Saturday, August 4, 2012

NEPAL 032912 A Day of "B's"


Dear Everyone,

Today we returned to Boudha.

Breakfast on the deck at the Hotel Park Side began our last day at Chitwan National Park.  With our trusty Starbucks Via packs -- Colombian and Italian Roast -- or "milk tea" (for me), we savored our last day on the breezy second floor dining room deck.  Breakfast was accompanied by a great variety of bird songs and the sound and bright colors of traffic on the adjacent village road.

Baby elephants were the main attraction at the Elephant Breeding Center, our last field trip stop with Gopal. The smaller baby in the picture was born only eight days ago and was still learning how to use all FOUR!! of his brand new legs. The larger baby was sort of the center's mascot and chief pest.  We saw him snatch a bundle of specially prepared "nutritionally correct" elephant snack food from a pile next to the mahout who was making them just outside the enclosure's fence. We also saw a pair of spotted owlets in the stable where twin male "babies" of one year of age were with their mom still and chafing at their new chained up status.

NEPAL 032812 More Elephants and a Whole Lot More Water


Hello All, 

This morning started with a refreshing, open-air ride in the back of a small pickup through the “really downtown” area of Sauraha – restaurants, shops, hotels, bars, etc. – to the outdoor “embarkation lounge” for elephant rides through the jungle.  There were several towers like the one pictured below that eager tourists climbed to sit in what was essentially a big wooden box on the back of a willing elephant.  


Each of us straddled a corner post of the box for a gently rocking ride through a stream and onward into the jungle.  

NEPAL 032712 Water and Elephants


Dear Friends

Today was a marvel of pleasant ways to watch nature.  We started with another dugout canoe trip on the Rapati River. Instead of walking left out of our hotel to catch the boat for the short ride that had so captured our imaginations, we met out boatman near the riverside cafes for a three-hour float into the realm of colorful Nepalese water birds.  In the silence of the boat we could hear the bird calls and see them at their level, a much different experience from looking down on them from a jeep, and I felt myself relaxing into the experience deeper and deeper as the distance between us and the resorts increased.  Donna sat in front with Gopal and they went through the bird book -- amazingly he knew which page to direct her to for most of the species we had seen -- and they estimated that we saw at least 65 different birds.  

NEPAL 032612 A Chitwan Day of Birds and Rhinos

Hello again from Chitwan National Park


We began our day of looking for and enjoying wildlife on the Rapati river in a dugout canoe being poled along as Gopal, our naturalist guide, pointed out one colorful bird (could be a Kingfisher) after another (perhaps a Bee Eater, an Oriole, or or the Indian Roller).  It was quiet except for the sound of water sloshing along the sides of the boat and the bird sounds (and our whoops and hollers of delight when we saw yet another fabulous bird). 

NEPAL 032512 Hello from Chitwan National Park

Hello All


Well happy me, there is WiFi here at the Parkview Hotel -- which we later christened "The Potato Palace for its delicious and abundant supply of the vegetable at mealtimes -- where Gopal, the staff naturalist, has arranged a busy three days for us to explore the park.

We started out today with (1) packing, (3) a walk to see where Karma lived during his year in Boudha studying at a Buddhist monastery (The area is so changed that the building where he lived has been replaced by a larger structure), (3) a little stupa-side shopping, and (4) coke and momos at a rooftop restaurant next to the stupa to fortify ourselves for our journey here.

We got a taxi to the airport and had one of those "You know you're not home when ___ " moments when we noticed the prayer wheel on the dashboard.  You'll notice in the picture one reason why Nepali traffic seemed chaotic to us:  the influence of the former British Colony to the south (India) persists in the drive-on-the-left traffic pattern.