Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Random Pictures


Because I'm not really in the mood to write at the moment, thought I'd share a few images of this fascinating place.

These first 2 pictures were taken from roughly the same spot, less than a year apart... who says I'm not really working here!? A shopping centre in Thimphu (the capital, just up the road), about the same size as our IT Park, took more than 9 years to construct! And that is not unusual here.


December 2010...(That Buddha statue on the horizon sits atop a shopping mall. Use it as a reference point to view these first 2 pics.)



Photobucket


October 2011...

Photobucket




Failed first attempt at digging a rock pool for the future waterfall...
 



Photobucket 




Large City Hotel

Photobucket 

 
Traditional Home  (And there's that statue of Buddha again!)

Photobucket



Intricate Painting

Photobucket



All Hands on Deck

Photobucket



Multi-Tasking (Get your buns done here!)

Photobucket



 Prayer Flags Send their Messages on the Winds

Photobucket



Buddhist Temple

Photobucket



Queen's Brother's Home (Not sure which queen, or which brother...)

Photobucket



Pagoda in the Park

Photobucket



Government Ministers' Enclave

Photobucket



My First Apartment (Bloody cold in winter!)

Photobucket



Buddha Statue on Shopping Mall  (Yes, the same one as in the first 2 pics! Pay attention...)

Photobucket



Archery is the National Sport. But those Carbon Fibre Bows aren't Traditional!

Photobucket



The King's Pavilion at the Archery Ground

Photobucket



Song and Dance Between Changing Ends at the Archery Tournament

Photobucket



 

Fantastic Fungi

Not long ago, we had need to literally "head upstream", to see why no water was arriving at our site via the hi-tech, state-of-the-art, 3 km long, above ground, 25mm poly pipe that delivers it to us. Without water, we have 120 workers who can't cook, drink or wash, and therefore they, not unjustifiably, close us down for a day by refusing to work. Also, without H2O, it's  impossible to make concrete for our building. And this building needs A LOT of concrete. So up we marched. And luckily, I took my camera.

Normally I take sweeping panoramic shots of distant mountains and forests, but this day, I finally got to try out the macro setting on my 8 years old, $99 "point and shoot" Fuji camera.

Pleasantly surpised with the results, too. I intend to print these pics large, then frame them to hang on my wall. One day.






PhotobucketPhotobucket
Photobucket
Photobucket




PhotobucketPhotobucket

Sunday, January 22, 2012

(Not So!) Brief Background


Early 2010 I travelled to India as a volunteer for an Australian charity. http://www.40k.com.au.
I was project managing the construction of a new home and school for severely underprivileged kids. (Pic below...the hostel is named "The Banyan"). We finished it at the end of 2010 and donated the building to an Indian charity, http://www.lovedalefoundation.org, and I still try to visit the kids monthly.

The Banyan was built from mud bricks which we made on site and sun-cured, from the soil excavated for the basement. 70,000 of them! It's a totally ecologically sound building...minimal glazing to allow breezes in the hot Indian summers, solar hot water, solar electricity, rainwater capture, aligned on Vaastu Shastra principles (Indian Feng Shui).
And my favourite feature, huge grates at the entrance to allow rain into the basement garden that sits between 2 classrooms. Lots of fun in the Monsoon season!





Photobucket






Photobucket

Through that work, I met the head of a large property developing company who had started this project in partnership with the Bhutanese government, building the nation's first IT Park. They were having some problems and delays in this difficult-to-work-in area, and he asked me if I could try and help move things along. Of course, I jumped at the chance.
We have about 120 Indian workers on site, mainly masons, carpenters and general labourers. It's very difficult to get local workers in a country whose entire population is around 680,000. But the local stonemasons and traditional painters are highly skilled artisans.


Photobucket 
 
Photobucket 
 
Photobucket 
 
It was only several weeks into the job that I saw the budget for landscaping and the difficulties of getting it done locally, so grabbed the opportunity myself. I left corporate management in Australia many years ago to become a horticulturist, turf manager and landscape designer, and ran my own company, so this project is a perfect blend of my business/horticultural experience. And an incredible life experience! Such a fascinating country, and a wonderful time to be here, just as it's carefully opening its boundaries to the rest of the world.

Photobucket 
 
Photobucket 
 
Photobucket 
 
TV was only introduced here in 1999, it is illegal to smoke, to use plastic bags, or to fish in the King's rivers. By law, 65% of the country must retain tree cover for perpetuity. I was initially very worried about whether this project was going to do good or be harmful to Bhutan's future, but everyone from the King to the most remote villager wants it.