Peaceful putao
The eastern and the Himalayas come to an end in the northern
part of Myanmar. There, 219 miles north of Myitkyina at an altitude of 1300 to
1800 feet above sea level, is a plain stretching 15 miles from north to south
and 25 miles from east to west. The land has many streams, springs and a few
rivers so it has sufficient water and abundant fish.
The town of Putao is there, a peaceful, pretty place protect
by high, icy peaks. It was once a military outpost for the colonial British
know as Fort Hertz and even that harsh-sounding name could not take away its
beauty.
Mt Hkakabo razi, the highest peak in Southeast Aisa at
19,316 feet, is 180 miles away from Putao. It is in a remote region, with
Tahawn Dam being the nearest village. This peak was only conquered for the
first time in 1996 by Japanese mountaineer Takashi Ozaki, along with his Kachin
guide Nyama Jonseng. Nearby Mt Phungan razi is only 9,900 feet hight and more
accessible
These mountains are the only ice-capped peaks in Southeast
Asia, and the fact symbolises the diversity of Myanmar which ranges from this
icy region to dry plain, cool plateaus, thick forests, vest fertile fields and
white sand beaches. From their northern most spot the mountains look upon the
far south, a country of harmony within diversity.
This northern region is paradise for scientists, for rare
orchids, herbs, butterflies and animals dwell in the 1,472 square mile Mount
Hkakabu razi national Park, which was established in 1998 with the help of the
Wildlife Conservation Society based at the Bronx Zoo in the United States. The
park area is one of the most biologically diverse regions in Southeast Asia, a
transition zone where tropical lowland Indo Malayan species overlap with upland
Sino-Himalayan species.
Mt Phungan razi is also known as the watershed of the wide
Nam Lang stream, which flows into the Malikha River near Machanbaw, Kachin State.
It lies about 6 day’s walk from Putao and many trainee mountaineers made their
first attempts here. It has often been ascended by individuals and members of
theMyanmar Hiking and Mountaineering Federation. Orchid researchers and
collectors are especially keen to go up Mt Phungan razi up to where the ice
begin to from, for the country to discovery new orchid species or find rare
ones.
The people of Myanmar who live near jungle areas have long
used medicinal roots and plants that are highly effective, yet undiscovered by
western pharmaceutical companies. One of them, called ma shaw
(Euonymus kachinensis prain) is considered a cure-all. It is not rare
but its properties are powerful and it is frequently used by traditional Rawang
(Kachin) medicine practitioners living in the area. Another plant is the bitter
root Kha tauk ( ring kar ) Coptis teeta wall,
which is used for hypertension. One fungus that is known only as ye gai tauk (ice mushroom )
is good for digestive problems or as an antidote for poison. Artemesia annua is known by various local names
and is taken by people suffering from malaria.
During summer the valleys burst out in a rainbow of colours
from the wildflowers that carpet the ground. In this fertile land with crisp
and pure air, fruits and vegetables flourish bountifully, including juicy and
sweetly tart grapefruits. The clear streams and rivers are home to
black-skinned fish that are simply called ice fish because they thrive in
frigid waters. The flesh is succulent and tender, an exquisite taste for the
locals that city restaurants cannot offer.
The region is populated by several subgroups of the Kachin (Jiang
Hpaw ) including Rawang and Lisu They have separate
villages with different customs and languages but live with good will between them.
In Putao the clean, wide roads are lined with cosy houses, with garden walls
built using stacked river stones. Wild creepers grow from the cracks and
flowering bushes cluster at the gates. Mothers sit on open verandas, singing to
babies, swirling rice in bamboo trays to remove the chaff, or knitting woolen
hats for their families.
The Mulashidi Stream that flows near Putao is crystal clear
and icy cold, the waters rippling gently over round stones. The rope bridge
over the stream is the pride of Putao., And from there one can see far into the
distance of the blue hills. Women and children wash clothes and bathe under the
warm afternoon sun, splashing drops of water into the air that sparkle like
diamonds. Morning and evening , villagers in their traditional costumes pass across the rope bridge carrying baskets of goods or firewood. The morning market is
busy every day as people gather to shop for fresh vegetables, fruits and meat
as well as honey, mushrooms, herbal leaves and roots collected from the forests.
There are many villages around Putao and one of the biggest
is Upper Shvn Gong, about 14 miles away, where some families use hydroelectric
power to run their generators, the same as in a few other area villages such as
Wasan Dam and Ziya Dam. The people walk on swaying rope or bamboo bridges, trek
for miles over hills to their farms, spend hours picking mushroom in the jungles and brave the cold weather but
they remain contented and proud, happy to welcome stranger and friend alike to
the land they love.
Scientists and mountaineers as well as trekker and nature
lovers find Putao and the surrounding areas a fascinating place for fun, for
making new friends, for research and for the sheer joy of being on this
beautiful piece of land.
ကခ်င္ျပည္နယ္ ပူတာအိုေဒသရဲ႕ ပံုရိပ္ေတြ႕ကို ျမင္ခြင့္ရတဲ့အတြက္ ေက်းဇူးပါ။ ကခ်င္ျပည္နယ္ ရဲ႕သဘာ၀ ေတာေတာင္ေတြ႕ခုဆိုတစ္ေျဖးေျဖး ဆုတ္ယုတ္လာေနျပီးဆို ျမင္သာပါတယ္။ ဆက္လက္ျပီး သဘာ၀ ပတ္၀န္းက်င္းကိုထိန္းသိမ္းနိူင္ေအာင္ ၾကိဳးစားၾကတာေပါ့။
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