Bouncing buses, tibetan kids and open air sleeping.
We arrived in Lanjo and after breakfast we hit the road... and bounced... a lot. We bounced our way along for a good 6 hours or so until we arrived in Xiahe. We were met by our guide: Kunchuk, a stocky tibetan who came from a family of nomads. He walked us around the town to show us the prayer wheels and temples and explain a little of the history of the place. We then had dinner where Peter, our irish potato lover ended up in the kitchen cooking his potatoes to his desired crispyness, much to the amusement of the restaurant owners.
Next day we headed to the monastery for a guided tour. I`m annoyed that I can`t remember more of the facts but it was a pretty dense tour and lots of names were mentioned so it was pretty hard to take it all in. The temple had a great atmosphere: the air was heavy and the silence was almost oppressive.
After lunch we headed up another bumpy road towards our homestay and stopped at a Bund temple on the way. We then headed to a tibetan school to meet some tibetan kids. They were very curious about us and it wasn`t long before we were surrounded by little groups of tibetan kids who prodded us and shouted random things. They seemed really interested in our watches, my long blonde hair (yep... I kept it) and Brett taking his contacts out... altho they kept asking him to do it again and again and didnt seem to understand he wasnt taking parts of his eye out.
Peter, Brett and Dan all played football or frisbee with the kids. Brett started busting out his usual tricks and tormenting the kids. Tim and Katy taught them Head-Shoulders-Knees-and-toes which went down really well. I hung back at first as I`ve never been great with kids and wasn`t sure what to do. Then Katy asked me to do a cartwheel and I then had the idea to do some old Break-dancing tricks. Most of the kids gathered round to watch and I (tried) to teach them?@some moves but the language barrier made it very chaotic. Then I was stepped to by a 11 yr old girl who did the most amazing back bend I`ve ever seen. I know when I`m beat so I called it a day. We headed to the homestay after that and took a walk around the village wall.
The homestay was nice and our hostess was very pleasant. Kunchuk and her made?@us a thick noodle soup which was THE best meal so far. After that we had a couple of drinks of some paint thinner like alcohol called Arro (I think). Brett and Kunchuk then showed me and Katy how to play Sho, a tibetan dice game. We played a couple of rounds of that which was really good fun.
The offer was then revealed we could sleep outside so Kunchuk, Brett and I all headed out with some blankets and laid out. Once the lights went off inside you could see all the stars so clearly. It was beautiful to see the sky in the pitch black.