- Stupas and prayer flags near a monastery
- Tibetan farmers cutting their barley with scythes
- Shop keepers with dried Saussurea medusa et al., in Chinglish known as snow lotus
- A meadow surrounded by pine forests above Nyade / Yading.
- Laetiporus sulpherus var. miniatus
- Suillus cavipes, a larch symbiont apparently distributed all over the Northern Hemisphere wherever larch trees (Larix sp.) occur.
- A cool lichen, may be a Lethariella, but that is just a guess...
- Looks to me like Entoloma bloxamii, commonly known as the big blue pinkgill.
- Our Sulfur shelf (Laetiporus sulpherus) cooked up.
- Coprinopsis atramentaria, the ink cap or Tipplers bane, which is also distributed in Europe and North America
- Wild growing hemp. Tibetans love the seeds of hemp.
- Androsace, a member of the Primulaceae
- A creek running through the meadow in Yading
- A spotted laughing thrush, most of the time they are very shy, but not in this sanctuary
- Drolma and Drolma, Tibetan local guides.
- At first Drolma was a bit closed and standish apart.
- Nyade as the local Tibetans used to know the place, Yading in Chinese.
- A curious, hungry finch that ran between our feet
- Mt Chana Dorje in the back with Lungta / Wind horse prayer flags.
- Finding the amazing Laccaria amethystea is always a treat! Luckily it is not rare.