DAILY PHOTO: Namdroling Thangka

Taken in March of 2014 at the Namdroling Monastery in Bylakuppe (south Karnataka)

Taken in March of 2014 at the Namdroling Monastery in Bylakuppe (south Karnataka)

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DAILY PHOTO: Flowers Over Varkala Beach

Taken in March of 2016 at Varkala

Taken in March of 2016 at Varkala

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DAILY PHOTO: Elephant Sculpture, Khajuraho

Taken in October of 2015 at Khajuraho

Taken in October of 2015 at Khajuraho

DAILY PHOTO: Stone Chariot, Vittala Temple in Hampi

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Taken in November of 2013 at Hampi

Taken in November of 2013 at Hampi

DAILY PHOTO: Kolkata Rail Station

Taken in July of 2016 in Kolkata (Calcutta)

Taken in July of 2016 in Kolkata (Calcutta)

 

For scale, this is the ghat that one can see below the station.


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DAILY PHOTO: Stalwart Street Bovine, Amritsar

Taken in April of 2016 in Amritsar

Taken in April of 2016 in Amritsar

DAILY PHOTO: Inside a Srinagar Houseboat: Stepping Into the Past

Taken in July of 2016 in Srinagar

Taken in July of 2016 in Srinagar

 

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DAILY PHOTO: Himalayan Lizard

 

Taken in July of 2016 on the trail between Naranag and Sonamarg

Taken in July of 2016 on the trail between Naranag and Sonamarg

 

This isn’t the wildlife I expected to see on our Kashmiri Great Lakes Trek, but I’ll take what I can get.

DAILY PHOTO: Lamayuru on a Rainy Day

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Taken in August of 2016 at Lamayuru Gompa

Taken in August of 2016 at Lamayuru Gompa

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DAILY PHOTO: The Shore of Pangong Tso

Taken in August of 2016 at Pangong Tso in Ladakh

Taken in August of 2016 at Pangong Tso in Ladakh

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With each change in cloud and sky, Pangong Tso looks like a different lake.

 

Pangong Tso is a long, narrow lake that crosses the border between India and China. By length, the majority of the lake falls in China, but these photos were all taken on the Indian side of the border.

 

It’s actually substantially higher than Lake Titicaca in Peru, which claims the title of highest navigable lake in the world. Pangong Tso is 4,350 m (14,280 ft) while Titicaca is 3810 m (12,500 ft.)

 

Don’t ask me what constitutes “navigable.” My wife and I tried to figure that out when we visited Titicaca several years ago. We didn’t see anything bigger than the boat we were on–nothing that would be called a ship. Of course, we saw not so much as an inner tube on Pangong Tso, and the fact that it’s so narrow in places may mean that a boat would have to have an exceedingly shallow draft to make it down the lake’s length. That is if one could travel the lake’s length without trigger happy Chinese or Indian military forces freaking out and blowing your boat out of the water.