Pokhara is quite the excellent little Nepalese city. The part I stayed in was along a lake and beneath the mountains. I got to meander through most of the city in my 5ish days there and my lodge was a 2 dollar per night den of amazingness. There was a small garden with a table where I spent a large amount of time in a mixture of reading and talking to the incredibly nice people around. One of the ladies who ran it had very good English so we talked a lot about Nepal’s government, economy, etc. I enjoyed the stay quite a lot.
The 3rd day there was amazing and began with tea at about 6:30 before I left my room to walk toward the World Peace Pagoda. The beginning of the walk took me through the south side of town and along the lake to a little lookout point over the lake. It was here that I met Carmen from Spain and we ended up walking the rest of the day and having adventures. She is currently a few months into a year long journey that it literally around the world. She had been working in marketing for all of her professional life and had worked at several companies/jobs before becoming the marketing director for 20th century fox in Spain. She also shared how stressful/time consuming it was to be in that line of work. A few months ago she was physically ill from all of it and decided to leave and start traveling. Since then she has been to several countries and did the trek to Everest base camp in eastern Nepal. So that is something of an introduction to Carmen. The walk to the Pagoda was wonderful (there are lots of pictures on facebook). The trail went up and down through the hills as the views of the mountains got successively better. The pagoda was interesting to see but certainly not the highlight. My favorite part was the walk down the other side of the hills. There was a direct path down to a dock where you can hire a boat to go back to town. We decided to take a path that in theory goes down the backside of the hills and to a cool market. We ended up kind of lost and it worked out very well. This path went through several small village farms and ended up at a dry riverbed. We followed the river bed as the only option and ended up on the opposite side of the very large lake from Pokhara. There were hardly any people around and it was a great place to just sit and look at the mountains over the lake.
Eventually three guys from katHmandu came by on a boat and let us ride with them back to town. The next phase of the day consisted of eating one of the most delicious dishes ever created with a deceptively simple and misleading name. The dish answered the calling of vegetable curry and brown rice. It was basically a gigantic pile of brown rice and a gigantic pile of vegetables in a curry sauce that descended from heaven. The brown rice was the luxury because everything seems to come with unlimited white rice. After basking in the glory of the dish, I narrowly avoided passing out on the way to my lodge and went to sleep at an obscenely early hour.
Most of the time in Pokhara was spent on other explorations I will share later and hanging out with a local kid named Sakhti and lots of foreigners from mostly Europe. Pokhara, especially the area I stayed in, is quite touristy but also super wonderful.
After Pokhara was Lumbini because it is on the way to India and the historical birthplace of Buddha. Those stories will come soon.

