Across the Roof of the World (1999)
This thrilling one hour program documents a trip by motorbike along the length of the Indian Himalaya. Producer/presenter Greg Grainger joins Indian motorcycle expedition leader Mike Ferris in the settlement of Gangotri, the source of the holy river Ganges.
The expedition - by two grand old Enfield motorbikes - tracks the length of the Indian Himalaya, from Gangotri up into Ladahk - Little Tibet, and its capital Leh, then across the world’s highest road into Kashmir and the houseboat studded lakes of Srinagar.
Highlights include:
* The inspirational snow-clad peaks of the Himalaya.
* Holy men and pilgrims in ceremonial immersions in the Ganges.
* The highest and roughest road in the world, to the Kadung La.
* Travelling through frequent landslides and crossing flooded roads.
* India’s vibrant culture, including the grass ladies, the field workers and the children.
* Sunset ceremony in the holy pilgrimage town of Rishikesh, where the Beatles came to meet their guru.
* The hitch-hikers: grass ladies, school girls, guitar-playing holy men.
* The lush Kullu Valley.
* Manali: Buddhist temple and ceremony, 5-thousand year old Hindu temple.
* Tibetan tea tent at the Barralachala Pass, our first 4,800 metre pass.
* Ladahk: high mountains, arid and eerily beautiful.
* A community of Tibetan nomads, literally living straight off the backs of their sheep.
* Historic Tibetan monasteries, including the thousand years old Thikse monastery, one of the finest examples of Tibetan buddhism in Ladakh.
* Leh: Tibetan traders with weathered faces from another era, line its ancient streets.
* The Ladahk Festival: procession of cultural troupes, dozens of diverse and different tribes, plus yak herders from Tibet, and a display of ancident archery.
* The highly sacred Mount Kailas, in Tibet and the annual Wesac ceremony.
* The stunning Kashmir Valley and its houseboat-studded capital of Srinagar.
Numerous rituals are enacted, all to placate the gods.
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Beautiful scenery. A lot of factually incorrect information and shallow observations though.
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