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Tiger’s Nest

July 15th, 02008 by Peter Schwartz

 

Cathleen and I just returned from a week in Bhutan. We traveled among three cities and regions of Bhutan, staying with the Aman hotels. On the next to the last day near the town of Paro, we made the climb to Tiger’s Nest. In many ways it comes very close to what we have imagined for the walk to the clock. If you Google Tiger’s Nest you will get a picture of the end point, the local version of the Clock [of the Long Now].

It is a small monastery hung far up on a cliff overlooking a spectacular valley. It is where Padmasambava landed to meditate when he brought Buddhism to Bhutan in the seventh century; He arrived on a flying tiger which had recently been his Tibetan concubine. He meditated in a cave high on the mountain for four months then subdued the local demons and began the conversion of the Bhutanese. Getting there is at least a two hour climb from the valley floor at 7000 feet to the Tiger’s Nest at 10,000 feet. The trail is fine but steep. As you climb ever more vertical switchbacks the monastery appears and disappears in and out of the trees and the mists. Along the way you meet other trekkers some passing you and others coming down. Finally after two hours of a long slow climb to manage the pace of the altitude, one arrives at the beginning of the entrance to the Tiger’s Nest.

One is on a promontory of rock across a chasm from the monastery. The cliff drops a couple of thousand feet in front of you and in it are steps carved into its exposed face. No handrails and maximum terror. The fact that a young Bhutanese mother with a small baby wrapped around her came floating up the steps impelled us to the courage needed to navigate the steps back and down into the gorge separating us from the Tiger’s Nest. As we climbed back into the canyon suddenly a one hundred meter high water fall at the deep end of the canyon appeared immediately in front of us with our path traversing directly across it’s base. . Having made it down in front of the water fall the steps started back up toward the Tiger’s Nest once more…over 700 steps in all.

After removing one’s shoes one enters the Tiger’s Nest and climbs several levels within, visiting three temples and gasping at the view. High and deep inside is the cold cave where Padmasambabva meditated. You can feel the chill breath coming from the cave. The return journey is much faster, but equally dramatic.

Here is a very high res photo.

This entry was posted on Tuesday, July 15th, 2008 at 3:00 am and is filed under Clock of the Long Now. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

4 Responses to “Tiger’s Nest”

  1. fionnlaech Says:

    Posted on July 15th, 2008 at 4:08 am

    This is the same kind of experience viewers should have when they go to visit the Clock.

  2. adrian Says:

    Posted on July 17th, 2008 at 5:25 pm

    Sounds amazing. but I think I could do without the terror part :-)
    Heights give me the heebies enough as it is.

  3. mike johnson Says:

    Posted on July 17th, 2008 at 6:30 pm

    very well written a place I have longed to know for many years and now being Buddhist
    closest gotten to there was Chaing Mai, 96
    one day maybe
    Viva El Frente/Verde

    Senor Pescado

  4. What do we know? (I mean what kind of stuffs, not the other thing?) « Analemma Says:

    Posted on August 13th, 2008 at 8:26 am

    [...] way to think about 10,000 years has recently become much less abstract–like by having an actual place to build a thing. So maybe the point is, as Douglas Adams once said, in order to make the best model possible of a [...]

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