For February break, I headed to Nepal with my good friend Sharon. Our first stop was Kathmandu where we stayed for three nights. Here's a typical street in Kathmandu: chaotic but friendly. |
Up and out early in the morning. We saw vendors selling all kinds of things. Nepal is semitropical, so the fruits were delicious. |
"Singing bowls" are very popular. They resonate when you rub the mallet around the edge, like rubbing a wet finger around a wine glass. Laaaaaaaaaa! |
Namaste. We were blessed and given a red mark on our foreheads by this Hindu gentleman. He also gave us a special saffron flower, all for a dollar. |
Walking through the crowded Thamel section of Kathmandu, we came across this beautiful reflecting pool. |
Pedicabs are everywhere, rundown but reliable. |
Nepalis seem to carry everything imaginable. Like these guys carrying beautiful rugs. |
The rat is the guardian of the Hindu god Ganesh and is seen outside his temple. This one is made of brass and has saffron and red offerings on him. |
This temple is to the Hindu god Vishnu and is famous because Jimi Hendrix sat on the steps and played guitar when he visited Katmandu in the 1960's. |
This relief sculpture of the god Shiva is quite popular. He is thought to be especially benevolent towards women so you often see them making offerings and praying to him. |
The next day, we went on a temple tour around Nepal. We started with the tiny Golden Temple. |
It's called Golden temple because all the statues of gods inside look like they are made of gold. |
My favorites were the statues of Prince Siddhartha (Buddha) riding on an elephant. Prayer wheels are on the rack on the right- turn them and the Hindu prayers on them are sent for you. |
Cool brass lion at Golden Temple |
Monkey and prayer wheels. If you can't walk around the temple the 100 times you are supposed to, to be devout, turn the prayer wheels so that the prayers written on them will go around for you. |
Next we went to Patan Durbar square, another complex of temples from the 18th century, built around a "newer" royal palace. |
Animals are often featured in Hindu art and architecture, like the elephants in the prior photo, and the cobra with the bird on its head on top of the column here. |
There are so many beautiful and ornate sculptures and carvings everywhere on the temples. Here are some many-armed gods, like Shiva, on the beams. |
This is the oldest Krishna temple in Nepal. Krishna was one of the incarnations of the god Vishnu. Some of the people hanging around are local college students. |
The palaces were often built near a water source. In this case it's one they still use. |
So much artwork with beautiful gods and animals everywhere... |
Kids enjoy playing on the stone elephants (hundreds of years old) in the square. |
Strands of saffron flowers and incense are sold as offerings. |
More stone elephants at Patan Durbar square... a procession is coming... |
Hundreds of Hindu pilgrims in a procession were walking from Patan Durbar square to the sacred Pashupati temple (about eight miles away). |
All kinds of musical instruments in the procession. They were going to celebrate the annual feast of Shiva, a most revered Hindu god. |
A famous holy man was part of the procession and rode in a carriage The flags say "Om" in Sanskrit, and flowers in pots are offerings to Shiva. |
Pashupati is often used for funerals... we saw several funeral pyres across the dry river. Kind of eerie to see cremations of people out in the open like that. |
Funeral pyres up close. |
Pashupati is the most sacred Hindu temple complex in Nepal. |
At Pashupati, there is a row of shrines to Shiva. When I was in this area I got an incredible feeling of deja-vu, I have no idea why. |
Looking inside the Shiva shrines. It's a symbol of life. |
Another Sadhu, wearing the saffron robes of the holy. |
Cows are sacred in Nepal and you see them roaming everywhere. |
The eyes on the stupa are Buddha's eyes: Wisdom and Compassion. The flags are prayer flags, each one contains prayers written in Sanskrit. |
Feeding the pigeons around Bouda Stupa is considered to be good karma, so large bowls of feed are sold. |
This is a sand mandala painted by monks in one of the nearby shops. Each day it is swept away, to remind us of how fleeting life really is. |
Last temple stop was the "Monkey Temple". Look closely and I think you can see how it got this name... There are monkeys everywhere around this stupa. |
The monkeys were well-behaved and didn't bother us. |
There are many vendors around the monkey temple, selling things like oil paintings... |
This artist loved showing off his favorite work, a painting of a place in the Himalayas that's special to him. |
Buddhist monk novices in the monastery at monkey temple. |
The senior buddhist monks were chanting in the monastery, really cool to hear. |
We enjoyed all our temple tours and were thoroughly enlightened. |
Back view of the Old Inn at Bandipur. Very comfortable and rustic place, with good hearty meals. |
View from the back of the Inn. We hiked to the top of the hill on the left, Thani Mai. There is a small temple to Shiva up there. |
Traditional Nepali house in Ramkot., round with a thatched roof. Cute kids (baby goats) outside. |
We saw chickens and goats everywhere in Nepal. They are both important food sources and can easily live off the land there. |
With the mild weather year-round, much of life in Nepal is lived outdoors. |
Goats and their caretakers (often children) are everywhere. The goats make good milk and cheese. |
Our wonderful trekking guide, Sook. He speaks five languages had lots of good information about the area. |
Trekking back to our hotel at Bandipur. |
As we got closer, we were treated to a view of the Annapurna range of the Himalayas, visible above the clouds... |
Sharon with a cow friend on the trail, Himalayas in the distance. |
Spectacular Manaslu with snow blowing off the peak as the sun was setting. Nepal was an amazingly spiritual place. I fell in love with the pristine Himalayas and will go back one day to see them. |