“The best tour we have ever taken”
—TripAdvisor Reviews of Rainbow Photo Tours
Today is a very auspicious day for us as we rise early and drive eastward through Rangjung and Radi to Phongmey village where you will meet the yak herders from Sakten and Merak, the famous Brokpa people of Bhutan. Sonam, owner of NakSel Resort in Paro and our hostess while in Bhutan, is a Brokpa by birth--her father was the hereditary lama of the region and she is treated like royalty whenever she visits. Sonam and her company, Rainbow Tours and Treks of Bhutan, have organized a special cultural program by the Brokpa people and you are considered the sponsor of this event so you will be asked to ladle out food to about 150 people in the ancient temple courtyard at Phongmey. This is the custom, the visitor serves the local people and even the King does this when he comes to visit, usually pouring tea in their cups. A group of over twenty Brokpa will make the two-day trek from Merak and Sakten, a district that foreigners were not allowed to visit until 2010. They will bring by horseback all of their cultural trappings as well as festival objects and costumes. Local villagers hear the noise and turn out for the free food and festivities. We bring a quarter section of pork, sacks of rice, chilies and vegetables and cook it all up over an open fire in huge black cauldrons in a typical Bhutanese style. (But we eat Western food brought from the hotel.)
This all has the blessing of the local lama to ensure that the sanctity of anything religious is protected by prayer and ritual. The Brokpa are yak herders from this remote region and have a language, culture and lifestyle that is unique even in Bhutan. An example of cultural uniqueness is the burial process--the body of the deceased is hacked to pieces and allowed to float down the river to be eaten by scavengers. Also, the dating process is something that young suitors call "night hunting"--we'll try to get to the bottom of that when we meet them in Phongmey.
The Sakten and Merak region remains mostly unexplored by tourists—only about 50 trekkers made the journey in 2012 when the region was first opened to foreigners and since then numbers have dwindled. Sakten and Merak were previously closed to foreigners in an effort to stall modernization of one of the world's last remaining "living cultural museums." Sonam tried for years to get the government to open her ancestral home as she feels her people should not be denied the modernization that has come to the rest of their countrymen in the form of electricity, roads, schools, and hospitals. Now that the constitutional government is in place she feels strongly that the political representatives of her region will soon convince the government to build the road that is so important to modernization. Dinner and goodbye party with guides and drivers as tomorrow we fly back to Paro leaving them in Trashigang to drive back to their homes on the national highway—it takes them two days of hard driving, overnight Druk Doethjung Resort.
Do you have more travel questions about going to Bhutan? Please feel free to Email Robin!