The Annapurna I Base Camp
Nepal, India, Burma and Thailand 1987
by Lawrence G. Desmond
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About the Book
In terms of the natural environment the route to the Annapurna Base Camp goes through a variety of landscapes that have evolved to cope with greatly differing temperatures and precipitation by responding to their varying elevations ranging from the spectacular rhododendron and bamboo forests at beginning of the trek to alpine forests when you near the Annapurna Base Camp at 13,546 feet.
Hiking through such a variety of mountain landscapes, and becoming acquainted with the mountain people of Nepal rivaled my past treks on the John Muir Trail in the Sierra Nevada of California, hikes to villages in the Sierra Norte de Puebla of Mexico where they cultivate maize as their ancestors did a thousand years ago, and getting to know Swiss farmers living in the Bernese Oberland who cultivate crops and graze cattle on the high alps near Engelberg like their ancestors before and after the retreat of the Roman Empire to the south.
A trek to the Annapurna Base Camp is not just a hike in the mountains to test your endurance, prove your strength, and practice your landscape photography. The subtle impact of the people, and the changing environment can combine to move the focus of one’s life in new direction.
Features & Details
- Primary Category: Sports & Adventure
- Additional Categories Street Photography, Arts & Photography Books
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Project Option: Standard Landscape, 10×8 in, 25×20 cm
# of Pages: 160 - Publish Date: Nov 26, 2023
- Language English
- Keywords trekking, mountaineering, Annapurna I base camp
About the Creator
Lawrence G. Desmond received a PhD in anthropology and archaeology from the University of Colorado-Boulder; an MA in anthropology from the Universidad de las Americas in Cholula, Mexico, and has carried-out ethnographic and archaeological research in Mexico and Guatemala for more than 50 years. He taught at the University of Minnesota, San Francisco State University, and College of San Mateo. Desmond has carried out ethnographic fieldwork at Santo Tomas Jalieza, Oaxaca, and archeological fieldwork including excavations, ground penetrating radar surveys , close range photogrammetry recording at Chichén Itzá, Uxmal, Labna, Dzbilchaltun, Pyramid of Izamal, and Balankanche Cave. Desmond's books, A Dream of Maya and Yucatán through her eyes are about the photography, writings and field work of Alice Dixon and Augustus Le Plongeon. Desmond's photos of Mexico are archived by Harvard's Peabody Museum, and of the Mesoamerican Archive and Research Project at the Getty Research Institute.