Thursday, November 13, 2008

First Light

First, some shots from yesterday. First up is a shot from a rooftop near the Kasthamandap temple:

Downtown Kathmandu (1)

Then, we have a stupa near Durgar Square:

Stupa (1)

Finally, a shot from inside a small multi-level Buddhist temple, somewhere in Kathmandu (I think it was in Asan Tole, but I was jetlagged as all hell and my memory fails me):

Window On The World

Anyway. Another day, more sightseeing. My guide Krishna and I began with the famous (and World Heritage listed) Buddhist temples and stupa at Bodhnath. This place is amazing, and manages to transcend the hordes of tourists thronging around its base:

Sacred Flames (2)

Bodhnath Buddha

We then followed the tourist trail to Pashupati, home to the holiest Hindu temple in Nepal (Pashupatinath) and a well-known funeral ground. I didn't even take my camera out at the cremation until my guide suggested it to me, and although I felt more than a little ghoulish and insensitive, I'm glad I got a record of an incredibly haunting scene:

Cremation (2)

Cremation (6)

The sightseeing day was concluded at Patan, a small village outside Kathmandu that absolutely swarms with fat, bus-riding tourists. The main Durgar Square ("Durgar" meaning "palace" - thus, there are at least three Durgar Squares in the Kathmandu valley) was very interesting but hard to photograph, and I didn't feel like I got anything worthwhile until we walked a little further away to some much less touristed temples.

Flames (2)

This evening has consisted of formalising trekking arrangements and eating/drinking with the trekking guides. I finished up the evening at a local Nepali "nightclub" - unquestionably "authentic" since I was the only non-Nepali in the place. Eventually I got shortlisted for what seems to be a local custom: get up and dance with your friends while the singers play a call-and-response game with you. Since I can't speak a word of Nepali, I couldn't respond to the calls, and I can only imagine what they were saying about me. Apparently it was in good humour, but I was standing there imagining things like, "Hey! Look at this rich foreigner! Let's get him drunk and then take his wallet!" and "What a tosser. He thinks he's being all cultural while we're having a laugh at his expense!" Good fun.

(All of these photos are links. I encourage you to click on them, see them at full size and quality, and explore the rest of my Flickr site. All of my photos, including the majority that haven't been posted here, are available in a set called Nepal 2008.)

2 comments:

max said...

wow mate, incredible stuff, are you over by yourself?
Keep the photos and stories coming, I am intrigued (and have subscribed to your blog!)

metaphive said...

love that sacred flames shot mate.
incredible.