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LSH/1/1/4/1/109 · Part · 1933-09-23 - 1933-09-24
Part of The Ludlow & Sherriff Collection

SUMMARY:
The diarists halt at Sanga Choling, receiving hospitality from a local mother and later sending mail via a young lama to Chague. The head lama visits and speaks of a recent scare in Lhasa involving Russians or Chinese Communists; Tsongpen returns with seeds from Karpo and the Trakan la, though the sought red Primula nivalis was not found.

CONTENT:
Sanga Choling
23rd Sept. Halt. Some rain, mostly fine and sunny. The old woman who is mother to the two girls we always see here, gave us lunch of guatu in camp, and came herself. She is a most delightful lady, full of life and talk, and her great desire was to be given some embroidery silk, a selection of which she went off with. We could get no man for the mail; all are off cutting grass and so on.

Sanga Choling
24th Sept. Halt. Got a man for the mail, through the mother's good offices, and sent him off this morning via Chague. He is a young lama and seems a nice youth. Rained in the night again. After lunch the head lama called, and was very pleasant. He has just returned from Lhasa, where he told us of scare of Russians, which may be real Soviet or Chinese Communists. However R.B. Norbu had gone to Lhasa, and the scare had quietened down. Nearly all S. Choling seems to be inter-related, and it is most complicated. We gave him some fruit salad and cake to eat, many cigarettes and four glasses of Cointreau, all of which he took with relish, a most un-lama like performance. It rained off and on all evening, and was overclouded all day. Tsongpen arrived back with a few seeds from Karpo and the Trakan la. He failed to find the red Primula nivalis, but got another one, and the P.

LSH/1/1/4/1/159 · Part · 1933-10-19
Part of The Ludlow & Sherriff Collection

SUMMARY:
Notes successful collection of several primulas (including from Tsari La) and other plants, with roughly 150 specimens and some seed, though access to Lo La was denied and the Tsari route was difficult due to deep snow. At Chuchar nothing was obtained, perhaps due to the headman; Danang remarked a 1 Sept departure would have been better. The Dzongpen seeks a Mauser pistol license via R.B. Norbu, and the Kyimdong Dzongpen was very helpful; both collectors seem fit.

CONTENT:
Ramzana's blue primula had no seed, gone over the Lo La
they could not get as they were not allowed over there.
Otherwise I think they have done well. Ludlow's yellow
primula, the almost black one, the reddish violet sikkimensis
from Shugden & the yellow which we hope is KW's
new one, from the Tsari La, are all collected. They have
brought a number of plants too, which may remain alive,
on the whole I think they have done very well. But as yet I have
not had time to see what they have got. Both seem fit.
The Bimbi La was very deep in snow & snow was down to
Chosam; so the Tsari part was very difficult. At Chuchar
they got nothing, but perhaps that was the fault of the
headman. It is interesting to hear that rhododendrons were
more than ripe, & that Danang says if they had left us on
1st Sept, it would have been better. Altogether they seem
to have about 150 specimens, with seed, some of which of
course, I also have. The Dzongpen is very keen to have a
Mauser pistol, & I have said I will speak to R.B. Norbu
about a license. The Kyimdong Dzongpen was very good
indeed to them. Tenduk was impressed to show how a cake