At the risk of raising everyone’s false hopes that I am
starting to blog more often, I have to write about my hike today while the
experience is still fresh. I left the dirty dishes and the wet, dirty clothes
for tomorrow morning. Tonight, I will DOCUMENT MY EXPERIENCE. (shout out to
Brooke ;) )
If I have ever hiked in my life, it was today. Today is a
national holiday, which means no school for me. A friend, Ugyen, planned a hike
to a “nearby” monastery with her class of 34 8th grade students and
invited me along. I was really excited because I see the monastery everyday and
have been meaning to visit, but have never made the time. So this was the
perfect way to spend my holiday.
Ugyen has done this hike before and knew we needed to start
early. We met at 5:45am and started out on our journey around 6:00am. The plan
was to hike down to the river in the valley, cross at the bridge, hike up the
other side to the monastery, and then make our way down to a nunnery at the end
of the hill. After visiting the nunnery, we would follow the trail back to the
bridge and follow the trail back up to Thinleygang.
6:00am start, ready to go. |
The first 1-2 hours were great. Although a little sleepy
from the early wake-up call, spirits were high and everyone was exited to reach
the monastery and have tea. Even while climbing the steep hill and feeling the
burn in our lungs and thighs, we were happy. This is what we expected; we were
mentally prepared for this.
Up, up, up we went. |
Finally, we reached the monastery around 10:00am. Because of
the holiday today, the monks had prepared tea and juice for the visitors.
Everyone took their turn prostrating themselves, making offerings, and saying
their prayers. After 45 minutes at the monastery, we hit the road again.
This time our path led strait down just for a few minuets before turning left
and becoming a relatively flat trail.
For anyone who doesn’t know, this past summer my job
involved leading teenagers on service trips. As a trip leader, we are trained
in risk management. Today, this hike
involved taking the students out of the safety of the hostel and on a hike into
the forest. So, already, I could hear Jim’s (my boss's) voice in my head telling
me about group management and how to be safe. Our group split up into many
small groups on the way from the monastery to the nunnery and that was the
first time (albeit not the last) on this hike when I began to seriously doubt
how safe we were being. In the end, this leg of our journey took about 3 hours.
We had small groups of eighth graders wandering the forest alone heading in a
general direction.
It was about two hours from the monastery when my small
group of students and I realized that we were definitely lost. I had to assume
that Ugyen was with all of the other students on the right path. Where we went
wrong, no one seems to know. But what I do know is we ended up in a village on
the wrong side of the hill and had gone way out of our way.
Not the nunnery, but there are worse places to be lost :) |
One sentiment that I’ve become very familiar with since
being in Bhutan is “but what to do?”. The people here use it when the situation
is unfavorable, or they are struggling a lot with something. They are using it
in a way that signifies: well this sucks, but we can’t do anything about it so
oh well. That is exactly what we said when we discovered that our once solid,
single group had broken up and, most likely, everyone else was also lost. What
to do but continue on.
Eventually we found a road that a couple of the students
were familiar with and they knew that we could follow it in the right
direction. After 30 minutes of walking on this road, a pickup truck drove by
with about 10 of our students standing in the back hooting and hollering. They
stopped farther down the road and my companions and I also jumped in. By that time it was 1:00pm and all of our legs desperately needed a rest and our
bodies needed food.
Eventually, our entire group made it to the nunnery,
although no one made it without getting lost first. But the good news is that
we had made it! The worst part of the day surely was over.
We visited the temple, ate lunch, rested our bodies before
continuing our hike back home. When we set out from the nunnery, we could see
the path that we were meant to take, and headed that way. I was bringing up the
caboose and assumed everything was going fine until some girls ahead of me
stopped to rest and we discovered that the front half of our group had gone
ahead and we were now separated again.
Well, no matter. I am trying to do my job as the caboose and
if Ugyen let some kids go ahead, she knows better than I do. So my smaller
group and I kept trudging along. Eventually, we found ourselves walking along
the side of a little water canal. About an hour out from the nunnery the boys
in the front stopped, yelled to the back that there was “no way” (as in there
is no path, no way to go through). Well we couldn’t go down the hill, next to
us was a dangerous drop off and we couldn’t exactly go up the hill due to
cliffs. When I got closer, I saw what the boys were talking about. The water
canal that we had been following bridged a deep valley with a little water
bridge. So we were lost again. I’m not sure whose idea it was, (probably one of
the boys) but all of a sudden students were taking shoes off to wade their way
across the bridge. There were about four students on the far side when a girl
who had crossed began screaming bloody murder. With my heart racing I started
yelling over to her to try to see what was wrong. Thank goodness it was only
leeches. From that point forward, every 10-15 minuets one of the girls would
start screaming from finding leeches on their ankles and legs. I’ve never had a
leech on me before, and I never knew how strong their grip is! Or how they
wiggle their way up your leg! They truly are disgusting creatures.
So after forging the water bridge, we put on wet socks and
shoes and continued. The leeches continued to plague us, and we still were not
sure if the other half of the students were safe. But, what to do? Another hour
closer to home and again boys in the front were calling back, “No way, no way”.
This time it turned out to be a fallen tree. I assumed this
would be easier to get through than the water bridge, but was soon proven
wrong. The tree was slippery! And too big to completely straddle while using
feet to anchor ourselves to the ground. So with a lot of help, and the
acceptance that our feet would land in the leech-infested water on the other
side, we became true tree-huggers.
Following, following, following the water canal we continued
until we reached the river at the bottom of the valley. At this point, our once
sunny sky had become dark and threatening. This was not the bridge we meant to
cross, but due to the big rocks blocking our way, we had no choice but to wade
across here. This is when it started raining. I made it about half way, jumping
from rock to rock, before accepting my wet fate. Of course I’m too ambitious to
give up that easily, so I made a jump for another rock that was mostly
submerged in water, slipped, and fell right to the bottom of the river. Of
course all of the students were very concerned for me and came running through
the water to help me. I was fine, until I heard thunder and saw lightening.
Thankfully, we all made it out on the other side of the
river. Wet, but alive. Now we had to find a trail that would lead us back to
the road. Eventually we did, and climbed back up toward our town. The rain
never stopped and by the time I made it home I was very cold. I arrived home at
exactly 6:15 pm. making this a 12-hour hike. The hike finished with my friend
saying, “I hope you are not unhappy. It is very likely we will have a fever
tomorrow”.
Nerve-racking and exhausting, but still the best hike that
I’ve ever been on. I’m not sure that I’ve laughed so much in one day since
being here.
On a final note, as I lay in bed writing this, I discovered
a bloody ankle and a dead leech stuck to me. And that is AFTER taking a shower.