Bedroom inside the farmhouse
Overland bus starts in early morning
Selling the piggy banks for saving the money
Selling fresh freshwater fish out of the Mekong
Morning market at the bus station in Pakse
Family tombs at a buddhist cementery
Family tombs at a buddhist cementery
New built temple near Wat Luang in Pakse
Lao kids at the Mekong river bank
Having fun at the river bank
Maenam Se mounths into the Mekong river
Simple guest house in Pakse
Ant larvae to sell for cooking
At the market in Pakse
Ferry pier to Cambodia
Having fun in one of the Mekong ponds
Khone Falls
Khone Falls
Khone Falls
Khone Falls
Don Det village
Don Det village on the river side
Young Lao girl guides us on the river
Pupils of the Genekha Primary School
Genekha village
Bhutanese farm house
Our horses have a rest
Mithe our friend and guide assistance
Bhutanese herds woman selling cheese
Way up to the DagaLa (pass 3200 m)
Fantastic panorama view over the plateau
Chorten on the way down to the Paro valley
Residential area on the way to Thimphu
View back to the small village
Kids in Wangdue Phodrang
Our hosts farmhouse in the Paro valley
Our host family
Downtown in Thimphu
Thanka painting in Thimphu
Visit an elementary school in Thimphu
Bhutanese kids interested in coversation
We reach the DagaLa (pass 3200 m)
A stone hut without a roof
A steep climb up to the Labatana lakes
Pack back in the tent and raise our sleeping bags
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Memorial Chorten in Thimphu


The Memorial Chorten was built in 1974 in memory of the Third King, H M Jigme Dorji Wangchuck, who died in 1972. There are no mortal remains of the King inside the chorten and only a photograph draped in ceremonial scarves on the ground floor serves as a discreet reminder that the chorten was built to fulfil one of his wishes. The late King had, in fact, decided to put into tangible form the three traditional pillars of Buddhism, the Word, Body and Mind of Buddha. He had the Commentaries of Buddha, the Tanjur, transcribed in letters of gold to represent the Word of Buddha and had 1,000 statues made to represent the Body of Buddha, but he died before he could complete the Mind of Buddha, in the form of a chorten.
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