So, after this trip to the botanical garden, and after a couple of days of schmoozing and preparations in Shangri-la, Michelle and I headed out for our first fieldtrip. Michelle is a botanist who is studying plant diversity in alpine ecosystems. Alpine ecosystems in this region are traditionally defined in this region as areas above 4000m (~12,000 feet). Tree-line in the region occurs right around 4000 meters, so Michelle is primarily interested in the plant diversity in the shrubs, meadows, and scree (rocky mountaintops) environments. I was pretty excited to go with her, because I had never been to an alpine area, I know nothing about them, and so I knew I was going to learn a lot.
There are several areas of alpine ecosystems near main roads. However, Michelle is pretty hardcore, and is interested in the most remote, unimpacted sites, because they contain the most diverse and interesting plants. So, it was going to be a several-days long adventure to get to and then spend time in, and then get back from, the sites that we wanted to visit.
We focused on visiting the summer pasture sites of the Adong village, a remote Tibetan village way up in the north of NW Yunnan, about as close as you get get to
We stayed the night, the next day, and the next night in his big, beautiful Tibetan house in the village, as our guide made preparations for our journey. So, finally two days later, we set out at 8am for the 12 hour hike up to the alpine. And what a hike it was! We went from about 2300m in the village to 4200m, where the herder hut is. We passed through our guide’s village, another village higher up, and then a long stretch of beautiful mature forests of spruce, fir, birch, poplar, and oak trees, many with long strands of lichens streaming from the gnarled branches. At tree line, the forest vegetation began changing into oak shrubs, rhododendrons, and stunted junipers. We continued climbing, and about at nightfall, exhausted and gasping for air (well, mostly it was only me who was gasping for air), we reached the alpine meadows and the herder hut which would be our home for the next 4 days.
Wandering around the Adong village while waiting for our guide's preparations, we found this big beautiful walnut tree, equipped with a ladder to climb up and harvest the nuts (or pose for a picture).
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