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
Children welcome us at the Bình Thuận Desert
Along the Huong River (Perfume River)
Children welcome us at the entrance door
Special wine sorts for your health
Inside Văn Miếu (Temple of Literature) in Hanoi
Dog meat butcher at a market in Hanoi
Kyichu Lhakhang Monastery
Ta Dzong in Paro
Monks in front the Rinpung Dzong in Paro
Rinpung Dzong in Paro
Bhutanese little ladies in the yard of the monaste…
Kyichu Lhakhang temple in the Paro Valley
Archery in Drukgyel
Drukgyel, the starting point of our trek
Passing the Chorten in the clockwise direction
A checkpoint on the way to the Chomolhari
Mother with her child
Across the Paro river
Farmhouse at the Paro riverside
Herds woman and her baby
The young Paro river and the Chomolhari
Chomolhari peak (7314 m?)
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
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Prayer wheels are devices used by religious followers of the Buddha for spreading spiritual blessings and good will. Turning a prayer wheel symbolizes "turning the doctrine," referring to the first teachings of the Buddha, when he set the Wheel of the Law in motion, and accumulates virtues for the well being of mankind. Each turn is the equivalent of reading the prayers within.
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