Thanks, guys. I hope they mean something cool like "Pillar of Heaven" or "Spine of the World" or "Divine Throne." Apparently all Denali means is "tall." Which, points for succinctness, but I like my mountain names to have a bit more cosmic resonance.
'Shells'
Natter 74: Ready or Not
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, butt kicking, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I have the impression that Everest isn't all that significant in the culture/myths of the locals despite its fascination for record-obsessed Western mountaineers. I think I remember hearing of a nearby lower peak that's a much bigger figure in Tibetan folklore. (Possibly because it's a lot more landslide-y than Everest and tends to kill people who try to climb it...)
Chomolungma apparently means "Holy Mother", which isn't too bad. (The Yangtze River is actually known as Chang Jiang in China, which means literally "Long River". Beijing is the literal translation of "Northern Capital"; Shanghai mean "On-the-Sea". And all their months translate as "Month 3" or such like. One might be grateful Everest was named by Tibetans.)
I think I remember hearing of a nearby lower peak that's a much bigger figure in Tibetan folklore. (Possibly because it's a lot more landslide-y than Everest and tends to kill people who try to climb it...)
I'm not sure if it's Tibetan or Nepalese, but I think no one's yet reached the absolute summit of the third-highest mountain because the locals regard it as a holy site. Expeditions just get within spitting distance and leave it at that.
I remember a PBS special by Michael Wood about the Himalayas, with an incredibly holy mountain, where you do a pilgrimage of walking around it. One of the stories was of Krishna's bride taking him there for their honeymoon. It's one of the highest mountains, but it was more isolated--thus walk-around-able--and nearly perfect in shape.
tends to kill people who try to climb it
Which seems only fair.
PBS special by Michael Wood
My secret boyfriend.
Yay fluevogs and thrift gods!
I bought so much stuff at the thrift store yesterday. Tried to start Marie Kondo-ing my stuff, but "useful" and "sparks joy" have very little relation to each other.
Then went to see "Diary of a Teenage Girl" with a friend. It was weird. Interesting setting but good lord awkward. Now I'm trying to convince myself to go work out. I got dressed. That's step one. Now to get to the gym...
The Yangtze River is actually known as Chang Jiang in China, which means literally "Long River". Beijing is the literal translation of "Northern Capital"; Shanghai mean "On-the-Sea". And all their months translate as "Month 3" or such like. One might be grateful Everest was named by Tibetans.
This cracks me up. I knew about the Yangtze and Beijing, but didn't quite grok the whole trend towards highly literal naming conventions. Oh the mysterious Orient!
I spent about 4 hours today working on the grant I'm writing. My brain is fried like a piece of toast. Egad. But other than that, very productive! And I came home to wine, so there's that.
Apparently all Denali means is "tall." Which, points for succinctness, but I like my mountain names to have a bit more cosmic resonance.
Denali means, in full, "the great one" (the rest of the local Native Alaskan names for the mountain translate to either "the tall one" or "the high one" - Athabascan/Dene names tend to be very matter-of-fact). To be fair, there are a shedload of mountains around that area, especially from the northern side (which is where the people live that we got the name Denali from).