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Dolpo Trekking
The best known of the many
isolated high Himalayan valleys across northern Nepal, Dolpo
preserves one of the last remnants of traditional Tibetan
culture. Legend says it's a one of the "hidden valleys" created
by Guru Rinpoche as a refuge for devout Buddhists in troubled
times. Surrounded by high mountains including the Dhaulagiri
massif to the south-east and cut off by high passes closed by
snow half the year, Dolpo's easiest access is from Tibet, where
its people emigrated from perhaps 1. 000 years ago.
Upper Dolpo shelters about 5.000 people, whose lives revolve
around Buddhism, barley, and yaks; their villages (over 4.260
meters) are among the highest settlements on earth. A large
portion of Dolpo has been set aside as Shey - Phoksumdo National
Park, at 3.555 square km Nepal's largest. Meant to preserve a
complete example of the trans-Himalayan ecosystem, the park
shelters blue sheep, Himalayan black bear, leopards, wolves, and
the exclusive snow leopard.
Dolpo is the best-known of Nepal's forbidden northern border
regions. The 1989 announcement that the government was opening
the region to group treks caused a flurry of excitement.
To reach here, you must trek through a registered company, which
will obtain permits. Groups generally fly from Nepalgunj to the
Juphal airstrip, then walk few hours to the district
headquarters of Dunai (2,100 meters). The trail follows the Suli
Gad River, passing through thick conifer forests and a few
Thakuri Hindu villages. The National Park check-post is one day
from Dunai; two steep days later, you reach Phoksumdo Lake.
Flying in and out, the trek takes less than two weeks. Phoksumdo
Lake (3,627 meters) is the highlight of the whole trek, a basin
of unearthly turquoise blue ringed by rocky crags and forest,
framed by snow-capped peaks.
Legend says a demons fled here during Gum Rinpoche's conversion
of Tibet's resident spirits, offering local people a gigantic
turquoise to keep her passage a secret. Guru Rinpoche
transformed the turquoise into a lump of dung, and the
disgruntled people revealed the demons hiding place. In revenge
she culled down a flood upon their village, submerging it
beneath the lake. The legend is a concise mythic summary of the
ancient struggle between Bönpo and Buddhists; the latter won,
but the former remain, even here at Phoksumdo.
At the lake's eastern end is the village of Ringmo, also called
Tso. The town's entrance chorten has nine complex Buddhist and
Bönpo mandalas painted on its wooden ceiling.
The people are Bhotia and only very distantly related to
Tibetans. They are gradually becoming Hinduized, adding Chhetri
surnames to their Tibetan names.
The Bönpo monastery, Tso Gompa, is two km from the village, set
above the lake on forested cliffs with views across to
Kanjiroba. Below the village, a gigantic waterfall cascades over
a series of rock steps, draining into the Suli Gad fur below. A
visit to the Bönpo Gompa at Pungmo, two hours up aside valley to
the west, is a worthwhile expedition.
The best part of Dolpo lies beyond the lake, along a difficult
trail that crosses a high pass into the real Dolpo. Shey Gompa,
named after nearby CrystalMountain, is several days' walk north
of the lake.
Another trail to reach Shey Gompa leads trough the Tarap valley
over several high passes and magnificent villages like
Tarap-Dho, Saldang and Pijorgaon. |