Posts Tagged 'Travel'

I was on the back seat of a bike, my camera was in the backpack and I thought that I would ask my friend to stop if I see someting beautiful. First time I asked was here… and then I left the camera with lense open right on my shoulder.

Ladakh

It’s almost impossible to tell here what is medium beautiful and what is very beautiful, especially if you still remember how it was for real.(…)
Read the rest of Ladakhi Roads (435 words)


This article Ladakhi Roads was originally posted at Tibetan Incense Blog.

© Oxanna for Tibetan Incense Blog, 2009. |
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Did you notice a big white stupa at the distance on some of the photos from the last story? It can be spotted from virtually anywhere, one does not need to climb higher for that. Though why not climbing? This is the view of it from guest house’s roof.

Ladakh Leh

Of course, one can climb to the stupa itself as well. During the very first days I was waiting for the weather to become better so that I would get warm and go out for a walk. But during the last days I was waiting for it to become foggy and little bit cold again. I wanted to portray mountains roped by fog and the clothes to wear did not really matter. (…)
Read the rest of Leh. Shanti-Shanti (451 words)


This article Leh. Shanti-Shanti was originally posted at Tibetan Incense Blog.

© Oxanna for Tibetan Incense Blog, 2009. |
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The West’s largest Buddhist stupa in Benalmádena is a karmic surprise amid the Moorish minarets and ancient Christian steeples.

By Lee Lawrence, The Christian Science Monitor, March 18, 2009

Dressed in dark jeans and jacket, Dizi Btissam fingers a motorcycle helmet as she listens to a young man with thick eyelashes and wavy hair. Behind them, a gilded statue of Buddha looks benignly down at a row of poinsettias.

“He is not a god,” Ivan Baez explains, as a low tremolo of chants filters through the sound system. “For us he represents the natural qualities that we all possess but that are obscured by our emotions, personalities…”

He is interrupted by the jingle of a cellphone from Ms. Btissam’s pocket. She dashes outside to answer. Mr. Baez smiles. He wears a collarless cotton shirt dyed the deep red of uncooked saffron, and he gives the impression that life is equally good whether or not Btissam returns. She does come back, though, minutes later, to listen without further interruption as Baez speaks about enlightenment, about “resting fully in what is” and experiencing “our highest potential.”

Buddhism is not what I expected to learn about in Spain. As I drove along the coast south of Malaga, my mind filled with the sound of lapping waves and the imagined clack of castanets. I pictured the rhythmic arches of Cordoba’s mosque and the intricate floral carvings of the Alhambra. The last thing I expected to see, rising above the guardrail, was the gold spire of a stupa, a moundlike monument that commemorates Buddha. And it was huge, soaring 108 feet high and stretching 82 feet across at the base – the largest stupa in the West.

Stupa in Benalmadena

Granted, this is Andalucia, a region known for its history of religious diversity. In many towns, the church bell tower encases an older minaret. In Cordoba and Toledo, 14th-century synagogues feature intricate Moorish carvings. And ensconced among Cordoba’s grand 10th-century mosque is a Roman Catholic cathedral. These are the legacies of La Convivencia, the time between 711 and 1492 when Muslims, Christians, and Jews lived peaceably together in lively intellectual and artistic exchange.

But a Buddhist stupa? What is it doing here?(…)
Read the rest of Press About The Benalmadena Enlightenment Stupa (844 words)


This article Press About The Benalmadena Enlightenment Stupa was originally posted at Tibetan Incense Blog.

© Leo Golan for Tibetan Incense Blog, 2009. |
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There is a big monastery and surrounding village of Lamayuru in about hundred kilometers from Leh.

Ladakh Lamayuru

Local guest houses look rather like a sand hole in the ground but if one manages to overcome the fear and enter inside then one can see absolutely decent rooms with beds covered by red carpets. Seeing you for the first time the guest house mistress is sticking out her tongue every second according to an old tibetan custom. She shows that the tongue is pink which means that its owner is not a demon.(…)
Read the rest of Lamayuru. Drikung Kagyu and perfectly common people (415 words)


This article Lamayuru. Drikung Kagyu and perfectly common people was originally posted at Tibetan Incense Blog.

© Oxanna for Tibetan Incense Blog, 2009. |
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Everything starts when the guesthouse owner opens before you the door of the room where you are going to live, and you see apples and buddhist flags.

Leh(…)
Read the rest of Leh. Indian Tibet (1,214 words)


This article Leh. Indian Tibet was originally posted at Tibetan Incense Blog.

© Oxanna for Tibetan Incense Blog, 2009. |
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In the LonelyPlanet guide this place is reffered to as a citadel. The word used is not "fort" or "fortress" which are more common, it’s specifically citadel, synonymous to a stronghold.

Ladakh

And here I can totally agree with the guide’s editors.

Ladakh

(…)
Read the rest of Ladakh. Bazgo. An ancient citadel. (179 words)


This article Ladakh. Bazgo. An ancient citadel. was originally posted at Tibetan Incense Blog.

© Oxanna for Tibetan Incense Blog, 2009. |
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What does a settlement start from in Ladakh? As it usually is, from a big and beautiful gate.

Ladakh

This gate is almost not decorated, one can spot much more impressive ones which are no inferior to painted entrances to big monasteries. But this one has three stupas on it: blue, white and yellow. This set of three coloured stupas can be seen in Ladakh everywhere, all sizes. The azure ones are especially impressive.

Ladakh(…)
Read the rest of Ladakh. Alchi. A model village. (133 words)


This article Ladakh. Alchi. A model village. was originally posted at Tibetan Incense Blog.

© Oxanna for Tibetan Incense Blog, 2009. |
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I’ve been travelling constantly since summer 2005. And from that time onwards all my belongings never took much more space than one backpack. Gradually its size became much smaller than in the beginning and contents were tested live: now I’m carrying almost nothing I would not use, and I have most things that are really needed.

Note: Article is dated september 2007, new version would come in april 2009 once I buy new bag as the one pictured is almost broken now.

Some time ago I was astonished by fact that actual buddhist monks could own only 7 things. It’s clear that in less hospitable climate than indian it will be hard to get along with only one piece of cloth as a dress. Also possibility of working and properly keeping in touch with the world would require even more devices with a paper notebook on top of the list and a laptop and mobile phone at its end. It’s also understood that the minimal set for plain survival and minimal set for comfortable life will be dramatically different, and here it’s very important to keep balance between what can really lighten your life on the road and what only makes your bag heavier.

Also, as you can imagine, set of things for Iran can be quite different from Goa’s set. What you possibly could not survive without in Russia would be of no use in Tibet. And some of the necessary things do not have to be carried along all the time as you can buy them upon arrival.

This photograph shows the content of my bag on the way from Europe to Asia: what I would call optimum set of belongings for travelling in all those not quite rich and clean asian countries.

And, of course, boy backpackers can replace some items with whatever would be useful for men.

 

 1.Backpack

It’s extremely important to have a high quality backpack. Its solidity, capaciousness and handiness influences a lot in your travels. Simply imagine how many times during your trip you will have to pack and unpack it and you will understand everything. Clothes and sleeping bag go into lower part, laptop goes into special pocket by back, everything else goes as it fits. After a number of shifts you will most probably develop most convenient order of placing things. But please remember that no matter how few things you have and how big your bag is it will be anyway totally full. Knowing it choose the bag of the size that you can carry easily. The things that would not fit into it will give you one more occasion to review what you really need and what not.

2.Small bag

Your backpack stays in the hotel and you go for a walk in the city. Accordingly your second bag should be big enough to accomodate a purse, camera, warm jacket or shawl, possibly a vacuum flask with some tea and sometimes laptop if you still don’t get internet from your mobile phone and have to go for sending mails and uploading pictures into the nearest cyber-cafe.(…)
Read the rest of Girl Backpacker’s Backpack (2,305 words)


This article Girl Backpacker’s Backpack was originally posted at Tibetan Incense Blog.

© Oxanna for Tibetan Incense Blog, 2009. |
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