2nd/3rd May
After a short sleep we awoke to some tentative sun.
Breakfast was served outside the front of the little hotel, a good vantage point from which to watch the world go by. They did a yogurt, fruit, honey and nut combination served in a glass, as well as fried eggs and toast, served in no particular order.


I was by now beginning to feel pale and not at all interesting. Anil arrived. “How are you?” I could not lie. “Rubbish actually.” “Ok. Let’s go to the hospital.” I put up a faint protest, but in the end we walked the short distance to the medical centre.
In UK the word ‘hospital’ conjures up images of pristine floors and shiny surfaces. Living where we do back home we are blessed with an enormous medical complex which is all car parks and plate glass windows.
This could not contrast more highly with where I found myself now: a small low concrete building, very dark on the inside, with a few directions to various rooms eg Out Patients and in an adjacent building, Emergency. A few people were hanging forlornly around Out Patients, being told the doctor was not there yet. Ever quick to cut to the chase, Anil steered us straight over to the Emergency department. We ascended one floor. There appeared to be one guy on triage as well treatment, a few nurses, and a couple of wards. The walls were painted dark green and there was a pervading smell of carbolic. I glimpsed the ‘women’s’ ward. It was a suite of iron bedsteads parked closely together, on which languished ladies in various conditions, attached to drips. It was not heated and the only light came from outside, dazzling, in contrast to the dingy walls.
In between the women’s and the men’s wards was the triage room, for which we queued. There must have been further wards down the corridor as I heard some terrible deep coughing coming from someone who sounded clearly in bad shape.
Within minutes we were beckoned in. “What brings you here today?” The doctor on duty looked Tibetan and spoke excellent English. His manner was very calm and ordered. Anil attended to assist in any translation needs but possibly also just to see what happened! A detailed history and vitals were taken. To my great relief everything was fine, including no fever and oxygen saturation levels at 92% indicating that hanging around at 3,500m was not presenting any problems. “You are coping very well with the altitude” he said, “but you have inadvertently eaten something which has given you this infection. You must take these.” He wrote me up for three days of ciprofloxacin and some anti spasmodics.
The whole thing only took ten minutes. Anil and I then went downstairs to the dispensary, which was tucked away behind a tiny hatch. We posted the prescription through it, and minutes later the hatch reopened and the exact amount of medicine popped out, just in its foil wrapping. “How much?” I asked. “No charge,” came the reply. I was staggered.
I was so grateful. It took a couple of days, but by the end of Thursday, I had a tiny bit of appetite and was able to down some chicken which stayed put. Marvellous!
Thursday 3rd May
The weather was definitely turning cold. Grey wispy clouds swirled low beneath the mountain tops and a few snowflakes came and went. We were very glad of the layers we had packed ‘just in case’.
In the afternoon, to escape the confines of the hotel room, I went with Jeremy and Anil to visit Key Monastery, a relatively short distance away. Our tour co-ordinator, Mukesh, also jumped in and joined us.
Key was set impressively high up the valley, with a large gate at its entrance.




We were greeted warmly and shown around. A large candle was burning behind a glass.






Again, no photographs were permitted on the inside, but we recognised the familiar pattern of rectangular inner temple sanctums as well as there being a large communal prayer hall, adorned with frescoes and cloth hangings, Buddha reigning at the centre. We experienced all the usual amazement at the sophistication of this ancient construction, (a thousand years) combined with the simplicity of the buildings, at such a great height.
Life in Spiti was raw, and devotional for these monks. What a privilege it was to observe in this far flung place.
We returned to a chilly Deyzor and enjoyed a late soup.







































somewhat gingerly..!


















Wooden carved spindles also hung from roofs in fringes. The detail in all of the carving was staggering.



























































































