Friday 14 May 2010

himalayan adventures

we are in nepal now, and it is wonderful. people actually have a concept of personal space here! and we need blankets to sleep at night - its that cool! we didn't think we'd even be able to come, as there was a week long, rather intense maoist (d*** communists) strike that shut down the entire country. the maoists were out in the streets to beat any shop owner or taxi driver who was working. so the whole country was brought to a complete standstill. thankfully they called it off, because they realized that the people actually cared more about survival than communst ideology (who would have guessed?). as soon as we heard it was over we headed in.

we took the bumpiest all day ride possible from varanasi to the nepali border at sunauli - a ride that got started moderately late by indian standards because they were under the bus hitting something with a piece of rock for 2 hours. the bus had this cute horn that played a little song every time it was engaged - about every 5 seconds for 14 hours. next day we took another all day bus from the border to the town of pokhara. we got to stay with an uber cool nepali guy named neeraj, who is a friend of some of my cousins. the first night we had a delicious nepali dinner with him and his parents and family members. his father is the director of the international nepali fellowship - one of the biggest christian ngos in nepal! they have some sort of rule that foreign ngos can't do anything here, so that basically means that we had dinner with a very important man. and they gave us a room that was the nicest i have slept in for many a month.

pokhara is right on the edge of the annapurna range in the himalayas, probably one of the most famous trekking areas in the world. on the first day we headed out for a 2 day trek. haha, it sounds a lot more intense than it was. the first day involved a 2 hour hike up to a little village called dhampus at neeraj's suggestion. it was just outside the annapurna conservation area - so we didn't have to pay the large permit fee. the village was idyllic, and we didn't do anything for the rest of the day, except for eat some more nepali food and watch the odd cow go by. basically the place was deserted. we got up the next morning at 5 am and there was the huge annapurna mountain range right outside our window! (during the day the mountains are shrouded in clouds.) very beautiful. we then climbed another 2 hours (after a while on the wrong path) to a village called pothana where the views were even better. had breakfast, and then came all the way down. that night we had a fine dining experience in pokhara. the place is amazing. we had to search for a place we could afford. its like a tourist town in north america. rather impressive.

the next day was today. it was a truly epic day, soiled by only one little thing. actually, when i write the word soiled, more than one thing, but i won't get into that whole issue this time. when we got up after sleeping in, neeraj cooked us a satiating breakfast of buffalo burgers complete with fresh lettuce washed with clean water and coca cola to wash it all down. we then checked into a hotel because neeraj is heading up to dhampus himself for a romantic weekend. we then rented scooters!!!! $3.50 for the day! didn't realize gas was going to be so expensive though.... anyways, on these scooters we had more fun than one knew was imaginable. we found a waterfall and a cave with a river and a temple in it. then we went out into the countryside to a river with rapids that we swam in. but then it started to rain.

as we were grabbing our stuff, my "friend" devin dropped my camera onto a rock, from which it bounced into the river, ruining it. i miss it already. the last parts of my trip will be pictureless. but i forgave him, because he's my friend, and thats what friends do. even if he wasn't my friend, as per the words of Christ. plus it was in no way his fault. even if it would have been he more than made up for it by being the best scooter partner. after that, it started raining very heavily, so we went swimming more because it was warmer in the water than out. it started hailing huge half inch hail balls. when, after at least an hour, that finally ended, we headed back, but the rain/hail started again, along with intense wind that threatened to blow our bikes off the road and was rather painfull when combined with the hail on our tender, north american skin. it was exhilerating. tonight we cruised around pokhara in the dark on our scooters. the only thing better than unexpectedly hitting a speedbump on a scooter during the day is hitting one in the dark! we got lost, which added to the fun. tommorow we're heading for kathmandu....