Tibet

Share your trip photos, tracklogs, experience & tips. Ask the locals info about your planned destination.

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dankailo
Posts: 64
Joined: Wed Jun 10, 2009 11:13 pm

Re: Tibet

Postby dankailo » Sat Oct 23, 2010 3:15 pm

Hi Bro,

A very beautiful and details introduction to Tibet. Hope I could travel the same route to Tibet.

Stay healthy and travel more when you are young.

:peace: :good:

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naim
Posts: 212
Joined: Mon Apr 13, 2009 10:13 pm

Re: Tibet

Postby naim » Sun Oct 24, 2010 1:28 am

"The latrine is almost subhuman. It's hard enough to aim through a hole reduced to a slit by the calcified accretions of many previous visitors, without at the same time having to flash a torch to warn other guests and extract thin sheets of Boots travel tissue in a freezing, force 8 gale. Many years ago, encountering similarly appalling conditions in a boat on Lake Tanganyika, I took Imodium to prevent me having to go to the toilet ever again. As I squat in this howling tempest three miles up in the sky, I think cyanide might be the better option."

- Michael Palin in HIMALAYA, describing the toilet at Rongbuk Monastery, near Everest Base Camp.
http://palinstravels.co.uk/book-3527

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He describes it rather well. :mrgreen:

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Pls see my travelogues at http://naim.my - THANKS!

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moeyhc
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Posts: 2240
Joined: Wed Sep 17, 2008 10:53 am
Location: Penang - Nuvi 300, 205W, 2575RLM, M1200, M1000B/C, Papago N1

Re: Tibet

Postby moeyhc » Sun Oct 24, 2010 7:52 am

Thanks for the insight and summary of the caveman sanitary situation in Tibet. I'll pass for now and shall return when some brilliant Idiots invent a disposable Loos :mrgreen: .... Cheers!
Common Sense Is Not Common.

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naim
Posts: 212
Joined: Mon Apr 13, 2009 10:13 pm

Re: Tibet

Postby naim » Mon Oct 25, 2010 12:51 am

My encounter with Mt Everest, story in full. Including much-requested Base Camp loo pics, hahaha!

Pls visit: http://m.naim.my/qomolangma-aka-everest-at-last

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For full story, pls visit: http://m.naim.my/qomolangma-aka-everest-at-last

THANKS!
Pls see my travelogues at http://naim.my - THANKS!

FrancisTLim
Valued Contributor
Posts: 167
Joined: Wed Sep 17, 2008 8:34 pm

Re: Tibet

Postby FrancisTLim » Mon Oct 25, 2010 1:59 am

Very nice photos and descriptions.

I didn't know that the Everest Base Camp is in Tibet. I always had the impression that it was in Nepal. Are there more than one Everest Base Camp?

Also, I learnt previously that Everest was 8848m. Seems that it has been corrected downwards by 4 metres.
Regards,
FrancisTLim.

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naim
Posts: 212
Joined: Mon Apr 13, 2009 10:13 pm

Re: Tibet

Postby naim » Mon Oct 25, 2010 11:14 am

FrancisTLim wrote:Very nice photos and descriptions.

I didn't know that the Everest Base Camp is in Tibet. I always had the impression that it was in Nepal. Are there more than one Everest Base Camp?

Also, I learnt previously that Everest was 8848m. Seems that it has been corrected downwards by 4 metres.


Thanks, you can climb Everest from either Nepal (via southeastern ridge) or Tibet (northeastern ridge - more challenging). So each side has its own set of base camps.

I'm using the Chinese official height of 8844m, as per the sign board at base camp in pic. Another published height is 8850m. :)
Pls see my travelogues at http://naim.my - THANKS!

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naim
Posts: 212
Joined: Mon Apr 13, 2009 10:13 pm

Re: Tibet

Postby naim » Mon Nov 08, 2010 5:58 pm

Thanks for following, guys, and here's another instalment:

http://m.naim.my/lhasa-to-shigatse-pass ... -glaciers/

A Lhasa-Shigatse 300km road trip, via Kambala Pass & Kharola Pass, both almost 5000m high. Also a great view of Yamdrok Lake, Kharola Glacier & Mt Noijin Kangsang.

EXCERPT

This is Lhasa River, which passes to the south of Lhasa City. In eastern Tibet, the river abruptly veers southwards to enter India, then Bangladesh, where it’s known as the famed Brahmaputra River.

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We cross to the southern side of Lhasa River …

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… and make a brief stop at a sacred ‘water burial’ site (which has since been closed due to nosey tourists dropping by). In Tibetan Buddhism, the normal way of disposing a dead body is by ‘sky burial’ where the body is dismembered and left at the ‘sky burial’ site for vultures to feed on. If the body is diseased, then the vultures may not eat it (or flesh may harm them), so the option is use either ‘water burial’ or ‘fire burial’ or ‘ground burial’. In ‘water burial’ the dismembered body is thrown into the river.

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After a blast of some macabre Tibetan culture we press on into the mountains along the Lhasa River. This is beginning to look like South Island, New Zealand.

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Up the Kambala Pass, which will eventually reach 4,800m (15,700ft).

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...


PLS READ COMPLETE STORY HERE: http://m.naim.my/lhasa-to-shigatse-pass ... -glaciers/
Pls see my travelogues at http://naim.my - THANKS!

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moeyhc
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Joined: Wed Sep 17, 2008 10:53 am
Location: Penang - Nuvi 300, 205W, 2575RLM, M1200, M1000B/C, Papago N1

Re: Tibet

Postby moeyhc » Mon Nov 08, 2010 8:56 pm

:tq:
Common Sense Is Not Common.

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alyem
Regional Mapper
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Joined: Mon Sep 22, 2008 2:23 pm
Location: K. Lumpur (Nuvi 710, Legend Hcx) and Oregon 300

Re: Tibet

Postby alyem » Mon Nov 08, 2010 11:04 pm

:prayer: :prayer: :tq: :tq:
73, 9w2yyl
You need the MAP, We need your TRACK

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sobamy
Polygon Mapper
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Joined: Fri Dec 18, 2009 12:51 am
Location: Selangor - Garmin Nuvi 1350 Nuvi 2575R

Re: Tibet

Postby sobamy » Tue Nov 09, 2010 8:00 am

Beautiful photos. Lovely sceneries. =D> =D> :tq: :tq:
~~ freely receive ~ freely give ~~

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