The Druk Path trail begins on a long dirt road behind the
Paro Dzong. If one did not know what to look for, the road would be
indistinguishable from any other rough road winding its way up into the higher
mountains that surround the Paro valley. From the beginning, our head trekking
guide, Sangay, instructs us to hike at our own pace. The higher we get, he
explains, the more easily we will quickly become cold, too quickly if we try to
wait for the slower-paced members of the group. In order to facilitate our
different hiking capacities, Sangay assigns one of his trekking staff to
accompany each group. In theory, there will be three groups—the “fast” group,
the “medium” group, and the “slow” group. Since there are only nine of
us—myself, Mike and Willa, Leeli and Rinpoche, Judy, Christina, Gina and Bill,
we wonder how this will work out. Wangyal, a sweet young man with a long lock
of dark hair falling into his eyes is assigned to the group I find myself in—the
“fast” group. This is not to say that I am a particularly fast hiker, although
I may be, but I know that having lived in Bhutan for nearly a year, I am
well-acclimatized and increases in altitude are less-troublesome for me now
than they have ever been. That is one very clear benefit to living at high altitude—once
one’s blood cells have adjusted to the change, differences in altitude of a few
thousand feet aren’t as taxing. Nevertheless, I remind myself, high altitude
sickness is notoriously unpredictable and can affect even the most seasoned
high-altitude climbers with no warning.
As a result, I feel grateful again to Francine, another member of the
tour group, who has given me her high altitude medications—not only for my own
benefit, in fact, not even particularly for me at all, but for the rest of the
trekkers, whose acclimatization has been occurring only over the past ten days.
This is with the exception of Khari Rinpoche and Leeli—Rinpoche because he
comes from the Solo Khumbu area of Nepal near Mt. Everest and Leeli because she has just
recently spent a month trekking in Nepal before joining our tour here in
Bhutan.
 |
Druk Path Trek |
As the dirt road winds gently upward, a cool breeze sails
high white clouds overhead and spring flowers nod their colorful faces at us
from green hedges. The “fast” group consists of myself, Mike, Willa, and for
the time being, Rinpoche. We bombard Rinpoche with questions about his nunnery
in Nepal and about his previous lives. In alternating Tibetan and English,
Rinpoche explains that he is the third in his lineage, the first Khari having
escaped over the mountains from Tibet during the take-over of Tibet in 1959.
This first Khari Rinpoche, Lobsang Tsultrim is known today as having realized
enlightenment within his lifetime. He spent many, many years in solitary
retreat high in the mountains and is reknowned as a realized
gom chen (great meditator). He founded
the nunnery of Khari Gaden Thanphilling after escaping into Khumbu over the
Nang pa pass, which today houses over 30 nuns. The second Khari tulku died very
early at age 9. And Rinpoche, now 31, lives mostly in Kathmandu, where he
studies, though he returns multiple times a year to his nunnery and works
ceaselessly to raise money to improve the living conditions of the nuns. As the
morning wears on, Rinpoche drops back to join the group behind us and Mike and
Willa and I continue upwards on the dirt road. As we pass one quaint little
farmhouse after another, all widely spaced out and most with large apple
orchards (the main product of the Paro valley) I am beginning to think that we
will never leave inhabited areas.
 |
Mani Wall |
Finally we come to a large mani wall at the
end of the road in a large green field. From here, I can see that the trail
begins a sharp ascent into the dark pine forests of the higher foothills. We
wait until the entire group has joined us to confer over a possible lunch spot.
No one is quite ready to stop yet, so Mike, Willa, and I forge ahead, quickly
making good progress up the steep pine-needled trail. It is obvious that
Wangyel is slightly confused and uncertain what to do with the fact that our
small group hikes much faster than he anticipated, so much so that he is being
pushed to walk faster than I think he would like to. In fact, at the break
point near the mani wall, Sangay informs the entire group that we are hiking
much faster than most
chillups and he
thinks we should alter our route to provide longer days on days two and
three.
As I ascend through the tall, fragrant pines, the trail
snakes upward and back into the folds of the mountain. Behind, the lush Paro
valley disappears from sight. By the time we eat lunch perched on the side of
the trail on moss-covered logs, there is no sound besides the whisper of the
wind in the green boughs overhead. Lunch this first day is simple, a sandwich,
hard-boiled eggs, and any snacks we have brought. Wangyal and the other
trekking guides have been carrying our packed lunches all this way. We have
only to bring water, snacks, raingear, and warm clothes. Even with this small
amount, my pack is quite heavy, due to my obsession with having enough water to
drink! Everyone is happy to stop and eat and we all chat during lunch.
Continuing, the trail is much the same, except now we are getting back into the
heights where the spring blooms of the rhododendron pierce the forest shadows
like glowing red embers. They are so vividly red or pink in color against the
green-brown background of the forest that my gaze is drawn to them over and
over.
 |
Rhododendron |
Finally, gaps of light begin to appear between the blue
pines, fir and bamboo trees, indicating that we are coming closer to the top of
the ridge. The walking is harder now--I can tell we’ve come up at least a
couple of thousand feet. Emerging out into high alpine valleys feels like
coming up out of deep water. Suddenly there is nothing but sky and distant
jagged horizons of mountain peak after mountain peak shifting and changing
under the shadow of the moving clouds.
 |
At the Pass, Jele Dzong |
A small dzong appears on a higher ridge,
its white washed stone walls and red band of ochre paint standing out in sharp
relief against the billowing cloud formations. Although we are tired, we are
ahead of the rest of the group and, even more, of the ponies who are carrying
the tents, our baggage, food, etc. Sitting still at this altitude with only our
raingear for warmth isn’t a great idea, so our small “fast” group decides to continue
hiking on to the dzong, even though Wangyal tells us that we will be camping
here for the night and that the hike to the lhakang will be part of our route
on the following day.
 |
Jele Dzong |
Jele Dzong, which turns out to be a small temple built by
Drukpa Kunley’s brother, commands a breathtaking 360 degree view of range after
range of mountains, including a view of snow clouds descending down through the
ridges and ravines of Jhomolari (23,995ft), the highest peak in Bhutan. Looking
back the way we have come, I can see the Paro valley far in the distance. From
this vantage point, it looks quite tiny. Wind whips the vertical prayer flags
erected to commemorate the dead that are arrayed alongside the temple. Iron
cables secure the building to the ground, informing us that this small dzong
must receive a beating from the elements. A small wooden house is under
construction slightly down the ridge and a few monks appear to be engaged in
its building. The courtyard of the lhakang appears to be deserted, but before
we have time to wonder too much, a young monk comes running carrying a key to
the main temple shrine hall. The temperature is quickly dropping as I unlace my
hiking shoes and pad somewhat reluctantly across the cold stone floor into the shrine
hall. Inside, the wood floors are dark and smooth with age and the passage of
many feet. The hall is large, but shadowed, its main figures of Guru Rinpoche
and his consorts gaze calmly down from the darkness. We perform the customary
three prostrations and make a small monetary offering on the shrine. The young
monk offers us holy water, which we sip, rubbing the rest of the liquid across
the tops of our heads.
It is now quite cold and the wind is whipping wildly
outside. We descend quickly to the campsite. The ponies are just arriving while
the rest of our group lies sprawled on the ground. As the pony men, cooks, and
trekking guides scurry about setting up our sleeping tents, the cooking tent,
and a dining tent, we all sit in a circle on small folding chairs and watch as
the sun begins its long descent. Quite quickly we are served hot tea, popcorn,
biscuits, and nuts. The food is welcome as is the hot milky tea. We are all
ravenous at this altitude (11,270ft). As the sun sets the sky takes on a
brilliant deep blue cast; the mountain peaks emerge again from their clouds,
and we can see the glow of the rising moon lighting up the ridge across from
our campsite. This night is a full moon, one of the largest full moons on
record due to the proximity of the earth to the moon. Across the campsite, a
yak herder’s tent emits a thin trail of smoke. Out of curiosity, Mike, Willa,
Rinpoche, myself, and Bill all walk across to visit.
 |
Waiting for Tea |
Inside the “tent,” which is little more than a couple of
tarps stretched over bamboo poles over a dirt floor, a middle-aged woman with
bare feet and arms is stirring a huge pot of boiling milk perched on a pile of
wood over a burning fire. I marvel at the woman’s smile and her seeming
imperviousness to the biting cold that has caused the rest of us to bundle up
in every extra garment we brought. I am wearing layers of long underwear, a
down vest, raingear, hat and gloves and am still freezing. Rinpoche talks with
the woman and tells us that she is making
chura
(Tibetan cheese), long strings of cubed blocks of yak cheese. The woman seems
as curious about us as we are about her. We watch as the milk curdles and she
begins to pour it through a large cheesecloth into another pot. She is
incredibly strong and her hands seem as impervious to heat as her feet to the
cold. She tells us that her son will soon be returning with their yak herd and
sure enough, we soon hear the ringing of many bells as the yaks come running
into the camping area, complete with numerous baby yaks, bounding up and down
next to their more sedate mothers. Around the edges of the tent can be seen
everything this mother-son team own, stacks of blankets and baskets, and
various objects no doubt useful, but utterly unknown to me. Before we leave, we
all buy a couple of the long strings of
chura.
At first I am reluctant, my only experience with this kind of cheese was
buying it many years ago in Tibet. I remember chewing one piece of the hard
tasteless cheese for hours without making any progress on softening it or eliciting
any flavor from it at all. But this
chura
is much different, far softer and more flavorful--it tastes marvelous at this
altitude.
Dinner finds us gathered around a table inside the dining
tent. A meal of numerous dishes—rice, green salad, veggie curries, meat, and so
on—covers the table. I can’t believe we are eating so much food and such good
food. Everyone is starving and we wolf down large quantities only to find a
desert of fresh fruit and hot pudding awaiting us afterwards. I can’t help comparing
the luxury of our situation with stories of colonial safaris where Englishmen
and women were sipping hot tea from china in the middle of the African deserts.
By the time we gather around the blazing campfire, I am ready for bed. But the
moon is just rising above the peaks of the mountains and the world is bathed in
brilliant silver light. We watch as the huge, gleaming orb of the moon climbs
higher into the ink-dark sky. The world seems very far away, and us here, our
breath streaming into the moonlight, breathing in the silence and the space,
like odd travelers to an unknown world.
 |
Waiting for the Moon |
Sleep is fitful. For one thing, I am freezing. My borrowed
down bag, which claims to be rated to 30 degrees below zero, can be no such
thing. As the night goes on, I gradually put back on every item of clothing I
brought. I clutch the hot water bottle the staff gave me to my chest and try to
relax. Every time I think I just might fall asleep, I have to get up, unzip the
tent, and duck behind a shadowed bush to pee. By the time morning comes, I
think that I must have risen at least nine times. I vow not to drink nearly so
much hot water the next night. At about 5am, on my ninth trip to the bushes,
the sun is rising and the world glitters with frost. The breath of the yaks and
ponies steams in the sunlight that quickly warms me. Only Leeli is up and we
whisper together in the early morning before the noises of the cooks and
horsemen begins to awaken the rest of the group.
 |
Early Morning Frost |
After a breakfast of
tsampa
(Tibetan barley flour soup), eggs, toast, and tea, we are on the path early.
This second day is said to be one of the longest and we want to get an early
start. The day is glorious, which is a relief, since we’ve been hearing
unseasonable tales of hail, snow, and rain. Hiking back up past the Jele Dzong,
even mountains that were shrouded in cloud the day before are now vividly
present, their jagged slopes breaking through the clear spring dawn like
razors. Mike, Willa, and I reach the Dzong first and lie about on the green
ridge until the rest of the group appears, at which point, we continue on,
disappearing into the forest that is again vivid with blossoms of purple,
yellow, and the brilliant red of the rhododendrons. I find myself frustrated
hiking with Wangyal, whose cell phone has regained coverage. He has it on
speakerphone and is engaged in a long, loud discussion with his girlfriend. I
keep gesturing at him to end his call, but he either doesn’t understand me or
doesn’t want to. But I feel irritated by having to listen to his chatter in
such a quiet and beautiful place. I only want to walk in silence and hear the
sounds of the woods, the wind, the mountains. Finally, in a fit of pique, I
charge past him on the trail and practically run a long distance down to where
the trail begins a steep ascent back up to the ridgeline. At 12,000 feet,
hiking so quickly is intense, beyond my normal pace, and I am sweating and
breathing in deep gulps as I surge up the trail, knowing that my uphill pace
will leave Wangyal far behind. And I do. Finally his voice vanishes and there
is only me, my breath, the wind sighing through the trees, the clouds sliding
by overhead. It would be peaceful but for the sense that I must keep on going
if I want to stay ahead of my guide. Willa and Mike are somewhere behind me
with Wangyal, and I feel a bit silly that I have so over-reacted to the phone
call. But, since I have gone so far, I just keep going until the trail final
emerges into a high meadow at about 13,000 feet.
 |
Day Two |
Here, I wait until Willa and Mike arrive and the three of us
lean back against our packs in the warm sunlight and watch the distant peaks
around us. We are all drowsy with exertion and sun when Wangyal arrives. We ask
him for our lunch, but he indicates that we will need to await the rest of the group
before eating, as lunch this day will be a “hot” meal. I can’t tell if eating a
“hot” meal for lunch is a particularly Bhutanese custom or if this is just an
extra perk for westerners who come on treks. But lunches in Bhutan are almost
always the usual hot rice, curries, peppers, etc. Personally, I prefer to just
snack, especially when hiking, and the thought of a huge hot meal isn’t very
appealing, but I hold my tongue and my patience this time.
 |
Holy Goats |
Sure enough, lunch is an actual hot meal, carried by our
guides in insulated containers. It’s hard to believe we can have such a meal in
the middle of a day of hiking in the wilderness at 13,000 feet! After lunch we
are informed that we will stay in the further of two campsites along the trail
since we are all hiking at such a good pace. Generally, the Druk Path trail
takes about six days, but we are doing it in four. Before this sounds
impressive, we learn that Bhutanese soldiers often do the entire trek in one
day as part of their training program. So, even though we are all feeling very
proud of our hiking skills, learning that the whole thing can be done in one
day, brings a bit of reality to the situation. It reminds me of
circumambulating Mt. Kailash (or Tise as its known in Tibet). When I
circumambulated Mt. Kailash in 1998 in November with Walker Blaine, there was
no one there expect us, the snow, and our two guides, who were always ahead of
us carrying our packs, but wearing nothing but flip-flops. On the second day,
before crossing the highest pass at 18,000 feet, we were overtaken by a group
of Tibetans, including an old man walking with a cane. Given the altitude, we
were walking about three or four feet before having to stop and gasp for
breath. The Tibetans, carrying nothing but bags of tsampa and their bowls,
surged past us up the pass. We learned that they had begun the route at about
4am that morning and would finish that evening. For us, the entire route took
three full days of hiking, including areas where we were breaking through the
snow and sinking up to our knees in places! The Druk Path seems a bit like
that.
 |
Going Up |
Leaving the lunch spot it is clear that the weather is
changing. The limpid blue sky of the morning has given way to increasing clouds
and the temperature is dropping. Not wanting to be caught on the trail in the
rain, Willa, Mike, Bill and I hike quickly along the ridge until it drops back
down into the forest. Here, it is clear that caravans of ponies have been
traveling, and we can see that there has been a lot of precipitation of various
kinds. The trail begins to slope downwards more and more steeply and besides
the psychological disappointment of losing the altitude we worked so hard to
gain, there is the increasing difficulty of the trail, which degenerates into
ridges of thick, oozing mud, and spaced at regular intervals. Trying to hop
from muddy ridge to ridge as the trail plunges downward is more than
challenging and I find myself sliding and slipping, struggling to maintain my
balance, sometimes in vain as I crash onto the ground in the mud. The trail
goes down and down. At one point, a white horse appears above us on the steep
slope, its coat gleaming pearl-like in the increasing gloom. At another point,
a huge white yak appears in front of us and as we stand gaping at its long,
silvery coat and size, it charges straight towards us, causing us to leap off
the trail and yell back to Bill to step off too before the yak reaches him.
There is a feeling of descending into a fairy world of hanging moss, shadows,
mythical animals, and unknown adventures. If the trail wasn’t so challenging,
it would be a rather magical descent. Rain begins, slowly, but increases
quickly. I’m worried that I’ll be soaked, since I’ve neglected to bring my rain
pants today. The precipitation hastens our pace and at about 5pm, Bill, Willa
and I cross over a roaring mountain brook into a small meadow nestled in a
remote valley between two high ridges, where Mike is waiting. Although I had
hoped we’d be camping again up high, as the rain increases in volume, I feel
grateful that we are stopping. The tents are mostly set up, which is good, as
we are freezing. Changing into everything I own, I pray that the sodden ground
doesn’t seep through the bottom of my tent. I splash my way over to the dining
tent, which is at least sheltered, but it’s muddy and very wet.
As we await the rest of the group, the rain changes suddenly
to snow that falls from the sky in thick, white sheets, so heavy with moisture
that the ground is immediately covered in white. By the time the rest of the
group arrives, everyone is exhausted and freezing. For a while we huddle in our
tents. Gradually, as darkness falls, the sound of the heavy snow falling begins
to fade. By the time we are called to dinner, the snow has stopped. The ground
is sodden under three inches or so of heavy wet snow, and mist curls in the
branches of the dark trees that surround our campsite. Somehow, in spite of the
wet and snow, the horsemen have started a campfire with huge, steaming logs
arranged in a teepee shape. As we huddle next to the smoking wood the fire
begins to gain strength and before long I am even able to dry my soaking feet
by extending my legs toward the blazing heat. Sangay informs us that if the
snow continues this night, we will have to abort the trek, as the ponies will
not be able to make the next day’s hike over the high, stone passes we must
pass through on our way to the final campground above Phajoding Monastery. In
spite of exhaustion, we are all worried. It would be a shame to abort the hike,
especially since the next day’s journey takes us far back up into a region of
sacred lakes, high above the tree line. Curled in my sleeping back at night, I
am grateful that I don’t have to pee nearly so much, but still I barely sleep,
mostly due to the intense cold that makes any movement complicated as I attempt
to sustain any heat my body has produced.
 |
Waiting for the Sun |
The vague gray light of dawn awakens me and I push open the
snow and frost-crusted tent flaps to reveal a world of frozen ice and snow,
dark pines, and deep silence. The sun is slowly inching its way down the side
of the ridge we descended the day before and I make my way to edge of the
meadow to where the first rays will reach. No one seems to be awake. The ponies
stand silently. They too await the warmth of the sun. Bit by bit the sun
descends, striking color into the shadowed mountain slope, the dark trees, the icicles
hanging like crystal teeth from the branches. When the sun finally touches me,
I feel instantly warmer. The snow-covered meadow glimmers and light fills the
small valley. It’s a glorious day.
 |
Ice Tree at Dawn |
No snow fell again during the night and so
we are good to go. At breakfast, Sangay tells us that as we pass through the
higher peaks today, we must avoid coming too near to any of the lakes, which
are considered sacred to Bhutanese people. Leaving garbage or washing one’s
feet in the water is known to anger the deities of the waters, bringing down
bad weather and bad luck on whatever hapless person has committed these acts. A
story of the Fourth King of Bhutan says that only he can go onto the lakes, as
one time when he was on a small boat in the middle of one of these high lakes,
the waters began to churn and the clouds came in very suddenly. The King lifted
his pistol and shot a single shot down into the water. Immediately the waters
calmed and the weather cleared. Since this day, these lakes are said to be
sacred to the Fourth King, who is thought to have certain kinds of
siddhis (magical powers). I love this.
And as well, I love that we will be traveling through these sacred areas.
 |
13,000ft |
The hike up out of our sleeping valley is practically
vertical. Mike, Willa, and I hike alone as Wangyal turns back to tell the rest
of the group that he has found the three ponies who were thought to have run
off during the night. The trail is snow-covered and muddy, but so steep that it
is obvious that ponies don’t come this way. Mike disappears ahead of Willa and me as we chat and climb. Eventually we come back out on the ridge, the thick
forest slipping back behind us as high rhododendron and dark, slate rock take
their place. A small lake is gray and still beneath the higher gray and white
slopes of the mountain peaks. The view is astounding.
Again I am reminded that
Bhutan is only a country of mountains. There are no flat areas, unless you
count the airport runway! Now the trail is less steep although we are still
climbing. Stopping for even a few moments allows the high, cold wind to
penetrate to the bone, so we keep going, rising and falling with the rocky
trail. As the time passes we come to a small pass festooned with prayer flags.
For a few moments, the sun emerges and we perch on the edge of the cliff, warm
in the sun, looking out to the north to Jhomolari, whose highest peaks are
obscured by clouds. Small cliff birds swoop and dive on the wind around us.
Other than the birds, there is no movement save the fluttering of the prayer
flags and the silent overhead sailing of the clouds.
 |
Wangyal on the Pass |
When the sun disappears,
we continue down the other side of the pass a short distance to the ruins of a small
stone shelter above another small lake. Here, we have to wait for the rest of
the group. Putting on everything I have carried, I take a short walk around the
ridge to a small cave overlooking the lake. Sitting down, I let my mind and
body settle into my surroundings, into the brownish-green earth, the jumbled
piles of gray slate and rock that rise up around me, the steep cliff edges that
drop off in front down to the lake. As I remain motionless, the world seems to
come alive around me. The surface of the lake ruffles and fans in various
directions, the movement turning its color from silver to black to gray and
even to blue when the sun slides out from behind the shifting clouds for
moments at a time. Watching, the lake seems almost alive, as if some unknown
hand was skimming its pearly surface, stirring its depths. My body feels heavy,
solid, an anchor grounding me on this earth, environment and internal thoughts
merge and dissolve and I am reminded of lines from Trungpa Rinpoche’s
Sadhana of Mahamudra, a terma text
discovered at Taktsang in Paro that say:
Good and bad, happy and sad
All thoughts vanish into emptiness like
The imprint of a bird in the sky.
Time passes, but I am unaware of it until I hear a shout and
in moving, discover that my body is stiff and cold. As I make my way back to
the stone shelter, I note that those few moments alone in the cave above the
lake are the first moments of stillness and peace I have had since the trip
began. So much doing, so much moving, but not nearly enough just being, especially
in these places that know nothing else, whose environments are impenetrable if
we simply rush through them on our way to somewhere else.
 |
Sacred Lake |
When everyone arrives, we eat a hurried lunch. Snow flurries
are swirling around us and the temperature is dropping again as Mike, Willa,
and I quickly gather our packs to continue. Since we’ve been waiting for such a
long time, we are quite cold. From here the trail again rises over rocky ridges
and couple of passes. It is liking walking through a moonscape—just rocks,
moss, water, snow, and a few low bushes. In places, the ridge flattens out into
long sloping plateaus upon which small lakes reflect the white sky like silver
mirrors. As the afternoon comes to an end, we arrive at the final pass. Huge white
clouds billow up over the blue sky creating a surreal vantage point as we
approach the saddle. It is like walking up to the edge of the world.
 |
Final Pass |
A rock
cairn marks the point where the trail drops down into the Thimphu valley and we
can see the city of Thimphu far, far below, shining like a white city in the
sunlight. Looking closer down over the ridge, the monastery complex of
Phajoding clings to the side of the mountain. We can even see the tiny dots of
our tents being set up nearby the monastery by the trekking staff in
anticipation of our arrival. For a long time we sit on the ridge and watch the
clouds and shadows shifting over the valley far below.
 |
Thimphu Valley |
Finally, we begin the
steep descent. Arriving at the campsite we collapse. As time goes by and the
rest of the group does not arrive, we begin to worry. Is everyone okay? I know
that, if for me, being in excellent cardiovascular shape, this hike was
exhausting, how has it been for everyone else? Mike and Willa are fine, like
me, they are tired, but physically fine. After a couple of hours, we hear
shouts from the ridge above. Our group has reached the final pass. Eventually
they arrive and we scurry around to make sure that everyone has tea immediately
and something to eat. Everyone is fine, though exhausted and we are all grateful to have made the journey so well. In general, our guides are
astounded by our group. They keep mentioning how fast we are in comparison with
other treks. After everyone has had a bit of rest, we gather for our final
dinner, which is a true feast of delicious food. The kitchen staff has outdone
itself. In general we are all amazed and deeply grateful to the entire trekking staff. They have taken amazing care of us, from being our companions on the path, to lighting fires in the worst possible conditions, to bringing us bed tea every morning in our cold tents. I think that any one of us would do this again with such a fantastic staff. Gathering around the fire after dinner, we sing songs and tell stories.
The trekking staff joins us and we even get one of horsemen to sing us a song.
His clear voice wavers in the moonlight, the song is wistful and somewhat sad.
I reflect that tomorrow we will return to the world of noise and people, cars
and technology. I think we are all a bit sad to leave these heady heights, the
silences, the wind. Next time, I hope to take more time, have space for just
sitting and being, not rushing on to the next campsite, but resting in these
places a bit more.
Falling asleep it is again freezing cold, but I sleep
somewhat better, anticipating the next day’s descent to Thimphu. Our Druk Path
trek is over, but I am determined to spend a lot more time in these high
mountains!
 |
High Peak |
Great blog with a full of beautiful pictures. I loved reading your blog. Keep it up
ReplyDeletethanks
Festivals Of Bhutan
That was a nice post! Quite informative!
ReplyDeleteI am doing the Druk Path trek next month. Will there be snow there at that time?
Hi Dear,
ReplyDeleteI really like your blog .. I see your blog daily and your blog is very useful for me.
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