Chobhar Gorge
The pictures from the other day, by the way, are of Chobhar Gorge, which we visited a couple of months ago.
Chobhar Gorge is in the southern part of the Kathmandu Valley. It is where the holy Bagmati River flows out of the valley.
Legend says–and geology agrees–that the entire Kathmandu Valley used to be a giant lake.
Legend also says that Chohar Gorge marks the place where a holy saint rent the rocks at the edge of the lake with a giant sword to drain the waters.
(Geology waffles a bit on the latter.)
For a very long time, it was a difficult area to cross.
Then, in 1903, a bridge was constructed in Scotland, shipped partway around the world,
then carried piece by painstaking piece over rugged paths into Nepal. And reassembled to span the gorge.

The inscription on a pillar of Bagmati Bridge, reading "Chundra Bridge" June 1903; another inscription on the other side says Aberdeen, Scotland
Of course, there’s now a larger, more modern bridge for cars, too. But, from either one, Chobhar Gorge is breathtaking.
Nepali of the Day:
nadi: river
paani: water
saphaa: clean
phohar: dirty
sarakchyan: conservation
upuhteka: valley
mandir: temple
purano: old
naya: new
phul: bridge
tol: lake
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