Nepal. Like An Old Pair of Slippers

Nepal / India

by | Dec 13, 2016

December 2 – 10, 2016

Nepal. I keep waiting for you to let me down. To betray me. We all have our ups and downs. I’m fully expecting that old Lucy and Charlie Brown football trick. Yet, every day, I fall more in love you and this beautiful country. The people. The smiles. The kindness. And of course the raw, inspiring, (and sometimes unforgiving) landscape. Like a pair of old slippers, at first they were a bit stiff, but the more you wear them, the more comfortable they become. They begin to mold to the contour of your feet and you wonder how you ever got by without them. This has been my Nepal experience. Every day, I get more comfortable here and I wonder why I didn’t arrive sooner.

I had been mostly off the bike for three weeks when I returned from a week on a Thailand beach. This is not a ploy for sympathy, but I was definitely itching to ride. My new friend Laxmi Magar, whom I met at the Kathmandu Mountain Bike Festival, reached out to me and asked if I wanted to ride with her at 630 a.m. the next day. When the #1 ranked female mountain bike racer in Nepal invites you out for a local tour of the valley, is there an answer other than “yes”?  Laxmi has an infectious laugh that makes me laugh just being around her.  She truly cares more about inspiring and promoting female cycling in Nepal than her own achievements or accolades.

On a crisp morning, with the sun cresting the peaks and burning off the morning haze, we met up with 6 local guys from the Trek store and joined them…and the girl was still the fastest one on the dirt. It was a giggle inspired 2 hour tour of foot paths, drainage ditches, and dirt roads that linked several of the surrounding villages together and gave me yet another glimpse into the beauty of this country.

After a few more days in Kathmandu of going to dinner parties and spending time with new friends, I decided I either needed to rent an apartment and continue living this “normal” lifestyle with my old slippers, or I needed to get back on the bike and start moving.

On Friday morning I set out through more local foot paths and arrived in Bhaktapur. Bhaktapur is the largest of the three Newar kingdoms of the Kathmandu Valley, and was the capital of Nepal during the great ‘Malla Kingdom’ until the second half of the 15th century. Today it is the third largest city in the Kathmandu Valley with a population of more than 80,000. Bhaktapur is listed as a World Heritage Site by UNESCO for its rich culture, temples, and wood and clay artworks. The city is also famous for special type of curd (yogurt) called Ju Ju(king) dhau(curd), which is made from buffalo milk. It is the crack of yogurt.

Walking through Bhaktapur is like going back in time. There are millions of bricks that make up all the streets and buildings. Ok, I have no idea how many bricks, but literally, everything here is made of brick. Even the bricks are made of bricks. As a result, it was a place that had been unchanged for nearly 1000 years, save for an earthquake in 2015. Now, there is no overlooking the devastation. The Magnitude 7.8 quake that struck on April 25, damaged 116 heritages in the city. Of them, 67 were completely destroyed while 49 suffered partial damage. It is tragic to see a city that has survived for nearly 1,000 years, change almost in an instant. The spirit, will, and perseverance of the people here is unrelenting and nothing short of inspiring as they battle to rebuild their city.

Saturday is market day in Bhaktapur. All streets in the main square are lined with locals selling beautiful fruits and vegetables and delicious fried things. The ladies are huddled under blankets until the sun comes over the roof tops and hits their spot on the street.

Its easy to get lost in the modern conveniences of a place like Kathmandu that is geared toward western tourists, even though by comparison it is far behind Bangkok with regards to modern. (I did after all see a Lamborghini dealership there.) It is only when I leave a comfortable area like this that I am reminded and transported back to a place that is more real, where people are struggling, just trying to get by. My mind is more open and my senses more aware of life’s hardships. I am once again swimming in perspective and gratitude for all that gifts that I have. It is clear that I am too comfortable in my slippers. Tomorrow, I’m getting back on my bike, going east.

 

thumb_img_8948_1024

Exploring some local “goods”

thumb_img_8951_1024

Laxmi setting the course

thumb_img_8959_1024

Foot paths through the fields are great single track

thumb_img_8964_1024

The future

thumb_img_8994_1024

More local goods

thumb_img_9005_1024-2

Local road out of town…and oh, the traffic

thumb_img_9009_1024

Arriving in Bhaktapur

thumb_img_9019_1024

Bhaktapur

thumb_img_9020_1024thumb_img_9022_1024

thumb_img_9023_1024

Holding the buildings up

thumb_img_9026_1024thumb_img_9029_1024

thumb_img_9031_1024

Amazing wood craftsmanship

thumb_img_9035_1024

This is what an earthquake looks like

thumb_img_9048_1024

Holding the buildings up

thumb_img_9049_1024

Amazing local pottery

thumb_img_9050_1024

thumb_img_9056_1024

Caught a beautiful wedding ceremony

thumb_img_9065_1024thumb_img_9073_1024

thumb_img_9079_1024

More wood work.  Amazing

thumb_img_9083_1024

thumb_img_9084_1024

I always look for “local” food.  I’m 5’10” and I had to duck my head.  These places are easy to miss if you don’t know where to look

thumb_img_9087_1024thumb_img_9092_1024

thumb_img_9094_1024

Religious ceremony.  I hope its paint…

Get the Book

The World Spins By is an intimate journey of loss, curiosity, and love—recounted one pedal stroke at a time along Jerry’s two-year bicycle journey back to himself. 

2 Comments

  1. That’s good

  2. I rather be there than Israel