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LSH/1/1/3/3/127 · Part · 1933-04-09
Part of The Ludlow & Sherriff Collection

SUMMARY:
A plant noted on the 26th was photographed and pressed. Pintso visited with a notebook to describe the Lopas, and observations were made about their recognition of upside-down camera images compared to Kashmiris and servants. Dawang reported an old Gompa on the route from Dotrang to Kashongha, now a pilgrimage site with oil lamps in early June, and a marking on Bailey’s map is noted as mistaken.

CONTENT:
on 26th has nearly come to full bloom, so I photographed it &
had it pressed. May it turn out to be a new one. Fine.
Pintso was asking more about the Lopas & came in with
his little notebook to tell us all about it. He described
the various tribes & finished with the lowest of the low. "These
he said "have tails about 4 to 5 inches long." It was said
in all seriousness, & he & all the Kashmiris of course,
believe it. It was curious how all the Lopas, when I
let them look through the back end of the camera, at
once recognized whoever was sitting in front. And he saw
too that the image was upside down. A jungly Kashmiri
would never see that, I doubt even if our own servants
would. The 'temple' which Dawang reported seeing on the
way to the Kashongha from Dotrang is an old Gompa of
considerable size. It used to be an important & holy place,
till looted by the Lopas. Even now though it has no
occupants, it is a place of pilgrimage. All the people in
the district go there on the 15th of the 4th month (about the
beginning of June) & make a circle of oil light lamps round.
The marking of this on Bailey's map is the only mistake we

LSH/1/1/4/1/91 · Part · 1933-08-15
Part of The Ludlow & Sherriff Collection

SUMMARY:
The author considers Meconopsis 2531 to be Bailey's var. argemonantha and marks plants for seed collection. From 2–5 September, they halt near Nga La and Pang La, receive news of a dak from Tsona, recover and butcher a lost sheep, and record further hunting by Tsongpen, Dawang, and Tenduk; they then move via Migyitun to Bimbi La, photograph three lamas, and note coolie difficulties.

CONTENT:
L.P. 177. I think the white poppy we found the day before yesterday (2531) must be Bailey's var. argemonantha of which only the flowers and leaves are preserved. 155

The Meconopsis 2531 we think may be Bailey's var. argemonantha. I have marked a dozen plants for seeds.

2nd Sept. Halt. Camp above Nga La.
Pang La.
P. macrophylla 2538
P. rhodochroa 2539
G. prolata 2540
Last night was perfect, and today was again fine with no rain, but clouds coming up fast in the evening. Tsongpen shot two kuling females. Collected a few seeds, but found nothing of much interest. News came to Migyitun of a dak having been sent from Tsona. The lost sheep was found, brought up here, and within 5 minutes was in 4 pieces — one for Pintso and Co, 1 for the Kashmiris and one for us, with some odds.

3rd Sept. Halt. Nga La Camp. Mist all day and some rain. Dawang and Tenduk went out with the gun and got one more kuling, in good condition.

4th September. Migyitun. 9500' 5 miles. Rain in the hills all morning, mostly fine in the Migyitun valley. Dak said to be in S. Chöling, but nothing more known about it.

5th September. Bimbi La Camp. 11 m. 12500'. A fine morning, and hardly any rain all day. Three lamas turned up and wanted to pose for their photographs, so I took them in colour. Coolies are getting a bit difficult, and poor Pintso has a hard time.

LSH/1/1/1/1/75 · Part · 1933-06-30
Part of The Ludlow & Sherriff Collection

SUMMARY:
Notes on the death of the Thimbu penlop and Tobgye’s sending of English medicine, causing concern with the Maharaja. On 30th June Ludlow and the author travelled to Lomi-Tsa-wa via Do Kyong La in clearing weather, collecting flowers including Magnolia globosa and observing that vegetation in the Trashi-cho-dzong valley and at the pass resembled Sikkim.

CONTENT:
35

Thimbu penlop. He died of dropsy & a short while ago his
relations asked Tobgye for English medicine. Against his own
lamas advice, Tobgye sent some, but with strict instructions
that the lamas should first of all decide in their usual way
whether it would do good or not. After taking one of the two
medicines, the man felt weaker, & the whole thing was
immediately reported to the Maharaja, who is said to have been
angry with Tobgye. They said nothing of the fact that the
other medicine did a lot of good. I can't believe that the
Maharaja will put any blame down to Tobgye in the end.

30th June. TO LOMI-TSA-WA. 12 miles - 6700' (An. Ht. 7700'). Ludlow & I
Embelia oleracea 182
Anemone rivularis 183 were at last able to go on our own & were allowed to shoot
Rhod. Keysii 184
Symplocos ramosissima 186 as soon as we reached the DO KYONG LA, 10410'. So we
Pedicularis megalantha 187
left at 5.30 am, although it was raining pretty hard. By
Meconopsis villosa 189
Rhod. camelliaeflorum 190 7.30 however it cleared up & remained fine till 5.0 pm. On
Berberis celestina 191
the way up & at the top we found a number of flowers,
Mag. globosa 192
Pyrola rotundifolia 193 including the magnificent Magnolia Globosa in full bloom at
Streptopus simplex 194
10000'. We also got a strange rhododendron which Dawang
Geranium pratense 198
Didissandra lanuginosa 199 has never seen before. In the Trashi-cho-dzong valley
the vegetation is quite different to what we had seen before:
trees were quite scarce, & what there were, were mostly
small. The forest again became thick, but at the pass the
vegetation was much more like Sikkim - no pines or firs, a
good deal of bamboo undergrowth & numbers of rhododendrons.