.jpg) Smiling Faces and Bright Futures Thanks to dormitory accommodation, these Thai Hilltribe girls – children of Lisu itinerant workers – are able to continue their school studies.
The remote, mountainous corners of northern and western Thailand – and neighbouring Laos and Myanmar – are home to countless small villages of “mountain folk” (ชาวเขา), or ethnic “Hill Tribes”.
These Hilltribes/Hill Tribes are not a unitary group. In Thailand alone, there are six major distinct ethnic minority groups – the Akha, Karen, Meo or Hmong, Yao, Lahu, and Lisu, plus a few smaller groups and numerous sub-groups, each with distinctive customs and languages.
Most of these groups are relatively recent arrivals in Thailand; going into the 20th century, the country was home to only a few thousand hill tribe members. However, over a period of 200 or so years, groups have drifted across the borders from China, Tibet, Myanmar and Laos. Today, the combined groups are estimated to comprise about a million people in Thailand.
Traditionally, the Hill Tribes are migratory people who practiced slash-and-burn subsistence farming. In the past, their members were regarded as foreigners by the Thai legal and social system: even today, many of them lack legal status because of their past migrations across international borders. And, even when they are legally recognised, the remoteness of their communities puts them out of reach of many mainstream services, and the differences in their languages and customs puts them “outside” mainstream society.
Hill Tribe children face particular challenges in accessing education. They may live a long way from the nearest village school. Thai is not their language at home. Their subsistence-farming parents have little money for extras, like uniforms or books. The schools in these remote hills also face difficulties, for while the Thai Department of Education pays for classrooms and teachers, they do not invest in ancillary supports, like canteens and dormitories for children who cannot return to their distant homes during term, or libraries and recreational books to encourage literacy in pupils. Nor do they support individual students whose families lack electricity, running water, and a meaningful income. It is still often the case that “Hilltribe people are not getting the education they need to determine their future in society.”
Fortunately, this is changing.
When the Thailand Hilltribe Education Projects (THEP) was first formed in 1991, schools in the hills were struggling to provide even basic infrastructure for their resident students, and many children were dropping out of school at very young ages. Since then, THEP has supervised countless school dormitory, canteen, and agricultural projects, and has supported over 300 students through scholarship funding. In the last two years, the first THEP-sponsored students have graduated from university!
I love a good-news story that involves children being able to follow their dreams of an education.
And, I love visiting Northern Thailand, where the people are friendly, the views are stunning, and the food is superb. Susan Race, who manages the Thailand Hilltribe Education Projects (THEP), visits the region several times a year. She checks on the school projects she has found funding for, consults with local staff on potential new projects, and interviews all of the many Hilltribe students who receive study scholarships through her organisation. She does all this with absolute transparency: anyone who is interested is welcome to join her on her trips – as I have in the past (see: Ursula’s Weekly Wanders: THEP)
It is always great fun accompanying her, and meeting some of the students who benefit.
.jpg) Wings over Chiang Mai I feel good as soon as I see the red tile roofs of the city and the surrounding green mountains. (iPhone6)
.jpg) School Assembly Travel with Susan is always packed full! By nine in the morning, we are at our first school, where the children sit quietly waiting for us.
 Mini Speeches Many of the children at this school stay all term in dormitories that have received funding though THEP project grants. Flanked by Khru Usa, one of the local teachers behind THEP, and the school’s Headmistress, Susan speaks to the children briefly.
 Like a Pied Piper Khru Apichart, a local Headmaster and one of the principal drivers of THEP, walks towards a school’s dormitory with a group of children.
 Lisu Girls Some of the older dormitory residents line up to meet us. The Lisu tribe consists of more than 58 different clans; the groups in Thailand are known as “Flowery Lisu” on account of their colourful traditional costumes.
 Lisu Girls The Lisu are a Tibeto-Burman ethnic group, descended from indigenous semi-nomadic Tibetans.
 Kids Line Up About 55,000 Lisu live in Thailand, mostly in the remote, mountainous hills of the Northwest.
 In the Girls Dorm We are not really in “the Hills” here, though. These students live at the dormitory so that their parents can find itinerant work somewhere in the region.
 Lisu Girl in her Dorm The youngest dormitory resident is a five-year-old kindergarten student …
 Lisu Girl in her Dorm … with a lovely, cheeky grin.
 In the Mosquito Nets In the boys’ dormitory, the lads show us how the mosquito nets – which need to be replaced annually – work.
 Dormitory in the Rain The next school we visited has a number of tidy dormitories which accommodate several different Hill Tribe groups.
 High Bunk – Low Ceiling Inside one of the dorms, a Karen student in traditional dress shows off the top bunk.
 Karen Twins Traditionally, unmarried Karen girls wear dresses made of lengths of white or cream cloth that has been hand-woven on a backloom – if not by the girls themselves, then by their mothers.
 Hmong Dormitory Students A group of smiling boys in their wonderfully ornate outfits made by their mothers, greet us outside their dormitory.
 Inside a Dormitory The conditions in the dorms are simple, but at this school, they are beautifully maintained.
 Hmong Student The traditional Hmong black velvet costumes are richly embroidered, and decorated with beads and coins.
 Khru Apichart in the Boys Dormitory Apichart Intra was one of the founders of THEP. He takes an active interest in the projects and the children who benefit from them. Here, he is asking the dormitory students how it is going, and if they have any problems.
 Hmong Boy in his Dormitory
 Susan and the Teachers After a quick lunch, we move on to a local district office, where Susan and the teachers prepare to interview scholarship recipients.
 Students Filling in their Forms Scholarship recipients are expected to submit their grades every semester, and update the THEP team on any changes in financial and living status.
 Meeting Students Susan always invites interested people to join her on trips; these may be student sponsors, and/or members of organisations who have donated project money. They always enjoy meeting the students – many of whom are willing to try out their English.
 Student Group Shot No project can happen anywhere near a Thai educational office without the ubiquitous group shot! The Karen children in the front row are in traditional dress. We then got back in our van to drive further into the Hills: from Chiang Mai District, west into Mae Hong Son.
 Traditional Costumes After the long and winding drive through the mountains between Chiang Mai and Mae Sariang, we arrived at our last stop for the day, Sangwaan Wittaya School. We were greeted by students in traditional Lanna, Hmong, and Karen dress.
 Traditional Thai Dancing They danced for us while we ate our freshly prepared dinner. (iPhone6)
It was late when we finally pulled into our guesthouse.
We’d had a long day of meeting students and teachers, checking out dormitories and bunkbeds – a day full of fresh food and smiling faces. And, we had an early start the next day to do it all again!
I love travelling with Susan and seeing how the schools and students are doing. But, you have to have stamina!
A trip with THEP is work.
Joyful work.
Photos: 8June2017
Posted in Education,Portraits,Thailand,TravelTags: children,costumes,environmental portrait,environmental portraits,people,Photo Blog,portrait,portraits,Thailand,Thailand Hilltribe Education Projects,THEP,traditional,traditional dress,travel,Travel Blog,Ursula Wall
 Pura Ulun Danu Beratan The much-photographed 11-tiered meru – the thatch-roofed tower shrine – at Pura Ulun Danu Bratan is dedicated to Dewi Danu, the Goddess of the Waters, and features on Indonesia’s 50,000Rp note.
If you want to be a successful traveler, it pays to do your homework.
For example, checking the expected temperatures all around a region – not just on the coast – and packing accordingly!
This was not the first time I’d been caught out by weather in Asia: last year, my husband and I “forgot” that Vietnam is far enough north to get seriously cold in winter.
Bali, on the other hand, is just 8 degrees south of the equator, with average year-round tropical temperatures in the region of 30°C.
Unless, of course, you head into the mountains – in the wet season.
My husband and I had been enjoying some time in the coastal resort town of Sanur Beach when it became apparent that he needed to travel to Kuala Lumpur. Rather than join him, I decided to wait out his return near Candikuning. My plan was to do some yoga, go walking, catch up on work, and visit the temple of Pura Ulun Danu Bratan.
I hadn’t counted on the rain: three days of cold, ceaseless rain that knocked out the internet where I was staying and rendered my clothing – especially my shoes – woefully inappropriate. English language and tourist information fell away as I climbed the mountain to Wanagiri. Walking any of the local hikes was out of the question in the pelting rain and with the wet, slippery grass underfoot. No heat, no tv, no credit cards, and no internet: it didn’t take long for me to finish my book and to exhaust the “menu” in the wet, blowy common area. It turned out that the only transportation I could get down the hill to an ATM in the closest town was a motorcycle, making the idea of carrying my cameras seem pretty fool-hardy.
Still, you make do with what you have!
Fortunately, I had a plastic raincoat in my bag. I rolled up my pants so they wouldn’t get too soggy, grabbed my iPhone6 and my umbrella, got on the back of a small bike, and hung on for dear life.
 Bukit Kembar BacPaker Room I’m pretty sure the ad I read when I booked my simple room emphasised the “EcoTourism” rather than the “Bacpaker” aspects of my accommodation. Be warned: eco-tourism is often code for “no infrastructure”. Although, to be fair, the local coffee (although gritty) wasn’t bad, and the water in my shower was nice and hot.
 Overlooking Lake Buyan This is, no doubt, a lovely spot in good weather.
 The Road Ahead It was about 10 km of steep, winding mountain road, lined with jungle, macaques, and the odd house, back to the town of Candikuning.
 Entrance to Pura Ulun Danu Beratan (Bratan) I tried to organise for my motorcycle-taxi to meet me somewhere different, so I could go for a walk into town, but it was evident that we weren’t communicating clearly. I settled for assigning a time, and having him meet me here, where he left me.
 Guardian at the Gate This combined Hindu-Buddhist temple was built in 1633. Some of the features in the grounds – like the fierce dvarapala or gate guardians – are typical of Bali’s Hindu temple (and home) design.
 Eco-Eagle Other features – like this extraordinary eagle – were like nothing I’d seen before.
 Shrine Shrines of varying sizes and shapes are dotted around the grounds. The mountain in the background disappear into the rainclouds.
 Candi Bentar A typical feature of Balinese temple construction is the entry gateway, or Candi Bentar, which looks like an intricate tower that has been split into two.
 Inner Sanctum There is no entry to the inner sanctum of the temple, except to those who are engaged in genuine worship.
 Inner Sanctum When the richly-carved doors are open, however, you can see the draped temples within.
 Visitors to the Deer Sanctuary Deer have a special place in Buddhist lore, representing Buddha’s disciples.
 Barking Deer The barking deer (muntjac) is a protected species in Indonesia because of their diminishing numbers in the wild.
 The 11-Storey Pelinggih Meru at Pura Beratan Pura Beratan is a major Shaivite water temple complex, part of the UNESCO-listed Subak water management system. The 11-storey Pelinggih Meru is dedicated to Shiva and his consort Parvathi, and also enshrines a Buddha statue.
 Visitors to the Temple A brief pause in the rain allows visitors and their Balinese guide to walk around the site.
 Fish Statue A giant fish lives in Danau Bratan, which is also known as the Lake of Holy Mountain because of the area’s fertility.
 Worker on the Site
 Sacred Fig Tree Wrapped in a black and white checkered cloth which symbolises the balance of good and evil in Balinese Hinduism, a giant fig commands a central place on the lawns.
 Patterned Paths
 Boats for Hire There are no takers for the hire boats in the wet weather.
 Another Fish Outside the restaurants, more fish operates as a fountain.
 Umbrellas in the Rain From inside one of the restaurants, I can stay dry while watching more visitors as they leave the site under their colourful umbrellas.
I was lucky: the restaurant had reasonable prices and a free wifi signal; I dragged out my lunch as long as I could so that I could stay dry and check my mail and Facebook for the first time in two days.

Eventually, however, I had to roll up my pants again, don my plastic raincoat and brave the elements to meet my motorcycle driver for the long, wet ride back to my modest room.
Such is travel!
01February2017
Posted in Bali,Indonesia,Religious Practice,TravelTags: architecture,Bali,buddhist,hindu,Indonesia,Photo Blog,religion,temple,travel,Travel Blog,UNESCO,Ursula Wall,worship
 A Quiet Bench There is something very “English” about a wood and iron bench sitting amid wet grasses and spring daisies.
“Spring” – that season of new life and fresh growth – is a concept originating in the temperate regions of Europe.
There is nowhere quite like an English country-garden to herald Spring in all its traditionally subtle beauty. The gentle rains – for which the countryside is so well known – coupled with slowly increasing sunlight, give rise to fresh budding leaves and an abundance of flowers. When the sun is shining, it is easier to believe in the ideas of rebirth, rejuvenation, renewal, and regrowth.
In practical terms, the arrival of spring, after a long, cold, grey winter, signals that it is time for people to get outside – either into their own small patches, or into those wonderfully expansive gardens of the old stately manors, preserved under Great Britain’s National Trust.
And so it was, one day last month while I was in Hereford, that we all grabbed our cameras and donned our sensible shoes, and went for a walk along the Wye River in The Weir Garden, a National Trust property just 8.0 kilometres (5 mi) west of the city.
This 10 acre (4 hectare) garden was designed by the prior owner, Roger Parr, and his head gardener William Boulter. In addition to the riverside walk, which follows the river banks over the old retaining wall, there is a traditional walled garden, dating back to the early 19th Century, and a Victorian glass house, added in the 1920s.
It’s a lovely place to visit, but you might want a raincoat or an umbrella!
 Green Everything is spring-green, as we enter the Weir Garden property. There is a small entrance fee, unless you are a National Trust member.
 Gumboots The paths along the riverside are pebbled and dry, but most Brits always have their Wellies in the car, so they can put them on “just in case.”
 A Quiet Bench There are plenty of places along the riverside to sit and watch life – and the Wye River – go by.
 Daisies I love daisies! They may be rugged and simple, …
 Daisy … but they are so cheerful.
 Purple Campion (Silene)
 Valerian (Centranthus Ruber) Clusters of flowers hang over the river as it winds past us.
 Daddy and Daughter Narrow steps lead down to the water’s edge, where a father and daughter check for passing fish.
 Canoes on the Wye Thanks to the local canoe rental, you can easily follow the waters down-stream.
 Child in Nature Youngsters are at their happiest in nature, climbing trees and getting grubby.
 On the Tyre Swing Near an open area with plenty of lawn chairs, there is a natural play ground built from ropes and wooden stumps; the tyre swing was a huge hit. I think it was only the promise of ice-cream at the near-by self-serve shop that got this little one to loosen her grip.
 Green on Green The grass and woods surrounding the upper path are impossibly green …
 Colourful Daisies … with pink daisies stretching out from the verges. (iPhone6)
 Admiring the Wye River The upper path looks over the old retaining wall and the river banks.
 Sheep in the Meadow Freshly-shorn sheep graze in the neighbouring meadow, as we move from the Riverside Walk to the Walled Garden.
 Common Red Poppies (Papaver Rhoeas) at the Wall The 19th Century Walled Garden protects lots of freshly-planted kitchen vegetables, but is also colourful with the spring flowers.
 Columbine (Aquilegia) Flowers in the Rain
 Carnivorous Pitcher Plant (Sarracenia) In true Victorian style, the heated glass house contains some real exotic specimens!
 Bees in the Onion Flowers Back outside, a light, misty rain …
 Bees in the Onion Flowers … doesn’t prevent the bees from going about their business.
 Treecreeper (Certhiidae) We were heading back to the car when one of my companions got excited about what he could see in the trees.
 Treecreeper (Certhiidae) I had to look very, very hard before the small, fast-moving treecreepers became remotely visible to me!
Canadian author Margaret Atwood has said: In the spring, at the end of the day, you should smell like dirt.
We did.
Dirt, flowers, and maybe a little ice-cream.
Until next time,
Happy Rambling!
Pictures: 29May2017
Posted in Great Britain,Nature,Travel,United KingdomTags: blog,England,English,environmental portrait,Herefordshire,National Trust,nature,people,Photo Blog,Spring,Swainshill,The Weir Garden,travel,Travel Blog,uk,Ursula Wall,walk
 Dirt Roads West It’s a long drive west across Mongolia, and for much of the way, the roads are more of a “suggestion” than an actual motorway.
It was a long day.
Long, bumpy, and noisy.
I’ve said it before: Cross-country travel in Mongolia is not for the faint-hearted – or for those who are weak of bladder! The Russian UAZ (Ulyanovsky Avtomobilny Zavod) four-wheel-drive vehicles that are tough enough to negotiate the matrix of mud, rocks, dirt and potholes that pass for a road network across the expansive steppes of Western Mongolia are not designed for passenger comfort.
We – a small group of photography enthusiasts organised by Within the Frame and managed by local guides G and Segi – were on our fourth day driving west from Ulaanbaatar (see: Gandantegchinlen Monastery). Our ultimate destination, the annual Golden Eagle Festival in the far-western province of Bayan-Ulgii Province was still a few driving-days away. In theory, we were driving so that we could immerse ourselves in the local landscape and culture. In practice, we saw the land from the windows of our 4x4s and mostly stopped well away from any settlements: our evening camps were dictated by the few accommodations open as the tourist season waned, and our lunch- and “comfort-breaks” took place wherever we happened to be.
I spent a lot of years on the Canadian prairies, so I have an affection for open plains with dustings of snow and mountains in the distance. I reflected on those days of driving across the winter wheat fields as I sat watching the steppes bounce past outside my UAZ window. The difference was that the prairie highways were smooth and straight; Mongolian roads pitch worse than a bad-tempered camel or a small boat in a storm.
We had been warned: it would be a long drive from our ger camp at Tosontsengel to our “hotel” on the shores Khyargas Lake.
And it was…
… with its own unique beauty.
 Snow and Mist on the Steppes We weren’t long out of our ger camp at Tosontsengel before the view out of our UAZs disappeared into snow and fog. (iPhone6)
 Snowy View from the Truck It amazes me that our drivers could keep track of the vaguely marked-out dirt roads under the falling snow. (iPhone6)
 Rocky Piles Much of the landscape is open and empty; a pile of rocks indicates it is time for a comfort stop!
 UAZ Vans on the Empty Road It is low-season; we have the roads pretty much to ourselves.
 UAZs racing on the Flats Our drivers amused themselves on the long drive by taking up impromptu challenges with each other. As we came alongside Telmen Lake, they fanned out three across and made their own paths. Bumping, pitching, and curving, they dodged giant holes and herds of cows and sheep. We started singing the theme to the TV show Bonanza as our driver raced the other vans across the flats.
 Bridge to Nomrog We were going to have our lunch at the side of the road, so we passed through the small town of Nomrog without stopping.
 Snow on the Foothills
 Yaks on the Steppes With their shaggy coats and bushy tails, the herds of domestic yaks are a sight!
 Yak on the Steppes Their short legs disappear into the tall grasses …
 Yak on the Run … but they move pretty quickly when they want to!
 Horse on the Steppe I was excited to see a fabled Mongolia pony through my UAZ window. (iPhone6)
 Mongolian Nomad on the Steppe Nomads on horseback herding their sheep and goats are dotted all over the open landscape.
 The Road Ahead As we continue westward, the road deteriorates further.
 UAZ on the Road Ahead Sun and rain alternate as we continue to aim for – but never quite reach – the mountains.
 Mongolian Ponies The afternoon sun shines on the herds of well-fed ponies that I watch through my truck window.
 UAZs on the Road Snowy mountains float in the distance as we drive into a landscape …
 Landforms in the Distance … that makes me think of prehistoric times and Jean M. Auel’s Clan of the Cave Bear series.
 Roadworks New roads are being built – but not in time for us! The contracts for new highways have been won by Chinese contractors who bring in their own construction crews.
 View from the Truck We drive a short stretch of gravel road-base before being tipped back out onto the dirt. (iPhone6)
 Sunset Quiet The sun dipped below the horizon before we reached our destination; it was a good excuse to stretch our legs and momentarily escape the noisy vehicles.
It was dark before we reached our hotel – which was possibly just as well! The old Russian building (called by one French blogger “an ancient Soviet (Internment?) Camp”) looked like a high school, but lacked internal plumbing or any other creature comforts. The toilets were holes over pits at the petrol station next door, and the washing station was a walk in the other direction, at the cold-water tank. I thanked my lucky stars for my headlamp: otherwise, I would have had no chance of negotiating the rocky, obstacle-laden paths in the dark.
As chance would have it, the one person in our group who saw a mouse is deathly afraid of them. She was persuaded that mice don’t climb stairs, and that she’d be safe on the second floor. Those of us on the ground floor tucked into our beds with hard and lumpy horsehair mattresses and crunchy barley-filled pillows, and took our chances with the mice.
Still, it was warm.
May all your roads be less bumpy!
Happy travels –
Photos: 25September2016
Posted in Landscapes,Mongolia,TravelTags: animals,blog,landscape,Mongolia,nature,Photo Blog,road trip,travel,Travel Blog,Ursula Wall
 Tulip Tree Flowers Tulip Trees (Liriodendron tulipifera) are native to eastern North America, and in these Appalachian cove forests, they can grow to almost 180 ft (24 m). The trees don’t produce their unique tulip-like flowers until they are 8-9 years old.
You could spend weeks – or even years – exploring the scenic views, the mountain trails, the towns and villages, and the flora, fauna, music, culture and craft along the Blue Ridge Parkway. Meandering along the spine of the Blue Ridge Mountains in America’s Appalachians, the National Parkway starts at Rockfish Gap, Virginia, where it continues south from the Skyline Drive in Shenandoah National Park (see: In the Virginia Woods), and runs 469 miles (755 km) to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park and the Cherokee Indian Reservation in North Carolina.
It was this time last year, late in an American spring, that my husband and I were driving south along this “National Scenic Byway”. The timing of our trip had been determined long before by family functions, not by the parkway’s peak blooming season. Shrubs and plants come into flower according to whim, location, and weather; but we got lucky: various ground-dwelling wildflowers were in bloom, and the flowers on the rhododendron and azalea bushes and the mountain laurel and tulip trees, were out in full glory.
We had only a little over three days – which sounds like a lot for the relatively short distance, but when you consider that the very maximum speed anywhere along the Parkway is 45 mph (72 kph), and when you factor in all the excuses to stop, we could have used more time. Still, we did manage lots of scenic breaks for flowers and views, explorations of historic and cultural sights, a few walks, and time out for wild berry pies and other Appalachian treats.
Join us for the first part of our journey.
 Humpback Rocks Farm Visitor Center We were not very far along the Parkway (Mile 6.1) when when we made our first stop at a Visitor Center. There is a walk to Humpback Rocks from here, …
 Blue Ridge Instruments … but we satisfied ourselves with a look at the static displays …
 Outbuildings and Vegetable Patch …and a walk around the old Appalachian farm buildings.
 Wood Anemone (Anemone Nemorosa) in the Vegetable Patch
 Out Building I always marvel at how hard early farmers had to work, and the ingenious solutions that they came up with for food preparation and storage, in the days before electricity and refrigeration.
 Fence Posts and Ivy Split rail fences were common in these heavily-wooded regions. (iPhone6)
 Fallen Fences Built from easy to split, rot-resistant wood, they last a long time – but not forever!
 Afternoon Sun at Ravens Roost By the time we made our next stop, at Ravens Roost (Mile 10.7), the afternoon sun was angling lower in the sky.
 Ravens Roost Marker From this overlook, sitting at a height of 3200ft (975 m), you can see north to the Shenandoah Mountains and south to the Great Smoky Mountains.
 Fallen Rhododendron All along the roadway, rhododendron blooms lay where they have fallen.
 View from a Parkway Overlook Everywhere we pull over, the trees and mountains extend off into the distance.
 Sheep Laurel Definitely a laurel, I think this is too pink to be the “mountain” variety, and I’m guessing it is Kalmia angustifolia, which is found all over eastern North America. Either way, the buds are lovely.
 White Tailed Deer Small, timid white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) feed on the verges as twilight drops over the road.
 Bedford Sunset We were treated to and old-town sunset as we pulled off the parkway to find our bed for the night. (iPhone6)
 Rhododendron on the Roadside I never tire of wild rhododendron! We were not long in the park on our second day – after an overnight break in Bedford just north of Roanoke – when we stopped the car to explore the flowers.
 Rhododendron This day fits us just that bit further south, and the blooms are plentiful. Short bushes with their huge flowers cling to inhospitable-looking granite boulders.
 Flame Azalia I was especially excited to find the endemic Appalachian flame azalea (Rhododendron calendulaceum) in full flower.
 Mountain Laurel Another of my favourite plants native to the eastern United States, is the very pretty mountain laurel (Kalmia latifolia).
 Tulip Tree Flowers I remember seeing a picture of tulip trees (Liriodendron tulipifera) in a book when I was a child in Canada, and not believing that they could be real. I still think they are pretty amazing.
 Smart View Loop Trail Determined not to sit in the car all day, we stopped at Smart View (Mile 154.5) to walk the short (2.6m/4.2km) loop trail …
 Smart View Loop Trail … though the wet …
 Virginia Woods … and impossibly green …
 Tall Trees … Virginia woods.
 Fungus in the Shadows The sheltered ground is home to fungi …
 Frog in the Leaf Litter … and tiny frogs are almost invisible in the leaf litter at our feet.
 Trail Cabin We finally reached the cabin that was home to the Trail family in the 1890s. We are meant to have a “right smart view” here, but the dogwood blooms are finished, and the clouds are coming in.
 Rock Castle Gorge (Mile 170) The rains are starting to roll our way again when we stop at the overlook near Rocky Knob.
The Parkway originated during the administration of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, with work started late in 1935 and mostly finished by the end of 1966. The project required negotiation with the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, whose lands were affected, and displaced many existing farm-holding residents and landowners.

Thank heavens for Roosevelt’s effort and foresight! Today, the Parkway is a priceless ecological and historical resource. “The parkway has been the most visited unit of the National Park System [almost] every year since 1946…”
These wonderful green spaces are so hard to recover once lost.
Until next time,
Enjoy the green spaces!
Pictures: 25-26May2016
Posted in America,Nature,Travel,USATags: America,Blue Ridge Parkway,drive,flowers,landscape,National Park,National Parkway,National Scenic Byway,nature,Photo Blog,road trip,Travel Blog,Ursula Wall,VA,Virginia,walk,woods
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Wonderful Ursula. THANKYOU!
Always a pleasure to travel with you!
Heartwarming. The children look happy and healthy. And such colorful costumes! Kudos to the team.
Hi Sidran! They are indeed happy and healthy – I think it’s all that wonderful Thai food. 😀
[…] last May (see: The Faces of THEP), I was travelling with a small group of educators who manage the Thailand Hilltribe Education […]
What a great organization
How fortunate you are to see all this
And great images and story!!
Wonderful Ursula ?
I must have missed this, when you posted it, Ivy – I’m so sorry!
Yes, they are a great organisation, and I love travelling with them. 😀
– Ursula