Genekha village
Pupils of the Genekha Primary School
Our group to the Labatama trekking tour
Our horses have a rest
Mithe our friend and guide assistance
Bhutanese herds woman selling cheese
Way up to the DagaLa (pass 3200 m)
Fantastic panorama view over the plateau
Chorten on the way down to the Paro valley
Residential area on the way to Thimphu
View back to the small village
We reach the DagaLa (pass 3200 m)
A stone hut without a roof
A steep climb up to the Labatana lakes
Pack back in the tent and raise our sleeping bags
A thin snow layer covered the hills
Reaching the end of the plateau
Phima our tour guide
Preparing the steps for our horses ...
Prepare the way for the horses
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Bhutanese farm house
Bhutanese architecture is a remarkable adaptation of Tibetan architecture to different ecological conditions. As in Tibet, the walls of fortresses slope inwards and are whitewashed, with the windows becoming larger in the upper storeys. However, in Bhutan, the need to cope with heavy precipitation and the availability of wood have given its architecture a flavour all its own. Wood is widely used. The assembling of windows and doors is so complicated that the work is done at ground level, the finished elements being fitted into the upper walls later. Windows are characterized by trilobed crossbars at the top and by complicated lintels that carry symbolic meaning in all of their parts. Lintels and windows are painted with floral or geometric designs. The roofs of houses are pitched above a flat floor. They are mortised and covered with shingle held in place with heavy stones. These pitched roofs are completely original in style and help give an impression of lightness to the whole building.
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