The interest in Nepal panoramas seems to decline, but in spite of this let me publish another work, in strict connection with the previous one. Namely, it helps to understand this side valley, less known of course than mainstream Khumbu.
The Cholatse, which dominated the previous panorama, here barely rises from the clouds. Interesting summits, whose names (if any) I still need to find out, populate the watershed in direction Chola La.
For the Lobuche barrier, it is recommended a consideration of N.25671, where you see the opposite side right under the moon.
Location: 27.95405 86.77099
Larger: http://bit.ly/2M7hHwA
Hans-Jürgen Bayer, Michael Bodenstedt, Peter Brandt, Hans-Jörg Bäuerle, Stephan Klemme, Martin Kraus, Wilfried Malz, Giuseppe Marzulli, Niels Müller-Warmuth, Jan Lindgaard Rasmussen, Danko Rihter, Werner Schelberger, Björn Sothmann, Michael Strasser, Konrad Sus, Arjan Veldhuis, Jens Vischer, Augustin Werner
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Comments
Consider that this was just a short walk, before dinner...
An amazing series of different landscapes and impressions that you are showing to us. To be honest, I sometimes find no suitable words - just silently stunning ...
Now that you are maybe going through your pictures from 2019 would you be able to remember every detail without looking at your archive, even for this extraordinary trip to Nepal? At the end of every year I'm trying to think myself about what has happened - some moments I forgot, some stay forever!
Also consider that what one sees in panoramas conveys a very partial section of the whole experience, as I was meditating right a few days ago. Namely, on December 8, while I was shooting what you now see on Alpen Panoramen under N.36776, I received a message that a newspaper had published a double page with my 4-years-old photos of Ladakh: http://bit.ly/2MaMrwF
I had simply sent to the requesting journalist the links to the albums, saying: Choose by yourself. Namely, I am convinced that the "Betrachter" who did not have the "Erlebnis", has a far clearer/objective judgement than the photographer. And I was surprised to see how far from panoramic the choice was!
This said... much of the material about Nepal and Peru, if not the majority, is still waiting to be considered and worked out.
Cheers, Alberto.
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