Chapter 18 (Updated January 19, 2012)

I'll talk about this information later, but now I'll talk about their discussions, which are about what the things that move in the snow might be.

At that time, based on my experience, I asked Tashi if there was anything like this in various Spanish/Tibetan folklore that could move under the snow. In the information we can find on the Internet, such things are generally led to the legends of the Himalayan Yeti, and if you are more professional, you can call him "Snow Ape", which is the general way of writing magical novels.

However, what is actually heard from the mouths of the locals is often very unexpected.

Tashi said almost outright that it was a brown bear. Brown bears sometimes hunt in snow dens.

I wanted to oppose it immediately, because it was absolutely impossible. Altitude is not a problem, brown bears can live at an altitude of five or six thousand meters, but the place where they were in distress was almost all covered with snow, and there was no sign of life at all. How do brown bears survive in this area?

It can't just have one chance to hunt the little brother in its lifetime. Then again, if it's really a brown bear, you can't tell who hunts whom.

The big question is, I'm sure the little brother is not very mistaken, the Tibetan must be waving, why is he waving to a brown bear?

Does it mean "Hey, watch out for your bear's paws"? Is this guy a second-class person?

Chen Xuehan said, maybe the Tibetan wants to remind the little brother not to stay in that place anymore, that place is in danger?

It's possible, I thought to myself. That's when Tashi told me not to doubt it, it must be a big brown bear, because he knew that there were brown bears in captivity to guard the temple in the past. The brown bear is a very intelligent animal, and it can recognize which ones are protecting it and which are strangers. He also heard of a monastery lama feeding a brown bear living near the temple with food scraps in a year when food was scarce, and was attacked by a brown bear when the British invaded the West/Tibet and several British troops seized the temple.

The ferocity of the brown bear is very terrifying, and some people have seen the largest brown bear in Hoh Xili, with a body length of 2.5 meters, and it is a sumo wrestler who stands taller than Yao Ming, and the British people were instantly killed and dragged into the forest.

Later accounts also proved that Tashi's claim that the brown bear may have been kept by Tibetans to protect the entrance to the lake.

Waving at a brown bear may be a habit of the breeder. But the brown bear spotted the intruder, so instead of going to the Tibetans, it chose to attack the intruder.

In this way, it was not easy for the little brother to save Rabah from a brown bear.

The speculations at the beginning of this knowledge will not be until the later stages of this story until we really know what it is. Throughout the story, we thought it was the brown bear, and we didn't have any doubts.

Because Rabah went insane after this account, he was not able to continue his account until two months later. So, the other porter became quite an important figure.

The porter's name was Lordan Dolma. Yes, you heard it right, it's a woman, but young people don't really care about the other person's gender.

Lodan Dolma is a girl from a family of Tibetan doctors. Her experience was quite bumpy, and poverty was the biggest difficulty. Otherwise, a woman will not be reduced to the point of being a porter.

In such bad weather, in fact, there is no difference between men and women. Because the face could not see the gender, and the fierce cold wind erased all the charm and beauty, Lordan stayed five meters away from the young man and Raba, because her physical strength could not keep up, and she was always lagging behind.

Although only in his early thirties, Lordan looked to be middle-aged in his fifties. She saw what was happening ahead, and by the time she ran up, it was all over.