Tag Archives: Beni

Solu Khombu Trek – Day 2

We woke up bright and early with tea in our tent.  It was a cold night, but putting Nalgene bottles filled with hot water at the foot of our sleeping bags helped loads.  Our trek today was about two and a half hours, once again, and it was not too bad.  Well, it was not too bad for us.  I don’t know how these porters do it.  They are carrying a ton of weight and they carry it all by using a strap that rests on their heads.  Totally different from anything I have ever tried.  But, I guess we’ve seen that many other cultures carry loads on their heads.  This looks very difficult though and potentially quite painful.  Seth brought up a good point, that  perhaps this is why there are many older people hunched over.  Not sure.

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Junbesi is a picturesque village in the valley of some beautiful mountains covered in large pine trees.  A river runs through the center of the valley and is the lifeline for the village.  They actually have a really interesting solution to drainage.  They dig ditches and lay flat rocks to cover the ditches, leaving enough space between the rocks to allow the water to drain.  We visited Junbesi Monastary.  Though it was empty, it was nice to poke around.  The monastery was painted in bright colors and had beautiful murals on the walls.  The art form here is so different from anything we’ve seen so far.  It’s refreshing.

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We, then, went to visit the Hillary Secondary School.  Sir Edmund HIllary, the first to summit Mount Everest, is the namesake of this school.  Whether he made a donation or not is something I don’t know.  It was nice to watch the children play.  And it’s absolutely adorable when you say namaste and place your hands together in front of your chest, because most of the time they will return your greeting.  So cute.  We spent a while watching them play.  Seth eventually turned into the main attraction.  He took a picture of a little boy that no matter how hard I tried I couldn’t get him to smile.  He just looked at me like I was a giant ugly bug.  Then I saw him look at Seth and smile largely.  It turned out that he liked to have his picture taken.  Seth was soon mobbed by children who wanted to get their picture taken and then look at them on the viewfinder.  They soon figured out that you could swipe the screen and scroll through the photos.  But once two fingers touched the screen the camera didn’t know what to do and just didn’t do anything.  It was fun to watch as Seth was encircled by the small children.

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That evening, Seth wasn’t feeling so well.  He probably was running a fever, either way he was feeling pretty crappy.  Hope that remedies itself quickly, because I’d hate for it to mess up Seth’s trip.

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Solu Khombu Trek – Day 1

We left the hotel bright and early at 6:20 in order to catch our flight at 7:45.  Thomas and Lakpah got us to the airport in time for our flight, but it turned out the flight was delayed till 9:20.  That’s ok.  We hung around for a bit before taking a short flight in a 20 passenger plane over some high valleys and mountain crests.  It was a beautiful little flight.  The descent was intense.  We followed a mountain ridge and them made a complete u-turn, dive bombing in order to land on a tiny dirt strip on the side of a mountain.  Fun!

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Phaplu is a small village of about 700 people.  Before they built a closer landing strip, Phaplu used to be the landing strip to climb Mount Everest.  That’s a long trek before you even reach base camp.  We went up to Hotel del Sherpa for some tea, and then met with Buddha, who showed us around the local hospital.  It was actually a very nice, clean facility.  It was nice to see, and to find that people use the cheap, if not free, medical service.  Then we had a quick lunch before heading out on our trek.

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Our trek today was only about 2-3 hours.  It was a pretty easy day through a beautiful valley where we ended up in Beni, in an open valley to camp by the river.  It’s a nice peaceful area.  There are a lot of people who pass by, and everyone is smiling and appreciative of a, “namaste”.  We watched children having an organized play time during school, where they played games that were unlike our childhood games, and difficult to figure out.  We watched a pack of mules walk by our campsite and cross a narrow wooden shaky bridge over a river.  It’s a nice start to our trek.