Inside Himalayas Magazine Issue 6 - 2018 Inside Himalayas Issue 6 - 2018 | Page 56

INSIDE HIMALAYAS | NEPAL | TIBET | BHUTAN INSIDE HIMALAYAS | NEPAL | TIBET | BHUTAN The ancient town of Kagbeni is the gateway to Upper Mustang. Photo: Ynske Boersma. Until a few years ago, Lo Manthang was even only accessible on foot, says the young monk, who introduces himself as Kunga Lama. “It was a three-day walk to Jomsom, the nearest town in this area.” How was that, to be so shut off from the outside world? “It was a great time for me. All my friends lived close by. We enjoyed the silence, and we had the nature as our playing ground.” When we enter the medieval fortress city we actually do feel thrown back into the Middle Ages. The tiny city is a densely built labyrinth of whitewashed houses made of mud and stone, with narrow alleys like little tunnels. On a square in the middle of the labyrinth, the city’s elderly gather to warm themselves in the 56 afternoon sun. The women are spinning their miniature prayer wheels, combing sheep wool, and making braids in each others’ long hair. But as in all parts of the modernising world, also here change is coming. The Chinese and Nepali governments are planning to construct a highway to connect the two countries, right through Mustang, following the old Salt Route. When the road will be ready, it will be the most accessible road through the Himalaya, with inevitable changes for the life of the Loba. In the past decade, the rough version of the road has been bulldozed from the mountains. This dirt road connects Lo Manthang with the nearest city of www.insidehimalayas.com | By Royal Mountain Travel Pokhara, in the tracks of the old trade route, and continues north to the Chinese border. Although for the time being it is only accessible to jeeps and tractors, the road has meant a huge leap forward for the residents of Mustang, with travel times reduced from several days to six hours. The road also means that the area is more accessible to travelers. Most Mustang visitors opt for a trek through the area, staying overnight in guesthouses along the route or camping. With the ten-day permit, you can just make it to Lo Manthang and back to Kagbeni, the entrance to the former Kingdom. Therefore, we decided to travel part of the way by jeep. This saved us time to explore villages further off the track, and get a better impression of the life of the Loba, at the crossroads of change to modernity. But when departing from Pokhara we realised that the ‘forbidden’ kingdom is more difficult to reach than we thought. Because of the strong winds, the tiny plane that would take us to Jomsom — the starting point for the journey through Upper Mustang — is kept on the ground. Being on a tight schedule, we have no other option than to take a taxi, a nine-hour ride on an unpaved road through the mountains. The vehicle, a Suzuki Alto, gets stuck in the mud several times. Late at night and utterly exhausted, we arrive in Jomsom, where early the next day we continue our road trip with a jeep, entering Upper Mustang at nearby Kagbeni. The jeep trip may be quicker than walking but it’s no less adventurous as we discover when our vehicle crosses the fast-flowing river through the valley, the water up to the bonnet. Then the road winds through the mountains, higher and higher, along ever-deeper abysses, and over arid high plains where only short grasses survive, scorched by the brightest sun. Surrounded by rocks carved out by rain, sun and wind in the form of pointed ochre, terracotta, and blue turrets and further away the 7000-metre high peaks of the Himalayas, you can do nothing but feel small and marvel at the wonders of nature in this remote corner of the world. The life of the Loba is like a spiritual battle against that wild nature, which they regard as divine. Wherever you look you will find the symbols and rituals used by the inhabitants to appease their gods. At the entrance of every village is a chorten, a red and white painted building with relics of Buddhist clerics to keep evil spirits at bay, and on each mountain pass you’ll encounter a pole with prayer flags, of which the Tibetans believe the wind will take the mantras printed on the flags, and spread them in the universe. Normally about 6000 people live in Upper Mustang. But now it is almost www.insidehimalayas.com | By Royal Mountain Travel 57