Saturday, November 13, 2010

Sultan Bin Shahlat Mosque


I wake up to the Azan Call of this mosque which is right next to my brothers apartment in Dubai, where you find mosques dotted everywhere (every square km has one of its own, but most are not as beautiful as this..

I prefer the Mosques, I saw in Abu Dhabhi, at least they are vastly different from each other and they exude a Central Asian Touch which the mosques of Dubai lack, made as they are of the same type of stone and even similar color schemes.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

A Study in Scale






A Study in Scale, originally uploaded by The Wandering Hermit.

A Study in Scale The Burj Khalifa and A Lamp Post.

Currently the Burj Khalifa is the tallest building in the world.

Clicked with a new Sony Camera brought for my mom... A Sony Cybershot DSC-W360. Takes some nice Panoramic Views

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Mukut: The Crown


Mukut: The Crown, originally uploaded by The Wandering Hermit.


First Ascent: - 1951: Mukut Parbat was climbed via the steep northwest ridge by a crack New Zealand team that included Edmund Hillary, George Lowe, H. E. Riddiford (leader), F. M. Cotter and Pasang Dawa Lama. Summitters were Riddiford, Cotter and Pasang Dawa Lama

Mukut Parvat
has an interesting history specially for those interested in Mountain Lore..

This was Edmund's Hillary's first Himalyan Expedition and sowed the seeds which would later see him along with Tezing Norga to become the first men to Climb Everest.

NZ MUKUT EXPEDITION 1951 :


With advice from the Everest veteran Noel Odell ( the last man to see Mallory alive on Everest and who was then a professor of Geology at Otago University), they chose a mountain called Mukut Parbat in northern Garhwal (Odell had visited this area along with Bill Tillman while making the first ascent of Nanda Devi in 1936). For this unclimbed 7,000-metre peak, they chose to attack the via the steep northwest ridge by a crack

As this was their first Himalyan Expedition they took just standard alpine equipment. Interviewed many years later for Mountain magazine, Hillary recalled: 'I had a pair of boots that should have been in a museum, but I managed to get one-and-a-half pairs of socks into them.'

On summit day Hillary with his usual climbing partner George Lowe (who had introduced Hillary to climbing) set out first but were soon brought to a halt due to Lowe's footwear and the onset of frostbite . they returned to their high camp and watched Riddiford , Cotter and Pasang draw inexorably closer to the summit finally making it late in the day. This marked the first ascent of the peak.
Neither Hillary nor Lowe got to the summit, despite doing most of the hard work lower down the mountain. Hillary was deeply disappointed, although impressed at the stubborn resolution of Riddiford, who had been unwell..

Although Hillary himself didn't reach the summit of Mukut Parbat in 1951, he did climb six peaks over 6,000 metres. Noticing an Indian newspaper announcement that the famous English explorer Eric Shipton was about to leave on a reconnaissance expedition to the south side of Everest, Hillary wrote to Shipton asking whether the great man could use the services of some well-acclimatised Kiwi climbers. Unknown to Hillary, the president of the New Zealand Alpine Club had also sent a similar request.

Shipton had a soft spot for New Zealanders, and a telegram arrived in Garhwal saying that two climbers could join the expedition. After an acrimonious discussion, it was agreed that the self-appointed leader, Earle Riddiford, should go, along with Hillary, who had just enough money left to last until Nepal. Ed Cotter and George Lowe returned to New Zealand.

Hillary knew that he should really have returned too, to rejoin his family in the apiary. But he was the sort of person who knew when selfishness--or at least self-interest - was the right course. As he said in his Mountain interview, 'Eric Shipton was the great hero of New Zealand mountaineering': you just didn't turn down that kind of opportunity. And so, a week or two later, in a smoky room beside the Arun river in eastern Nepal, Hillary and Riddiford met the legendary explorer and his fellow British expeditioners--Tom Bourdillon, Bill Murray and the young surgeon who had initiated the expedition, Michael Ward to start exploring in the Sola Khumbu and discovering the route via The Icefall and the Western Cwm to the South Col and the summit of Everest.

Saturday, July 11, 2009

Lakes Of Ladakh IV


Lakes Of Ladakh IV, originally uploaded by The Wandering Hermit.


The Village of Korzok rests on the banks of one of the most beautiful lakes in Ladakh.

Tso Moriri's waters are a distinct blue much enhanced by the rich cobalt deposits in the area. It is also famous for the Black Siberian Cranes which fly from Siberia to breed here.

Monday, July 6, 2009

The Climber


The Climber, originally uploaded by The Wandering Hermit.


Tethered on the brink of Eternity...
On Rock Pillar at the start of the climb of The East Pillar of Shivling in the Garhwal Himal, Uttarakhand India

Friday, June 12, 2009

Spacetrucking ~ The Peak Points The Way


Peak Points The Way, originally uploaded by The Wandering Hermit.


“Nothing needs to be impossible for you. After all man is six feet taller than the mountain he climbs. Only the will resolute has to be there” — J. B. Auden

**

Gangotri III , long exposure shot at twilight with star trails.

Taken during the trek to Auden's Col, which connects the Bhilganga Valley and Rudguira valley in the Garhwal Himal, Uttarakhand India.

**
Auden's Col (5,400 mtrs) connects Jogin I (6465m) and Gangotri III (6580m) peaks . It also marks the meeting of two glaciers which converge here from opposite sides. One is Khatling glacier and the other one the hanging glacier which descends from Jogin I.


The Col is approachable from Gangotri (which makes an ideal starting point) and one can trek up to Kedarnath from Auden's Col travelling via the Khatling glacier's lateral moraine this joining the two holy spots of Hindu Pilgrimage..(The route from the north is fairly easy but from the south it is decidedly tricky and is only meant for people who have some experience in glacier travel and rudimentary mountaineering skills as a lot of the terrain is usually snowed up)

* *

The Col is named after Dr. J.B. Auden (who was the elder brother of the poet & playwright W.H. Auden (who dedicated his play : The Ascent of F6 to him)

He joined the Geological Survey of India and had traveled widely in many parts of the Himalaya and the Karakoram.

In October 1935 he was in the Gangotri area of Garhwal with Dr. D.C. Macdonald and three Sherpas.
He returned to the area in 1939 in the company of two porters from Harsil hamlet, he crossed a pass at the head of the Rudugaira valley to the Bhilaganga valley in the south. This is now known as ‘Auden’s Col’ and is not often repeated. , this crossing was at the termination of two months of traveling light, living primitively in tents weighing three kilograms.
The north side of this col was relatively easy-going, but the south side presented some difficulties in crossing the pinnacled ice.

He also explored the Jadh Ganga, Mana Gad and the Lamkhaga valleys on the same trip.

Auden's Other Himalayan Journey’s

•In July 1933 Auden with Captain C.E.C. Gregory completed the survey of the Biafo glacier in Pakistan

•Then in 1934 he was in Nepal to study the effects of the great earthquake which caused havoc in Bihar-Nepal on l5January 1934. With D.N. Wadia, Dr.J.A. Dunn and A.M.N. Ghosh, he traversed large areas of Nepal and published an authentic record of his travels in the Himalayan Ranges.

•Auden’s most well-known trip was to the Shaksgam valley (now in China) in 1937. This was in the company of Eric Shipton, H.W. Tilman and M.A. Spender,( brother of another famous poet). Shipton makes detailed references to their journey in his autobiography while Auden recorded the geological results of the trip including producing the most definitive maps of the enormous Snow Lake region which are still in use today.

Dr. Auden was an Original Member of The Mountain Club of India (1927) which founded the Himalayan Club.

Sunday, May 17, 2009

The Buddha To Be.


The Buddha To Be., originally uploaded by The Wandering Hermit.


The huge 15mtrs. tall statue of The Maitreya Buddha (The Buddha to be & The Buddha of Compassion) at the Thiksey Monastery in Ladakh.

Built to commerate the visit of the Dalai Lama in 1970 it was made by local artisians and took 4 years to complete, yet it remains the biggest and one of the most beautiful statues of the Maitreya...

Sunday, May 10, 2009

On The Trail.....

When Men & Mountains Meet.

The twin Peaks of Shivling with the East Pillar in front seems close enough to touch but as usual its foreshortening at work.. Very difficult to get the true scale of these mighty peaks..

There is an old saying (which is specially true in the mountains) : DO NOT MISTAKE A CLEAR VIEW FOR A SHORT DISTANCE ...

The peak is still around 20 miles away as the crow flies and the trail climbing up from Gaumukh (the once traditional source of the Ganga but now retreated higher) to the meadows of Tapovan winds through some of the most dramatic scenery .. huge boulders, loose rocky hillsides and finally over the lateral moraines of the Gangotri glacier itself, which is covered with numerous glaciated boulders and crevasses and mainly made up of shattered rock

The whole locale looks something like Mordor out of LOTR...


Everywhere destructive forces are at work, with nary a sign of anything growing .. The shale and slate moraines are the remains of boulders crushed by the most erosive force in the world - a glacier - a slow moving river of ice, which decimates everything even mountains as it inexorably tumbles down to the valley floor below..

All this time Shivling looms on the right, until it passes out of view and you begin a steep ascent which finally culminates at the meadows of Tapovan, the contrast to the trail is total, here verdant hillsides, lichen covered rocks and wild flowers in profusion and it's such a joy to see things growing again and a grand vista of mighty peaks come into view those peaks which make up the great crique of the Gangotri Group of Peaks.. (Bhagirathi, Karchakund, Sumeru, Kedar Dome, Shivling, Meru, Bhrigupanth, Thalay Sagar)

The view alone is worth the toil of the trail...

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Kang Rinpoche: Precious Snow Mountain

Mt. Kailash *(South Face)* from Diaraphuk.

Though other westerners like the Jesuit priest Desideri & in the early part of the 1800's amp; William Moorcroft (with Hyder Jung Herseay) had put Mt. Kailash on the map one of the first westerners to measure it was Henry Strachey, a lieutenant in the 66th Bengal Native Infantry and belonging to one of the most outstanding and influential British families who made their mark in Brtish India.
During the hot weather of 1846 ostensibly on sick leave but determined to visit the holy lake Mansarovar and unfettered by a new government ban on travel to Tibet he made his way to Milam and with the assistance of Deb SIngh Rawat (grand father of Nain Singh Rawat the first explorer Pandit) he crossed over the Lampiya Dhura Pass disguised as a Hindu pilgrim. Traveling fast and keeping off well known paths and passes he reached the south west corner of Rakas Tal in 5 days after crossing the border.
After measuring the flow rates of both the Rakas Tal and Mansarovar, his attention was taken up by the "most beautiful peak he had ever seen. " A King Of Mountains, full of majesty which he estimated to be 21,000 feet high ... This clandestine trip won him the Patrons Gold Medal of The Royal Geographic Society as well as a place in the British Mission to Ladakh.

In 1848 it was the turn of his younger brother Richard Strachey, who was serving as an Engineer in the Bombay Army. Richard was perhaps the most talented of the 5 generation of Strachey's who served in India. He also started his clandestine visit from Kumaon again with the help of Deb Singh Rawat, taking as his guide his son Mani Singh Rawat. After confirming his brothers figures and drainage of the holy lakes he turned his attention to establishing the position and height of Kailash , later topographical figures showed that his figure of 22,000 ft to be just 28 feet on the low side.

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

The Midnight Special


Midnight Special, originally uploaded by The Wandering Hermit.


A Beacon of Light The Magnificient Potala Palace པོ་ཏ་ལ lit up in the Lhasa Night, Tibet.

Perched upon Marpo Ri hill, 130 meters above the Lhasa valley, the Potala Palace rises a further 170 meters and is the greatest monumental structure in all of Tibet.

Early legends concerning the rocky hill tell of a sacred cave, considered to be the dwelling place of the Bodhisattva Chenresi (Avilokiteshvara), that was used as a meditation retreat by Emperor Songtsen Gampo in the seventh century AD.

In 637 Songtsen Gampo built a palace on the hill. This structure stood until the seventeenth century, when it was incorporated into the foundations of the greater buildings still standing today.

Construction of the present palace began in 1645 during the reign of the fifth Dalai Lama and by 1648 the Potrang Karpo, or White Palace, was completed. The Potrang Marpo, or Red Palace, was added between 1690 and 1694; its construction required the labors of more than 7000 workers and 1500 artists and craftsman.

In 1922 the 13th Dalai Lama renovated many chapels and assembly halls in the White Palace and added two stories to the Red Palace. The Potala Palace was only slightly damaged during the Tibetan uprising against the invading Chinese in 1959. Unlike most other Tibetan religious structures, it was not sacked by the Red Guards during the 1960s and 1970s, apparently through the personal intervention of Chou En Lai. As a result, all the chapels and their artifacts are very well preserved.

From as early as the eleventh century the palace was called Potala. This name probably derives from Mt. Potala, the mythological mountain abode of the Bodhisattva Chenresi (Avilokiteshvara / Kuan Yin) in southern India. The Emperor Songtsen Gampo had been regarded as an incarnation of Chenresi. Given that he founded the Potala, it seems likely that the hilltop palace of Lhasa took on the name of the Indian sacred mountain. The Potala Palace is an immense structure, its interior space being in excess of 130,000 square meters. Fulfilling numerous functions, the Potala was first and foremost the residence of the Dalai Lama and his large staff. In addition, it was the seat of Tibetan government, where all ceremonies of state were held; it housed a school for religious training of monks and administrators; and it was one of Tibet's major pilgrimage destinations because of the tombs of past Dalai Lamas. Within the White Palace are two small chapels, the Phakpa Lhakhang and the Chogyal Drubphuk; dating from the seventh century, these chapels are the oldest surviving structures on the hill and also the most sacred. The Potala's most venerated statue, the Arya Lokeshvara, is housed inside the Phapka Lhakhang, and it draws thousands of Tibetan pilgrims each day.