quick
descent leads to the start of another ridge to climb – but
at this low altitude I can for the first time push hard on the
pedals and expect to recover. Buses are a nuisance as they dart
to the edge and then pull out again. We enter the very busy town
of Bhaktapur where the bus traffic becomes truly crazy. Finally
after weaving between and past buses we duck out onto a side road
and exchange the clutter of traffic for the clutter of pedestrians.
The buildings thin out and rice paddies appear by the side of
the road. The rice is tall and yellowing – ready for the
fall harvest. The road leads to the edge of Kathmandu. We skirt
the airport and then weave through a maze of busy minor streets.
Finally we reach Thamel and pull into the alley to the Hotel Dynasty.
We shake hands and congratulate each other in the courtyard and
then head inside. The place feels remarkably like home.
After a shower – and return to the same
clothes – I head over the Utse. I ask the receptionist for
the Beamounts – getting a blank look. Then I try British
bike rider and his face lights up “Oh, yes. Bike crash –
very bad. I walk him to his room!”. I call up and soon I’m
sitting with Mark chatting about the last few days of the trip.
He is very lively but still not very mobile. Sue arrives and we
discuss their hopeless Nepali doctor and agree to catch up more
over lunch. Julie and I meet with Sue at the “French”
restaurant across the street and have the “suggestion”
- strips of ham with cheesy mustard filling.
The rest of the day is spent hobbling about in
my bike shoes doing some last minute souvenir shopping. I get
some Tibetan books recommended by Mads, prayer flags and a map
of the route I cycled and few other knick-knacks. Luggage arrives
and bikes are dismantled - everything is packed away. We meet
for a final dinner of the full crew – including the Nepal
staff. We hand out tips and there is much smiling and clasping
of hands in the Nepali greeting.