Archive for September, 2008:
filed in Culture, Nepal, Videos on Sep.27, 2008
This is a short video I recorded from the window of our jeep while we drove from the China border to Kathmandu. Nepal is a really great country to observe through the window of a vehicle. All the houses are built right up next to the roads (because the canyons are so steep that there [...]
Tags: Bhote Kosi, drive by, Nepal, observations, village
filed in Nepal, Tibet on Sep.26, 2008
Crossing the Nepali border from Tibet was a really interesting experience. The Friendship “Highway” is a windy, usually one-lane gravel road on the edge of a sheer cliff, precariously inching its way down a narrow river valley on the edge of the Himalayas. The road is full of sheep and yaks, is often flooded or [...]
Tags: China, culture, Friendship Highway, Kodari, Nepal, Zhangmu
filed in Animals, Nepal, Tibet, Videos on Sep.26, 2008
As we drive along the bumpy gravel track of the Friendship “Highway” between Tibet and Nepal, we are constantly confronted with roadblocks. The most common? Gigantic herds of goats! Apparently, the goats that people eat in Nepal are raised in the grassy plains of Tibet, and then marched along the highway down the steep, precarious [...]
Tags: Friendship Highway, goats, herd, Nepal, Tibet
filed in China, Language, Photo Set on Sep.25, 2008
I’ve just spent two months in China, and despite Beijing’s best efforts to improve translations nation-wide, I’m happy to report that Chinglish is still everywhere. There’s nothing better than awesomely hilarious mistranslations! The opposite of Recycling Bathroom notice
Tags: China, Chinglish, Mandarin, mistranslation, translation
filed in Tibet, Videos on Sep.21, 2008
Our shadows taller than our souls…
Tags: desert, shadow, Tibet, video
filed in Animals, Photo Set, Tibet on Sep.20, 2008
Yaks are pretty much the coolest animal of all time. Sure, they may just be big woolly cows with sweet horns, but they’re a way of life for everyone in rural Tibet. The nomadic yak herders live in tent encampments in the windy Tibetan planes, surrounded by their herd, and yaks are the source of [...]
Tags: cattle, China, Namtso Lake, Tibet, yaks
filed in People, Photo, Tibet on Sep.19, 2008
Today my friend Tee and I were walking along the shore of Namtso Lake here in Tibet, and we were approached by these two young “monks.” They were boys, around 12 or 13 years old, adorned in red Tibetan Buddhist robes, but there was something off and un-monklike about them. Maybe it was the fact [...]
Tags: Buddhist, China, imposters, monks, Namtso Lake, Playboy, Tibet
filed in Gear, Misc., Tibet on Sep.16, 2008
I didn’t know that iPods could get altitude sickness, but my iPod has been pretty sick ever since I arrived in Tibet. I’ve got a fifth generation 60GB Video iPod, and whenever I get above about 3,500 meters in elevation (a little over 10,000) feet, it wonks out. Its poor hard drive starts making those [...]
Tags: air pressure, altitude, disk, elevation, hard drive, iPod, lhasa, Tibet
filed in Stories, Tibet on Sep.16, 2008
There are few places in the world that I’ve had a more romantic view of than the “rooftop of the world,” Tibet. Tibet! It’s the home of the Dalai Lama, rainbows of prayer flags, yak’s milk tea, and the devoutest Buddhist monks. It’s one of those magical, lost-in-time places where tradition trumps all, a place [...]
Tags: China, hipsters, lhasa, Tibet
filed in China, Food on Sep.15, 2008
I thought I knew Chinese food. Then I came to China. “Chinese” restaurants in America are a pretty poor representation of the real thing. Panda Express and all those Chinese buffets are about as American as Burger King. Some of our favorite “Chinese” foods are western inventions as well. But really, what did you expect? [...]
Tags: American, China, Chinese food, cultural differences, dining, Food, restaurants