Wolfgang's photos with the keyword: Labatama

Our group to the Labatama trekking tour

25 Jan 2010 1 698
This is our group to the Labatama plateau: The horseman, myself, Mithe our tour assistent who passed away one year later in a disco brawl, then our cook, my wife Salama, the second horse man and Pima the organizer and tour guide.

Reaching the end of the plateau

A thin snow layer covered the hills

Pack back in the tent and raise our sleeping bags

10 Apr 2008 1 746
During the night time it was a heavy storm blowing over the plateau and suddenly was blow away our tent. Our crew immediately improvised an other roof over our heads that we hadn't to stay outside in the Blizzard storm. From one moment to the other it was calm and next morning the landscape was covered with a thin layer of snow like iced sugar.

A steep climb up to the Labatana lakes

10 Apr 2008 703
There is a steep way up to climb on fixed ropes to reach the first lakes of many others.

We reach the DagaLa (pass 3200 m)

10 Apr 2008 1 769
Its a custom to walk on the left side of the cairn and set a stone onto the top.

View back to the small village

Residential area on the way to Thimphu

10 Apr 2008 661
On the way back to the Paro valley and to Thimphu we passed a small village were we could rest for a while. I forgot its name but not the warm hospitality from the villagers and the invitation to visit their rebuilt monastery. The drawing of the phallus on house walls is a sign for the power and protection against bad influences. In Bhutan the phallus is an integral part of ceremonies observed by communities, commonly used to ward off evil spirits and counter evil.

Chorten on the way down to the Paro valley

Way up to the DagaLa (pass 3200 m)

Bhutanese herds woman selling cheese

10 Apr 2008 1 548
Oh well maybe for cooking an spicy hot Bhutanese chilly curry. Later in Bhutans district Bhumtang people made an yak cheese in top quality.

Mithe our friend and guide assistance

10 Apr 2008 497
In honor of our faithful friend who took care of us all the trekking way. Mithe passed away in 1997 caused by a disco brawl. We keep our friend in best memory.

Our horses have a rest

10 Apr 2008 1 648
Once I was ask by a Bhutanese friend, what I would like to be my next life on the steps to the Nirwana. I never was asked such a question before so I had to think a long time what creature would be nice. Never an human being again as they are wrong thinking, making wars, conflicts, cheating each other being corrupted, killing the other for nothing ect. ect. My answer then was easy: An eagle? An elephant, a tiger? Then I said that an horse in Bhutan would be nice because the Bhutanese people keep the animals so nice.

Bhutanese farm house

10 Apr 2008 1010
Bhutanese architecture is a remarkable adaptation of Tibetan architecture to different ecological conditions. As in Tibet, the walls of fortresses slope inwards and are whitewashed, with the windows becoming larger in the upper storeys. However, in Bhutan, the need to cope with heavy precipitation and the availability of wood have given its architecture a flavour all its own. Wood is widely used. The assembling of windows and doors is so complicated that the work is done at ground level, the finished elements being fitted into the upper walls later. Windows are characterized by trilobed crossbars at the top and by complicated lintels that carry symbolic meaning in all of their parts. Lintels and windows are painted with floral or geometric designs. The roofs of houses are pitched above a flat floor. They are mortised and covered with shingle held in place with heavy stones. These pitched roofs are completely original in style and help give an impression of lightness to the whole building.

Genekha village

10 Apr 2008 583
The last village on the way to the Labana plateau.

Pupils of the Genekha Primary School

10 Apr 2008 1 881
A group photo in honor of the principal, teachers and all the pupils of the Genekha Primary School.

Phima our tour guide

10 Apr 2008 433
We never forget his high value help to make us possible this nonrecurring and grandiose trekking tour.

Preparing the steps for our horses ...

10 Apr 2008 595
... to cross the snow field. It looks easy but took more than one hour to work on it.

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