Sculpture of Sacagawea and baby Jean Baptist by Glenna Goodacre, against a gloomy grey sky; Buffalo Bill Historical Center, Cody, WY

Sacagawea and Baby Jean Baptist
Sculpture by Glenna Goodacre (b. 1931), Buffalo Bill Historical Center, Cody, WY

The Wild West is a place of legends and stories…

Few are more moving than that of Sacagawea (Bird Woman), the Lemhi Shoshone woman, kidnapped in 1800 by a raiding party of Hidatsa when she was about 12, and a year later, given or sold, along with another young captive Shoshone girl, to Toussaint Charbonneau, a French Canadian trapper. Thirty-four year old Charbonneau was hardly a prime catch: six years earlier he had been stabbed by an old Saultier woman for raping her daughter.

In 1804, Lewis and Clark hired Charbonneau as an interpreter for their expedition to explore the Western United States, because Shoshone-speaking Sacagawea was part of the deal. She gave birth to her first child, Jean Baptist, February 11, 1805, before the expedition set off, and the child travelled with her across the country. “Meriwether Lewis called [Charbonneau] “a man of no peculiar merit”.” Sacagawea, on the other hand, so impressed Lewis and Clark when she rescued their journals, records and other materials from the Missouri River after a boat capsized, that they named the Sacagawea River in her honour.

In American popular history, Sacagawea is an integral part of the Lewis and Clark story: in the early twentieth century, the National American Woman Suffrage Association adopted her as a symbol of women’s worth and independence; in 2000, the United States Mint issued the Sacagawea dollar coin in her honour; and in 2001, then-president Bill Clinton gave her the title of Honorary Sergeant, Regular Army.

I suppose if I were an American, I’d have know more about Sacagawea before visiting Wyoming – in the Wild West, the place of legends and stories…

Landscape: Buttes on the side of Highway 20 between Yellowstone National Park and Cody, WY.

Watch for Fallen Rock
The road out of Yellowstone National Park and into the rest of Wyoming lead us through a magnificent rocky landscape.

Landscape: large rocky outcrop on Highway 20 between Yellowstone National Park and Cody, WY

Like a scene out of a Western movie, rocky outcrops overwhelm the road. We have arrived in frontier country.

We found a motel in Cody, Wyoming, and parked our little sedan next to the Harley Davidson motorcycles and Mack trucks in the car park. Taking the desk clerk’s advice on eateries, we headed down the road to Cassie’s Roadhouse, a typically western-looking bar with a cowboy on a bucking bronco in neon over the front door…  and a huge parrot on the sign over the drive-in entry.

Here we learned about another woman who managed to succeed against the odds. Cassie Welsh moved to Cody with her father and married a local engineer in 1907. He died shortly thereafter, so she opened a “Ladies of the Night” house in central Cody. She later moved to the current Roadhouse on the West Strip, where she owned and ran the genteely-named Cassie’s Supper Club until her death in 1952. She is fondly remembered locally as “a lovely lady who always helped people”.

The parrot became a trademark of the next owners, who had brought two live birds from Brazil – as one does.

The restaurant was full when we arrived, and rather than wait we decided to sit in the bar, next to the wooden dance floor where two couples were about to practice. I thought we might be up for some line-dancing or a country two-step, but no! On Tuesdays, the local dance champion and instructor gives free lessons;  next thing we knew, we were brushing up our cha cha. In Wild West Cody!

It was far too much fun, and we never made it to the city’s nightly rodeo.

The next morning, we allocated some time to visit the Buffalo Bill Historical Center.

Not enough time, as it turns out. It is for good reason that the entry ticket is valid for two days: the complex of five museums in one building has been described by The New York Times as “among the nation’s most remarkable museums.” (Edward Rothstein, New York Times, August 3, 2012).

Stuffed Grizzly Bear under glass and coloured lights, Buffalo Bill Historical Center, Cody WY

Grizzly Bear
We entered the Buffalo Bill Historical Center through the Draper Museum of Natural History which depicts various aspects of the Greater Yellowstone area. We found it fascinating after having just been in the National Park itself.

Enter the ultimate Wild West legend: Buffalo Bill Cody, a name synonymous with the history of the American West.

He was born William Frederick Cody in 1846, of Quaker parents. From 1853, his family lived in Kansas, where they were regularly persecuted for their outspoken anti-slavery stance. When Cody was 11, he became the main breadwinner after his father died of complications from injuries inflicted by a pro-slavery supporter. He worked, first as a “boy extra” – a message runner – for a freight carrier, then as a scout during the Utah War, where he gained his reputation as a an “Indian fighter”.

Cody’s colourful career is a mix of fact and “spin”. He earned his “Buffalo Bill” nickname by killing 4,280 American Bison in only 18 months (1867–1868) while he was contracted to the Kansas Pacific Railroad to supply them with meat for their workers. Not long after, Ned Buntline’s serialised stories and dime-novels turned a loosely fictionalised version of “Buffalo Bill” into a national folk hero.

By age 26, Cody had been awarded a Medal of Honor for “gallantry in action” while serving as a civilian scout. The same year, he made his stage debut in The Scouts of the Prairie, one of Buntline’s original Wild West shows. During the 1873–1874 season, “Wild Bill” Hickok joined Cody and “Texas” Omohundro in a new play called Scouts of the Plains.

Ten years later Cody founded his own “Buffalo Bill’s Wild West” show, which was staged, in one form or another, across the US and in Europe until 1908. Looking through the exhibits and memorabilia, I was amazed at the breadth and depth of performers he engaged. Fancy riders from all over the world; Western figures whose names I recognised, like Calamity Jane and Annie Oakley; Native Americans like Sitting Bull. Buffalo Bill’s troupe was successful at popularising “The West” in the US and Europe, making his persona an American icon and an international celebrity.

Like other figures who are larger than life, Cody’s legacy is a mixed one. Although responsible for thousands of buffalo deaths, he actively supported conservation, spoke out against hide-hunting, and pushed for a regulated hunting season. He was known as an “Indian fighter” but he respected Native Americans and their rights. He is quoted as saying: “Every Indian outbreak that I have ever known has resulted from broken promises and broken treaties by the government.” He was castigated as a drunkard, a fraud, a bad businessman and a racist. But while he made and lost fortunes, he was generous to a fault. He supported women’s rights and payed them, and the Native Americans and foreign nationals in his traveling show, according to merit, not race or gender.

He died in 1917, a Western legend – but almost broke.

The city of Cody, and it’s wonderful museum, is only a small part of his contribution to the American West.

Scout

Scout’s Gear
Long hair, to protect the eyes and ears; long coat for warmth; and long rifles for more accurate, powerful shots at enemy or game.

Museum case: Hon. W.F. Cody Uniform and saddle

Hon. W.F. Cody Uniform and Saddle

Buffalo Bill Museum (Cody) case: Revolver, beaded moccasins, gauntlets and program from the "Buffalo Bill Combination"

“The Buffalo Bill Combination”
Western showmanship: Props from one of Buffalo Bill’s shows.

Buffalo Bill Historical Center Museum case: Annie Oakley

Annie Oakley’s Gloves
Costume from one of “Buffalo Bill’s Wild West” shows.

View inside an American Army Scout

Luxury Tenting
View inside an American Army Scout’s base-camp tent, Buffalo Bill Historical Center.

Buffalo Bill Historical Center: Buffalo Bill

Portable Tent
Smaller tents were used for scouting forays.

Cody called Native Americans: “the former foe, present friend, the American”.

The Plains Indian Museum section of the Buffalo Bill Historical Center depicts the history and culture of Native Americans, while highlighting their place in modern America.

Buffalo Bill Historical Center Museum display:

Dog Soldier Feather Bonnet
Visitors examine the exhibits in the Plains Indian Museum section of the Buffalo Bill Historical Center.

Display of a Plains

Plains Indian Tent

Display of Ancient Corns: The Plains Indian Museum: Buffalo Bill Historical Center

Ancient “New World” Corns 

Mounted Beaded Papoose Carriers, The Plains Indian Museum  ,Buffalo Bill Historical Center

Beaded Papoose Carriers

Model of a Plains

Woman’s Work
A Plains woman on horseback, with a travois.

Cowrie Shell-Embellished Dress: The Plains Indian Museum, Buffalo Bill Historical Center

Cowrie-Shell Embellished Dress
Quill working, hide painting and bead working demonstrated women’s skills, and their pride and love for their families.

Richly Decorated Man

Man’s Cape

 sculpture

Fury ~ Man and Horse

Sculpture of Buffalo Bill outside the Buffalo Bill Historical Center

Buffalo Bill
The sculpture of a very dapper Bill Cody outside the Buffalo Bill Historical Center bids us good-bye.

Sculpture of a wolf howling, outside the Buffalo Bill Historical Center

Wolf Howling
Another enduring symbol of the American West…

Reluctantly, after a great lunch in the cafeteria, we set off, out of the Buffalo Bill Historical Center, out of Cody, and east – out of Wyoming…

Wide-angle landscape: Eastern Wyoming

Wyoming Prairies and Mesa

Landscape: highway into mountains, East Wyoming

Highway I-14 East

Landscape: the rushing waters of Shell Creek under a grey sky.

Shell Creek
The low point, before the rise into the Bighorn Mountains.

Landscape: Highway through a car windscreen, disappearing into wet cloud.

Into a Snow Cloud
The road through the Bighorn Mountains disappears… Middle of summer, but they say it’s going to snow tonight!

Text: Happy TravelsWe stopped at a forlorn off-season mountain resort before descending the other side of the Bighorn Mountains. When we finally managed to attract some service, our waitress rued the “miserable climate” and the likelihood of summer snow. She was fed-up, homesick and California dreaming…

The Wild West is not for everyone.

‘Till next time!

Pictures: 15August2012

  • Signe Westerberg - May 17, 2013 - 1:33 am

    What a great post, took me back to my child hood, so many names I recognised and knew a little about. Sounds like a place you could have easily allowed 2-3days to explore.ReplyCancel

    • Ursula - May 17, 2013 - 4:33 pm

      “Biographies” are so much more fun than “history”! 😀ReplyCancel

Shoe prints in damp sand, Dingle Peninsula, Ireland

Castlegregory Beach
One of Ireland’s longest beaches: from Cloghane Village to the Maharees and Castlegregory.

Rain.

It was day nine of our walk around the Dingle Peninsula last June, and once again we woke up to rain.

Soft, misty, Irish rain – but coat-soaking, bone-chilling, camera-splattering rain even so. Not my idea of beach weather! My walking boots were still wet from crossing bogs the day before, so the overcast skies had me feeling less than cheerful.

According to our trip notes, we were up for a 29 kilometre walk, with 11 kilometres of it (or 11 miles – depending on whom you believe) along Castlegregory Beach. In the rain.

Day 9: Cloghane to Castlegregory

A long but not a demanding day, dominated by Irelands longest beach, with fantastic views of both sea and mountains and the off shore Maharees Islands.
 Local birds include seabirds (several species of seagull, shags, cormorants, gannets to name but a few), larks, starlings, curlews, crows, ravens, garden birds such as sparrows, robins and finches, and wading birds such as the heron. The swallow is a frequent visitor in the summer months, all to be seen on this walk.

Distance: 29 km/18 miles, Ascent: 40m/120 ft





View over River Owenmore on a misty morning, Cloghane, Ireland

River Owenmore
Everything was fresh – and wet – as we set out on our walk from Cloghane, Ireland.

Landscape: expanse of wet beach under an overcast, cloudy sky. Castlegregory Beach, Dingle Peninsula, Ireland

Castlegregory Beach
One small patch of blue beckons us as we start our traverse along the beach skirting Brandon Bay.

Close-up: intricate shell on a Castlegregory Beach, Dingle Peninsula, Ireland

Textures
Wind whips up the wet sand over the creatures stranded by the last high tide.

Miles of rippled sands under blue skies with white clouds, Castlegregory Beach, Dingle Peninsula, Ireland

Castlegregory Beach
Two hours into our walk, the skies start to clear, lifting our moods, and completely changing the colour of the landscape.

Gull taking off from the edge of the water, Castlegregory Beach, Dingle Peninsula, Ireland

Gull Taking Off

Large European Herring Gulls wading in the surf, Castlegregory Beach, Dingle Peninsula, Ireland

Seagulls Wading
Large European Herring Gulls (Larus argentatus) congregated in groups at the water’s edge.

Seagull in flight, Castlegregory Beach, Dingle Peninsula, Ireland

Seagull in Flight

European Herring Gull (Larus argentatus) wading in the soft surf of Castlegregory Beach, Dingle Peninsula, Ireland

Seagulls in the Surf
A Lesser Black-backed Gull (Larus fuscus) wades at the water’s edge.

Landscape: grass-covered sand dunes, sandy beach, bright blue sky, Castlegregory Beach, Dingle Peninsula, Ireland

Sand Dunes
A lot of our walk was past dunes covered in hardy marram grass.

Close-up: a tuft of beach grass (Ammophila arenaria) on a sand dune.

A Tuft of Grass
European Marram Grass or Beachgrass (Ammophila arenaria) clings to the windy sand-scape.

Close-up: a blue beach pebble marks a path through pale  sand, Castlegregory Beach, Dingle Peninsula, Ireland.

Nature’s Still-Life: Pebble Drift

Landscape: Low black clouds and patched of blue sky over Castlegregory Beach, Dingle Peninsula, Ireland

As we approach the north end of the beach, black clouds roll in …

Sand dunes covered in beachgrass, reflected at the water

… slanting the light low over the dunes …

Landscape: Windsurfer against the small village of Fahamore and grey skies, Castlegregory Beach, Dingle Peninsula, Ireland

Windsurfer
… and darkening the skies over the hamlet of Fahamore (An Faiche Mór or “the large green”).

Four Eurasian Oystercatchers (Haematopus ostralegus) at the water

Oystercatchers
Eurasian Oystercatchers (Haematopus ostralegus) are meant to be common in this area; these were the first we saw.

Landscape: black cloud over a beach with three people in wetsuits at the edge, Castlegregory Beach, Dingle Peninsula, Ireland

Body Surfers
Young people in their wetsuits seem unconcerned about the incoming clouds.

Once we reached the little hamlet of Fahamore (An Faiche Mór) at the north end of Brandon Bay, we took a break at the charming – and apparently “famous” – Spillane’s Bar & Restaurant. We were more than ready for a late lunch and early libation: there is nothing like a little stroll in the sea air to sharpen the appetite!

The next stretch of walking took us across Scraggane Bay, then back south along Tralee Bay towards Castlegregory.

Pied Wagtail (Motacilla alba yarrellii), Scraggane Bay, Dingle Peninsula, Ireland.

Pied Wagtail (Motacilla alba yarrellii)

Landscape: Fishing boats moored on Scraggane Bay, Dingle Peninsula, Ireland

Boats on Scraggane Bay
A small fleet of fishing boats, netting European lobster, spiny lobster or crayfish, spider crab, edible crab, and Atlantic salmon, keeps this area alive.

Rusty farm cart, Scraggane Bay, Dingle Peninsula, Ireland

Rusty Cart
The other economic mainstay is farming: mostly root vegetables, which love the sandy soil.

A stocky white bull against green grass with white and yellow flowers, Scraggane Bay, Dingle Peninsula, Ireland

A young bull watches us pass.

Landscape: horses appear to race a vehicle across green Irish countryside, Maharees peninsula, Ireland

Like a Commercial!
It must be dinner time: the horse seems to be racing the car across the Maharees Peninsula.

Ancient (seventh century) cross slab in Kilshannig Graveyard, Maharees Peninsula, Ireland

Kilshannig Graveyard
The crumbling graveyard at Kilshannig includes an ancient (seventh century) cross slab.

Landscape: grass, sand and sharp rocks against Tralee Bay, Dingle Peninsula, Ireland.

Rocky Coast
The beach on the east of the Maharees Peninsula, along Tralee Bay, is covered in sharp rocks.

A trap for lobster or crayfish sits over Tralee Bay.

Fish Traps
Traps for lobster or crayfish are scattered around Tralee Bay.

text: slainte - good health

The overcast had lowered again and the skies were almost dark by the time we stumbled into Castlegregory, our home for the night.

It had been, as our trip-notes had promised, a “long but not a demanding day”: a wonderful walk with some great scenery.

So, I was happy: my camera chips were full… and my boots were finally dry.

Sláinte!

Pictures: 27June2012

A dirt path leading through Pacific Northwest woods, Westminster Abbey, Mission, BC

Into the Woods
It’s a pleasant walk around the grounds of Westminster Abbey, Mission, BC.

Kermit the Frog lamented on the difficulties of being green.

It’s not that easy bein’ green
Having to spend each day the color of the leaves
When I think it could be nicer being red or yellow or gold
Or something much more colorful like that

It’s not easy bein’ green
It seems you blend in with so many other ordinary things
And people tend to pass you over ’cause you’re
Not standing out like flashy sparkles in the water
Or stars in the sky

It may not be easy being green, but I always feel better when I am surrounded by it.

During our too-brief stay in some smaller communities in Canada’s forested and green British Columbia last July, we took advantage of the wilds on our doorsteps, and walked out into the woods whenever we could.

While staying in Mission, a small city on the north bank of the Fraser River, about 60km inland from Vancouver, we visited the nearby Benedictine monastery of Westminster Abbey.

View of Westminster Abbey, Mission, BC from across wet green lawns; gray skies behind.

Westminster Abbey, Mission, BC

The order was established in 1939, and construction of the abbey, church, and seminary, all designed by Norwegian architect, Asbjørn Gåtheat, started at this site in 1953. The monks took up residence the next year.

During the school term, the Abbey is home to the only Anglophone high school seminary in Canada and a college degree program. While we were there, however, the church was padlocked tight, and the grounds were quiet. We saw one small group of visiting religious – perhaps escorted by one of the 30 resident monks.

Orange-Red Berries against green leaves, Westminster Abbey, Mission, BC

Orange-Red Berries

Large black slug on moss and leaf litter, Westminster Abbey, Mission, BC

A damp climate with plenty of dark, green places, means slugs can usually be found.

View up the Fraser River valley from Westminster Abbey, Mission, BC

The abbey grounds provide a commanding view up the Fraser River Valley.

Green landscape: small group of people, including nuns in habit, walking, Westminster Abbey, Mission, BC

A group of visitors inspect some of the grounds’ 70 hectares.

Detail: Pine Cones, Westminster Abbey, Mission, Bc

Pine Cones

From the Abby, it is not far to Rolley Lake Provincial Park, which – in the words of their own website – “provides a quick escape from urban life”.

Lakeside Loop, around Rolley Lake, provided us with with a delightful walk through more green…

Landscape: View over Rolley Lake

Rolley Lake

Two boys in the distance, view of the curving wooden boardwalk section of the Lakeside Loop, Rolley Lake, BC

A boardwalk section of the Lakeside Loop skirts over wetlands.

Inside a douglas fir forest, Rolley Lake Provincial Park

Once Were Woods…
Anything could be lurking – it’s like something out of a Brothers Grimm fairy tale!

Close up: moss on a tree trunk.

Mossy Woods
If you get lost, just remember that moss grows denser on the north side of trees.

Branches covered in short Spanish moss criss-crossing, Rolley Lake Provincial Park.

Spanish Moss

Trees leaning over a clear, rocky-bed creek, Rolley Lake Provincial Park

Woods and Clear Waters

Small tumbling waterfall over rocks and moss, Rolley Lake Provincial Park

Tumbling White Waters

Dry brown dead leaves, hanging against fresh green of new growth, Rolley Lake Provincial Park

Dead Leaves

Closeup of Moss, Rolley Lake Provincial Park

More Moss

Lanscape View: people kayaking and fishing on Rolley Lake, BC

Rolley Lake is a popular kayaking, swimming and fishing spot.

A few days later, we had the chance to wander some of the seven kilometres of trails that criss-cross Cliff Gilker Park in Roberts Creek, on BC’s Sechelt Peninsula. We walked well-maintained spongy trails through Douglas Fir and Red Cedar trees, climbed stairs, clambered over rocks and crossed charming bridges over Clack and Roberts Creeks.

View through trees of a small Waterfall, Cliff Gilker Park, Roberts Creek, BC

Small Waterfall, Cliff Gilker Park

View of branches of Evergreen Trees, Cliff Gilker Park, Roberts Creek, BC

Evergreen Trees

Spanish Moss on criss0-crossing tree branches, Cliff Gilker Park, Roberts Creek, BC

Spanish Moss on Lowered Branches

The thick, deeply grooved Bark of a large Douglas fir tree, Cliff Gilker Park, Roberts Creek, BC

Textures: The Bark of a Douglas Fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) 

Small Red Berries against green leaves, Cliff Gilker Park, Roberts Creek

Small Red Berries

Salmonberry - Rubus spectabilis - on a green shrub, Cliff Gilker Park, Roberts Creek, BC

Salmonberry – Rubus spectabilis

Fallen trees wedged amongst other trees, Cliff Gilker Park, Roberts Creek, BC

Even the Mighty Fall!

Cedar and fir: Beautifully straight, tall tree trunks - Cliff Gilker Park, Roberts Creek, BC

Cedar and fir both have beautifully straight, tall tree trunks.

Forest scene: Fallen log and Water Falling,  Cliff Gilker Park, Roberts Creek

Fallen Log and Water Falling

Thanks to Joe Raposo‘s lyrics, Kermit comes to grips with being green:

But green’s the color of Spring
And green can be cool and friendly-like
And green can be big like an ocean
Or important like a mountain
Or tall like a tree

When green is all there is to be
It could make you wonder why
But why wonder, why wonder?
I am green and it’ll do fine
It’s beautiful!
Text: Happy RamblingAnd I think it’s what I want to be!

I’m glad – because I love it.

Photos: 25July 2012 and 28July2012

  • Signe Westerberg - May 3, 2013 - 3:50 am

    gorgeous as always…and moss in the southern hemisphere is thicker on the southern side and moss in itself is a sign of good clean air. 🙂 Moss apparently doesn’t grow in polluted environs 😛ReplyCancel

    • Ursula - May 9, 2013 - 6:37 pm

      True, Signe, ’tis good air in the beautiful PNW. btw: Where does moss grow on the equator? 😀ReplyCancel

  • […] gone back to Canada for visits, we’ve searched out little emerald patches of nature (e.g.: Walking in the Green; Tide Pools; Lighthouse Loop; Newcastle Island; “Strong Waters”; Clayoquot Sound; Walks […]ReplyCancel

Young novice nun in White, clutching her alms bowl, looking over her shoulder. Mahagandayon Monastery, Mandalay

Phothudaw (ဖိုးသူတော်) – Acolyte
Mahagandayon Monastery, Amarapura

It is a different world…

Temples and monasteries are an integral part of life in Myanmar. They accommodate about half a million males, who are either vocational monks or novices, and around 50,000 nuns. That is: roughly one percent of the population actually lives in one of the many monasteries or nunneries, completely dependent on the laity for all their material needs.

Theravada Buddhist monastic life has a strict daily routine revolving around prayers and religious study, but it is the silent alms-rounds (e.g. Sangkhlaburi, Chiang Rai, and Luang Prabang) and the mealtimes (e.g. Lining up for Lunch) that fascinate outsiders and which provide such rich photographic opportunities.

View of young monks behind a half wall: one shaving the other

The Morning Shave
Mahagandayon Monastery

Being a “tourist attraction” is a dilemma for monastic institutions: while having visitors contributes to their financial well-being, and promotes cultural understanding, it can be disruptive. ‘Boundaries’ are different between cultures, and many tourists seem to be unaware (or to deliberately ignore) local expectations of behaviour within sacred grounds.

Mahagandayon Monastery in Amarapura, outside Mandalay is on just about every Burmese travel-agent’s itinerary. Founded around 1914, it is one of the largest teaching monasteries in Myanmar, and home to up to 2000 monks at any given time.

The common areas of Mahagandayon Monastery are quite open, but visitors are clearly instructed which parts are out-of-bounds to them: an injunction that more than one tourist, unfortunately, ignores. Daily, tourists descend mid-morning to watch the resident monks line up silently and systematically for their lunch – their last meal of the day.

An elder monk walking on the sidewalk, Mahagandayon Monastery

Abbot
Mahagandayon Monastery

Monks forming Lunch Lines in the rain, Mahagandayon Monastery

Start of the Lunch Lines

Young Burmese Theravada Buddhist monks line up with their alms bowls, Mahagandayon Monastery

Eyes Down
Young monks line up for lunch.

Environmental Portrait: Young Burmese Theravada Buddhist Monk in a queue, Mahagandayon Monastery

Young Monk Waiting

The bare feet of burmese Buddhist monks, Mahagandayon Monastery

Best Foot Forward
Bare feet on the wet walkways of Mahagandayon Monastery.

Line of Burmese Theravada buddhist monks, Mahagandaryon Monastery

Lines Moving into Lunch

Because visitors cannot be relied upon not to disturb the monks during their silent mealtime, they are no longer allowed inside the dining hall. So I, my nine photo-group companions, our leader Karl Grobl, and our guide Mr MM, remained outside, in the rainy streets and alleys of the monastery while the the monks ate in peace.

Once they finished eating, they filed out and commenced cleaning up.

Silhouette of a theravada buddhist monk in a lunchroom, Mahagandayon Monastery

Lunchroom, Mahagandayon Monastery

Young burmese theravada buddhist monk Washing Dishes, Mahagandaryon Monastery

Washing Dishes

Portrait: Monk Closeup Mahagandaryon Monastery

Greeting Visitors and Pilgrims

Chinese Monk in long yellow robes in the wet street through Mahagandayon Monastery

Chinese Monk
Visitors and pilgrims to Mahagandayon Monastery come from all over.

Burmese Theravada Monk talking to a blond woman, Mahagandayon Monastery

Monk Talking to a Visitor
Many of the monks at the monastery were articulate in English, and outspoken about their country’s history and politics.

Laneway Mahagandayon Monastery

Cross Cultural Discussions

Monk walking in a laneway, Mahagandayon Monastery

Monk in a Lane Way

A Theravada Monk on a balcony, Mahagandayon Monastery

From a balcony, a monk watches the visitors below.

Woman Waiting Mahagandaryon Monastery

Woman Waiting
Indigent people wait…

Young monk giving food to an indigent woman, Mahagandaryon Monastery

Alms for the Poor
… until the monks give them leftovers.

Young monk at a square water trough, washing dishes, Mahagandayon Monastery

Washing Up

We left the monks and the Mahagandayon Monastery to get our own lunch in Sagaing, southwest of Mandalay. Above the Ayeyarwady River, the Sagaing Hills are dotted with monasteries and nunneries; we stopped at one nunnery, where the women were busy preparing food for the next day: for themselves and for the neighbouring monks.

Three burmese nuns in pink robes and red skirts, sitting on a bench, preparing food, Sagaing Hill

Three Nuns, Sagaing Hill
Even though their last meal of the day is before noon, preparation for the next day’s meal starts early.

Portrait of a laughing burmese nun, Sagaing Hill

The nunnery is full of laughter.

Portrait of a smiling burmese nun, Sagaing Hill

The women have a natural beauty.

Portrait of laughing burmese nuns, preparing vegetables, Sagaing Hill

Work is easy when you have a friend to laugh and gossip with.

Portrait of a smiling burmese nun, Sagaing Hill

An older nun smiles at a kitchen doorway.

Portrait of a smiling burmese nun drawing water from a tap, Sagaing Hill

Another nun collects water.

Burmese nuns washing in a bucket, Sagaing Hill

Even though washing-up conditions are a bit rough, everything looks spotless.

Text: Metta - wishing you loving kindness.It is a different world.

Structured. Ordered. With a time and place for everything.

But, there is always acceptance and a welcome for outsiders, and there is always time for a smile and a laugh.

It’s a pretty good world, really, and I hope future visitors show it the respect it deserves, lest we not be invited back.

Pictures: 14September2012

  • Signe Westerberg - April 25, 2013 - 11:10 pm

    Beautiful as always Ursula, what fabulous smiles and giving people.ReplyCancel

    • Ursula - April 26, 2013 - 12:37 am

      Pleasure, as always, Signe, to have you along. 🙂ReplyCancel

  • Ayn Brown - May 3, 2013 - 2:11 pm

    Love it, such a beautiful portrayal of the spirit in the monasteries.ReplyCancel

    • Ursula - May 3, 2013 - 9:50 pm

      Thanks, Ayn. I would have loved more time with the nuns. Amazing place, isn’t it?ReplyCancel

  • […] “Being a ‘tourist attraction’ is a dilemma for monastic institutions: while having visitors contributes to their financial well-being, and promotes cultural understanding, it can be disruptive. ‘Boundaries’ are different between cultures, and many tourists seem to be unaware (or to deliberately ignore) local expectations of behaviour within sacred grounds.” -Weekly Wanders […]ReplyCancel

  • Aurora Lambino - December 3, 2016 - 6:13 pm

    Thank you for a more detailed insight of what Mahagandayon Monastery has to offer. We were brought there and given basic knowledge of it being a teaching monastery. Like you, we had seen the activities that you had featured in your write up, except the interaction of the monks and the lay “tourist”. I thought, one can not even engage them in any conversation, so, out of respect, I did not speak to any one except ask permission for a photo or two. Most have been very obliging.ReplyCancel

    • Ursula - December 4, 2016 - 12:55 am

      Hi Aurora,
      Thanks so much for your visit and your comments.
      It’s always hard to know how/if we should interact with people in these “foreign” settings – even when our guides have given a briefing. I tend to keep my camera down until I’ve made eye-contact, and “ask” for consent wordlessly. The monks or nuns then take the next step, and I get a better sense what is ok. As you say, they are usually MUCH more obliging than I would be in their shoes!
      Cheers! U.ReplyCancel

  • […] Por ser tudo muito perto, rapidamente chegamos ao aeroporto e, meia hora depois de decolarmos, chegamos a Mandalay. Como a proposta sempre é aproveitar cada minuto, nossa programação já estava pronta e, assim que desembarcamos, fomos até Amapura para visitarmos Mahagandayon Monastery – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c8o5nTGX_8Uhttps://www.ursulasweeklywanders.com/religious-practice/monks-nuns-and-a-monastic-life-mahagandayon-m… […]ReplyCancel

  • လင်း - May 24, 2024 - 2:28 am

    The white-robed “boy” in the first photo is a “phothudaw” (ဖိုးသူတော်) a white-robed “acolyte”, Not a “novice nun”!ReplyCancel

A canal with water wheels under an avenue of trees, Nîmes, France.

Avenue Jean Jaures
Nîmes gets its name from Nemausus, a Celtic god who was worshiped at the local spring. Les Quais de la Fontaine, the embankments of the spring, were laid out in the 1700s.

It’s autumn in Australia at the moment, which makes me think of spring in the Northern Hemisphere. Defies logic, I know, but there is something about the freshness of the air this change-of-season that has me humming: “I love Paris in the springtime…” and thinking of my last time in France, back in the spring of 2011, which is when we stopped for a day in Nîmes.

I’d been to Nîmes before: while I was a University student in Western Canada, I spent a summer working for friends who had bought an Auberge (country inn) in Gard, just outside this ancient southern city. I remembered it for it’s well-preserved Roman ruins, it’s cicadas, and its dry, shimmering heat.

I also remember it’s preoccupation with bulls.

Modernistic sculpture of a bull under red and yellow light ~ Lucien Blanc

Toro Miura qui Possede un Coeur ~ Miura Bull who Has a Heart
Lucien Blanc

That summer in Gard was the first (and only) time-and-place I attended a bull fight. Not the ‘glamourous’ Spanish fights with fancy toreadors in tight black pants, sparkly gold boleros, and red capes; no – more a ‘rodeo’ variety in a make-shift pen, with bull-fighters with pink and yellow capes that reminded me of cheap raincoats.

Composite: Five scanned photographs from a rustic bullfight, south of France, 1979

“Torro Piscine”
Bull Ring ~ Scanned photographs from a rustic bullfight near Nîmes, south of France, 1979.

It was a very long time ago, and I was keen to see if the city could live up to my distant memories of it. We were on our way to the start of our second walk in the French Pyrenees, travelling south from the Auvergne, so Nîmes was the perfect place to stop over. I booked a room close to the train station, and we set out with a city map, for a walk.

Wide-angle front-view of Le Palais de Justice in Nîmes.

Le Palais de Justice
Inspired by La Maison Carrée, the Nimes Law Courts were built between 1836-1846 by architect Gaston Bourdon.

Outdoor scene: people eating at coffee shop tables in a plaza. Nîmes

Life in the Palazzo

Well preserved Roman amphitheatre against a blue sky, Nîmes.

Les Arènes de Nîmes
Nîmes’ elliptical amphitheatre, built around 70 AD, is the best-preserved Roman arena in France.

Street view: Port de France, Nimes

Port de France
Locals go about their business through one of the two remaining gates from the original Augustine ramparts.

Posters for a dance and a play on a narrow street, Nîmes.

Modern Urban
Fresh paint and posters set off the old walls in the narrow streets.

Relief statues of saints: Frieze L

L’Eglise St Paul
Decorated in Roman provençal style, St Paul’s Church was inaugurated in 1849. Following periods of change, Nîmes had become the major metropolis of Bas-Languedoc by the 19th Century.

Looking up at the roof of the Maison Carrée, Nîmes.

La Maison Carrée
Built of local limestone by architects from Rome around 20 BCE, The Square House was designed by Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa, who was responsible for the Pantheon in Rome.

Side view of the Maison Carrée, Nîmes

La Maison Carrée
The temple was originally dedicated to Gaius and Lucius, adopted sons of Augustus. It is one of the most beautiful and best preserved temples in the former Roman Empire.

Statue of Emperor Antonin

Emperor Antonin (86 – 161)
Nîmes was part of the Roman empire from 118 BCE, and made a “colony” by Augustus in 27 BCE.

Lanscape: View across the canal to the roadway leading into the Jardins de la Fontaine, Nîmes

Avenue Jean Jaures
Leading into the Jardins de la Fontaine.

Stairways from the Jardins de la Fontaine to Mount Cavalier, Nîmes

Jardins de la Fontaine ~ The Gardens of the Fountain 
Built in the middle of the 18th century, the gardens effectively protect two major Roman ruins.

Looking up to the sky, through fresh green spring leaves.

Fresh Green
The trees in the garden are wearing their spring finery.

Ancient statue of a bearded man, Jardin de la Fontaine, Nîmes.

The gardens are home to ancient statues …

Young man sitting curb side with a guitar, Jardin de la Fontain, Nîmes

… and living art.

Nîmes

Temple de Diane
My favourite ruin, possibly because it is less well-preserved, is the Temple of Diana. Some say it was built as a sacred fountain dedicated to Nemausus during the time of Augustus. Others say it was built in the 2nd century as a library.

Inside the Temple of Diana, Nîmes

Inside the Temple

Pillars and arches, Temple of Diane, Nîmes

Ancient Pillars

Close-up of ancient, delicately carved stonework, Temple of Diane, Nîmes

Temple of Diane
Fragments of delicately carved stonework remain.

Close-up: purple pea-like flower.

Spring Blooms
Trees and bushes with these purple pea-like flowers were everywhere in the south.

View through rich foliage, up a path to La Tour Magne

La Tour Magne
It’s a short walk up the hill from the gardens to the La Tour Magne.

Ruins of La Tour Magne, Nîmes, against a blue sky.

La Tour Magne ~ The Great Tower
Once part of the old ramparts.

Looking up inside La Tour Magne, Nîmes.

The top storey has disappeared, but the tower still rises to a height of about 32m.

View over Nîmes from La Tour Magne.

Nîmes
A climb up the insides of La Tour Magne afford a great view over the city.

Olive tree and vegetation at the base of La Tour Magne, Nîmes.

The old olive tree and other vegetation at the base of the tower give an indication of the dry heat I remember so vividly from my earlier visit. Even though it was still spring, the day was hot and clear.

View of Les Arènes de Nîmes from the sidewalk café across the road.

Les Arènes de Nîmes
 During the Middle Ages, the arena was used as a fortress – a refuge for the population in case of danger. It was later filled with private houses, until the nineteenth century. Today, the amphitheatre is used for bullfights, music concerts. and other events.

Low light: inside the ancient arena, Les Arènes de Nimes

Les Arènes de Nimes
Inside the corridors of the arena, it is easy to imagine the ancient battles. The lion’s cages, and a chapel for the gladiators are all here.

Julie Donzala on a white horse conducting a fight with a mock-up bull

Modern “Bull Fight”
We were lucky enough to be  visiting during one of the two annual bull festivals: “La Primavera des Aficionados” (Spring of the Fans)Julie Donzala demonstrates her skills.

Hot pink toreador capes, Les Arènes de Nimes

Hot Pink
There are the capes of my memory!

A papier-mâché and wooden bull-head on wheels, controlled by a young man, Les Arènes de Nimes

Fortunately, the only “bulls” we saw were papier-mâché and wood on wheels.

Les Arènes de Nimes

Boy Toreadors
Young lads waiting for their turn with the “bulls”.

A draft horse being fitted with a heavy padded "skirt", Les Arènes de Nimes

This horse is being dressed for it’s role as a picador in a fight with real bulls.

Portrait: French man in a cap and red tee, Les Arènes de Nimes

Cavalier
One of la cavalerie de Philippe Heyral.

People in the ruins and stands, Les Arènes de Nimes

The Arena
It’s a quiet afternoon in the stands.

Text: Happy TravelsNîmes was still hot. It was still preoccupied with bulls. And the Roman ruins were still fabulous.

I didn’t hear any cicadas, but it was only April…

It was good to be back.

Pictures: 09April2011

  • Signe Westerberg - April 19, 2013 - 5:54 am

    How amazing and what history… were you a history buff before travelling or has it inspired you? thanks as always for sharing your travels.ReplyCancel

    • Ursula - April 19, 2013 - 7:06 am

      Hi Signe,

      Thanks for visiting. Actually, most history bored me to tears at school, and I struggled to remember all the requisite dates. When I first went to England, however, I was captivated by the history in the very stones and walls of the buildings. And the gossip! All those plots and feuds!! Nothing like they taught us at school. 😉ReplyCancel

  • […] far-flung as South Wales (i.e.: Caerleon – watch this space!) and the south of France (see: Ancient History: Nîmes) and Spain (see: Layers: Cartagena and Málaga) brings history to life, and makes me marvel at the […]ReplyCancel