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diario de cuero nepalí yeti tracker, cuaderno de escritura con papel lokta hecho a mano. fabricado en el himalaya de nepal.

  • $CLP 92.965

TÉRMINOS Y CONDICIONES

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- El producto se trae a pedido, en un transcurso de 15 a 25 dias, si alguna restriccion de un ente gubernamental o de salud publica cambia o restringe vuelos, los pedidos pueden demorar mas tiempo.
- Precios pueden cambiar previo aviso. Depende de precio con proveedores o existencia.
- Fotos referenciales del producto, consulte no mas
- Despachamos a todo Chile con Starken.
- Productos importados de Estados Unidos, es probable que los productos electronicos trabajen en 110V y NO en 220V, podria usar un transformador, para mas informacion primero nos puedes preguntar todas las inquietudes que tengas.
-LEATHER JOURNAL: 5x8 Inch Leather Writing Journal, Handmade in the Himalayas with 84 Pages (168 front & back). Vegetable-tanned real goat leather with natural walnut and pomegranate. Great as a nature sketchbook, travel journal, camping journal, yoga journal, or for tracking the elusive Yeti.
-HANDMADE LOKTA PAPER: Following a 1,000-year-old tradition in handmade paper from Nepal. Tree-free paper is made by hand, acid-free, thick and sturdy with our special epic Lokta pages.
-RENEWABLE PAPER SOURCE: Lokta paper is made from the Lokta bush, a renewable source grown on the Southern slopes of the Himalayas. The bush grows back quickly when cut. Cuttings are cooked into a pulp and then spread by hand on boxed screens and dried in the Himalayan sunshine.
-NATURAL TEXTURE: Each page has a distinct texture on both sides with one side showing a hint of the fine texture from the screen used to create the paper. The other side, called the sun-kissed side, forms naturally as the pulp dries in the sun, creating a natural wrinkle texture unique to lokta paper.
-A TRAVEL JOURNAL: Pack it with you on your adventures around home, the world, or when tracking the elusive Yeti through the mountains of Nepal. Made in Nepal.

Journal Entry ? Day 14 Ascent of Mount Khumbila. Any signs of tracks have eluded us. Some of the team stopped to admire the views of Mount Everest and Ama Dablam, but I cannot. What we seek is found on this mountain alone. Prior to the climb, I was unsettled, wanting to begin straightaway, but my team desired to stop in the early morning cold at the small outdoor market. One merchant who looked like he?d seen many harsh Himalayan winters noted the pack I carried, and then pointed in the direction of Everest. I shook my head and pointed to the looming Khumbila. The man paused for what seemed like some time. Climbing Mount Khumbilia wasn?t common and almost impossible to find guides for it. Adventurers kept their eyes on Everest, but what we seek doesn?t live on Everest?not anymore. The merchant handed me a journal. Despite its size, it was surprisingly light. I opened it. The pages were made of the handmade paper I?d seen back in Kathmandu, lokta paper they called it, but this paper was much thicker than normal lokta paper, the pages were sturdy, some were quite wrinkly. I?d seen how they made the paper, spreading lokta bush pulp bush over a boxed screen submerged in water, and then pulling it out of the water and letting it dry, propped up in the Himalayan sun, forming the rugged paper. I told the merchant that it was nice, but he insisted I look further. I turned the pages anyway and froze. One of the pages had a detailed sketch of the mountain, with a path leading to a cave. A cave we?d seen from old aerial photographs-A few pages contained writing in Nepalese, and then I saw the Yeti sketch. The man pointed to the mountain. I made the namaste greeting in thanks, bought the journal and now at our first camp, I?ve begun chronicling our ascent. My gel pen takes fine to page even with the temperature dropping rapidly on the mount. Day 17 This evening, we made camp about 2km from the cave opening and will enter at first light tomorrow.