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Traveling in Tibet -- Riding High in the Mon Shan Mountains

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By Patricia Lanza
Posted August 6th, 2007
Editor's Note: This article was written circa 2001. Some details have no doubt changed. If anyone has more recent experiences they;d like to share, please post them tot he comments blog section below.

"When the Iron eagle flies and the horses run on wheels, the Tibetan people will be scattered over the Earth, and their teachings flow all the way to the land of the Red Man"
Ancient Tibetan Prophecy

tibet

When I first saw my saddle sitting on the ground, I took it for some kind of medieval torture device. Unlike the hard leather saddles so prominent in the West, this odd contraption consisted of a crude wooden frame lashed together by pieces of rope. I watched in awe as my American guide perched it atop my horse's back and then tied it firmly in place under the belly.

Next, my American guide turned to me. "Now we have to prepare the rider."

"The rider?" I said. "You mean me? Prepare me how?" I said.

Steve said, " if you will notice the Tibetans wear a long coat called a chupa." and "around that they wrap a five foot length of cloth, which is strategically placed around the bottom." "Once you have this outfit on, you throw over your saddle a blanket and your sleeping pad, and jump aboard."

This is the typical Tibetan method of horseback riding over long distances. Their posterior is protected against saddle sores, and their legs dangle over the many layers, with the horse somewhere underneath. They are all the while sitting on their camping and sleeping paraphernalia.

Well, we had no chupas, no six foot length of cloth or any other saddle softening devices, so all of us Westerners needed a trip to the local tack store. Our Chinese guide and cooks were smart: They had brought along small pillows from home to buttress the ride, so to speak.

My horse I will call "No name", short in stature but mighty. Just how mighty was proven on the second day of the trip. Riding high on our wooden Tibetan saddles with our newly purchased felt and/or cotton padding, our horses waded into the Min Shan River. It looked like a simple enough crossing: only two feet deep, the current fairly mild. I was enjoying the coolness wafting off the water when suddenly, without warning, my horse lurched downward, his head disappearing with a frightening splash below the surface. I was now up to my knees in water, my boots filling with wetness, trying to hold my camera high while the horse below me struggled to find his footing.

Time seemed to stand still, every moment an eternity. Somebody was shouting something, but the thoughts inside my head were too loud for me to make it out. Amid the chaos, I focused my attention intently on just two things: protecting the camera?and remaining mounted.

No Name struggled, I froze, holding the camera with one hand. Finally, after what seemed an eternity, No Name's head came up, gurgling and spitting water, scrambling, with the help of a Tibetan guide, for higher ground. Standing on dry land on the opposite shore, I felt on the crest of an adrenaline rush. "You're lucky you couldn't see yourself," Ellen said. "It was worse than a Wes Craven movie."

Indiana Jones on Estrogen
To me, it was more like Indiana Jones on estrogen -- battling nature and emerging triumphant. But we hadn't begun our trip in danger; we had begun it with an exotic journey worthy of Dorothy and Toto. Eight Americans, including one from Hong Kong, had flown into the smog choked city of Chengdu in Southern China. From there, we embarked on a two day minibus drive heading north on a hazardous two-lane highway, that wound through the Min Shan River Valley.

Departing in the rain, the road snaked alongside the churning Min Shan river with rock slides at every turn. One, after splilling onto the highway, proceeded to cross the river, bulldoziing several houses on the opposite bank. Besides the rock slides there were overturned trucks, tractor accidents, vehicles bogged in mud, sheep and wild yak crossings.

The Merits of Yaks
That evening, after an obstacle course drive, we pulled into the pagoda gate town of Songpan, one of the few towns on our route to the Tibetan nomads. Here streets are unpaved and rickshaws mingle with horses and bicycles. Wooden-frame general stores provide essentials for nomads on the range: horse tack, mean-looking knives and also, I noticed with sadness, full length pelts from the snow leopard, an endangered species.

Walking the streets of Songpan, we wandered into the local version of "YakDonald's," where dried yak meat lay in bins all around us and even hung in large strips from the ceiling. In China, yak accounts for 20% of all meat sold. Standing amid all the yakernalia, I leaned over and, with a grin, whispered in Steve's ear: "I'll have a Big Yak and a bag of Flies." But to the Tibetan nomad, the yak is no joking matter; it is life itself.

The yak in its various forms is used for food, clothing, shelter and transportation. Tibetan nomads ride yaks and use them as beasts of burden. The hair is woven into tents. When yak butter turns rancid, Tibetans mix it with hot tea and barley flour to make tsampa, a staple of their diet. Yum! Its kind of like eating almond flavored cookie dough. The perfect trail food for nomads on the run.




 

Comments
Dream of mine to visit Tibet
Written by: Samui Guy
Wednesday, 23 March 2011
It's long been a dream of mine to visit Tibet, inspired by - don't laugh - that Brad Pitt movie Seven Years in Tibet. Of course I've found out much more about that ancient land since then, but no matter my original inspiration I still want to go!

Regards,
Simon
Samui Hotels

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