The young Paro river and the Chomolhari
Herds woman and her baby
Farmhouse at the Paro riverside
Across the Paro river
Mother with her child
A checkpoint on the way to the Chomolhari
Passing the Chorten in the clockwise direction
Drukgyel, the starting point of our trek
Archery in Drukgyel
Kyichu Lhakhang temple in the Paro Valley
Spin the prayer wheel
Pass on the way to Ha
Street scenery in Paro
Bhutanese man playing archery
Thanka enrolled at the Paro Tsechu
The enrolled second biggest Thanka (Thongdrol)
Welcome dance of the Lamas
Shhanag, The dance of the black hats
Sha-Zami, The dance of the deers
The Paro Dzong from northern side
Paro Dzong
View into the Dolpo valley
The Thongdrol enrolled
Chomolhari (7314 m?)
Meeting a caravan
Jangothang the Chomolhary sanctuary
Herders mother and her daughter
In front of the Yak herders hut
Invited from a Yak herders family
Traditional Bhutanese farm house
The stone bath
The last Chorten
Our group and some lovely ladies
to all our Ipernity friends and contacts
Prasat Khao Phra Vihaan is a Holy Cambodian nation…
Third level of the Prasat Khao Phra Vihaan
Prasat Khao Phra Vihaan, Cambodia
The "Nāga" gate into the Gopura on the third level
NyiLa (pass) 3950 m in Lo Mantang
Tsarang in Lo Mantang
The King His Royal Highness Jigme Palbar Bista
Mustang City, the hidden kingdom in Nepal
Father and son in Herat
Scenes from Afghanistan
Watch vendor in his small shop
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MAEZIOÙ / ARVESTVA /PAYSAGE /PANORAMA in mémoriam à Mahuphidos
MAEZIOÙ / ARVESTVA /PAYSAGE /PANORAMA in mémoriam à Mahuphidos
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Chomolhari peak (7314 m?)
There is no evidence that the mountain, whose official elevation is very close to a round 24,000 feet, has ever been accurately measured. Its true elevation may be nearer to 7,000 metres.
Despite its notability and spectacular visibility from the major trade route from India into Tibet's Phari Valley, the mountain has seen very little climbing activity, probably because of access restrictions on the Bhutanese side and the difficulty of the routes from the Tibetan site. The first ascent was made in May 1937 by a five-man British expedition, with F. Spencer Chapman and Sherpa Pasang Dawa Lama reaching the summit from Bhutan over the south-east spur. The second ascent was in 1970 over the same route by a joint Bhutanese-Indian military expedition led by Colonel Narendra Kumar. The third ascent was made in 1996 by a joint Japanese-Chinese expedition who reached the south col from the Tibetan side and climbed the peak over the south ridge. On May 7 2004, the British climbers Julie-Ann Clyma and Roger Payne reached the summit via the c. 5800 m south col as well, in a single day's dash from the col, after attempts to climb the impressive north-west pillar were thwarted by strong winds.
In October 2006, a six-member Slovenian team climbed two new routes, registering the fifth and sixth ascents. Rok Blagus, Tine Cuder, Samo Krmelj and Matej Kladnik took the left couloir of the north face to the East ridge at c. 7100 m, from which they followed the ridge to the top, while Marko Prezelj and Boris Lorencic climbed the north-west ridge in a six-day round trip. This climb earned Prezelj and Lorencic the Piolet d'Or in January 2007.
Despite its notability and spectacular visibility from the major trade route from India into Tibet's Phari Valley, the mountain has seen very little climbing activity, probably because of access restrictions on the Bhutanese side and the difficulty of the routes from the Tibetan site. The first ascent was made in May 1937 by a five-man British expedition, with F. Spencer Chapman and Sherpa Pasang Dawa Lama reaching the summit from Bhutan over the south-east spur. The second ascent was in 1970 over the same route by a joint Bhutanese-Indian military expedition led by Colonel Narendra Kumar. The third ascent was made in 1996 by a joint Japanese-Chinese expedition who reached the south col from the Tibetan side and climbed the peak over the south ridge. On May 7 2004, the British climbers Julie-Ann Clyma and Roger Payne reached the summit via the c. 5800 m south col as well, in a single day's dash from the col, after attempts to climb the impressive north-west pillar were thwarted by strong winds.
In October 2006, a six-member Slovenian team climbed two new routes, registering the fifth and sixth ascents. Rok Blagus, Tine Cuder, Samo Krmelj and Matej Kladnik took the left couloir of the north face to the East ridge at c. 7100 m, from which they followed the ridge to the top, while Marko Prezelj and Boris Lorencic climbed the north-west ridge in a six-day round trip. This climb earned Prezelj and Lorencic the Piolet d'Or in January 2007.
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