You who follow me know, that May is My month. So much beauty, so many birds coming in – today, the redstart arrived and flashed its colours outside my window. What joy!
Wood sorrel
Bird-cherry tree
Forest filled with ostrich fern
Beautifully backlit
Happy May to all of you from some of my favourite flowers, ferns and trees!
In general, April is the last month of Winter/Spring, and after it…comes the most beautiful month in Sweden – at least according to me. May.
It’s been a strange year, this last one. No snow – for the first time in my entire life.
This picture was taken in April 2013. This used to be the ordinary look of April.
It is warming up – or, we are warming up our planet. In fact, 2024 has been the warmest year ever on planet Earth.
Our glaciers are melting fast – and they are our fresh water reserves. Today I heard again that in Norway and Sweden they melt the fastest. Many of them are already gone.
But the Wood Anemonies are still flowering, and the glorious Spring light allows us to forget our troubles and what lies ahead of us.
My granddaughter is to experience the same as I did as a child and as both my children did.
To follow the developing of a frog from start to finish. A Nature’s wonder – so clear to the eye. Last week we went to the pond to take some eggs home, and when the little frogs are fully fledged – with all four legs – we will return them to where they came from.
According to me, one of the best things to let a child experience. Patience and wonder.
Last time we visited Malmoe, we went to see the immersive exhibition. As we went to Egypt in 1981 and saw his tomb, and the mummy and golden artefacts at the Egyptian museum, I did not expect much from this visit. But, it was a nice outing and another experience. And again I felt so sorry for this young, sickly boy, whose fate was to be farao.
I’m sharing some of the pictures – I had fun taking them.
An early wake up again on the train – the last part before Lhasa. The Tanggula pass is more than 5000 meters above sea level, but we were well taken care of with oxygen in our compartments.
The Tibetan Plateau is breathtakingly beautiful – I still have tears in my eyes when I look at the old photos-
– and again we were glued to the window. The whole journey is almost 2000 kilometers and today it takes some 40-45 hours. I guess hour train ride took a bit longer 16 years ago.
We passed by majestic rivers, lakes, mountains in every kind of weather – but I think above all we loved the magical cloudscapes over the vast open spaces.
I remember we didn’t sleep much…as we didn’t want to leave the magic outside that train window. In fact we were earlier up than ever. We rose with the first light shining in.
The colours were beautifully contrasting between warm and cold, and the numerous jaks and sheep were grazing everywhere. We also saw a wolf, but weren’t quick enough to photograph it.
The clouds created a moving palette on the ground – with shadows and light playing. Sometimes we felt the clouds were sailing so low we could have touched them had we been able to get off the train for a minute!
As we approached Lhasa, we came closer to the mountains and the valleys –
which we hadn’t done before. There were some people too out there – but very few and not easily spotted. If you can see them, they speak of the vastness and grandeur of the landscape.
Time stood still during the train ride, so we couldn’t imagine we would soon be there – at our final destination Lhasa, Tibet. A destination longed for since I was a child, but I never could have dreamed of such an amazing journey to get there!
A couple of minutes left, and then – a new adventure would unfold. Tibet. We were sad to leave the Plateau behind, because we knew we would fly back to Beijing in a couple of weeks, never to see it again.
Thank you for taking the Quinghai train with me – at least a bit easier than staying glued to a train window!
I am revisiting the trainride to Tibet in 2009 – and sending some pictures from the train for Thursday Thoughts.
Mezmerising landscapes every day – and – going to bed for the night? We didn’t want to miss a single thing. Today I found some pictures with human connection. Nomads with Jaks grazing the slopes. A peaceful sight.
The Chinese built the railway on the permafrost, and also the existing roads. We saw mostly trucks in endless lines on those roads.
Something that maybe was built to stop snow and sand blowing onto the railway?
Meandering rivers and roads, and everywhere that enigmatic light,
and the magnificent cloudscapes over the floating, colourful landscape.
See the tiny road running close to the railway? I can only imagine the distance to those mountains…
I hope you enjoyed this piece of the Tibetan Plateau too. I do think there will be a number III next Thursday – and you are welcome to travel with me!
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