In December of 2007, I was approached by one of my professors, and asked if I would like to go on a free trip to Bhutan. At this point, I knew where Bhutan was, because I digitized some roads for the project my professor was working on, but I had no idea anything about the culture. I sat on it for a few weeks, knowing I would have to get my passport anyway (since that next summer I was going to Europe for a field school), but I was having reservations. After all, it was a free trip to Asia, my favorite continent, but it would be my first time out of the country. A few weeks later, my professor returns, and said the words that made the decision very easy: "You wouldn't be a real geographer if you gave up a free trip to the Himalayas!" The Himalayas...ahhh...that was it! Ok, I'm IN!
The months leading up to the trip were full of long nights and even longer days of preparing the data and everything that we needed to present our information to the section of the government that we were meeting with (the Ministry of Works and Human Settlement - MoWHS for short). Finally, it came time for our 2 week trip to Bhutan! We (2 professors, myself and a doctoral student) left very early one March morning from Charlotte, NC. The trip was in multiple legs: a short flight from Charlotte to Atlanta, GA; a HUGE flight flight from Atlanta to Tokyo, Japan; Tokyo to Bangkok, Thailand; and finally Bangkok to Paro, Bhutan (the city with the country's only airport). It had been many, many years since I have flown in an airplane, last I remember I was in elementary school, so it was an amazing experience all around! It was like a brief tour of Asian in a few days...five hours in Tokyo and few hours in Bangkok....what else could a person who had never been out of the United States before as for?
Our arrival into the Paro airport was like a rollercoaster ride...tilting to the right, tilting to the left...this is where we got our first taste of what the terrain of Bhutan was like -- VERY rugged! We got our 2nd dose on the ride from Paro to Thimphu, the capital city! The city was amazing! The air was much cleaner than that of our capital (D.C.), and everything was just so much fresher (is that a word? Is now!). We spent the first day walking around the town taking photographs and want not. Interestingly, Thimphu does not have any street lights per say. Their street lights are in fact humans...directing traffic (I guess it's similar to crossing guards here). Anyway, after that first initial day of relaxation, things became very busy!
We only had a few days to prepare our presentation for to MoWHS...and we did a fairly good job, I think! After that a guide took us on a trek to a Monastary, the Motithang Takin Preserve, and to the TachichoDzong! All of these places were equally amazing! The Takin is Bhutan's national animal, and though I was told it was "ugly," I actually found it quite cute!!! The TachichoDzong was brilliant! It was so huge, and I could not even comprehend all that takes place there! Interestingly, there is a monastary in the TachichoDzong, which shows the interconnectedness of religion and government, which is definitely not present here in the United States! We also did a little bit of shopping while we were in Thimphu, where both the doctoral student and I bought traditional Bhutanese dress - a goh for him and a kira for me!
Before we knew it, we were off to Kanglung, Trashigang, for the next episode in our Bhutanese adventure!
No comments:
Post a Comment