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Sherpas peaking in the Rockies

A small but growing population of the hardy Himalayan mountaineers have left Nepal for this well-heeled town. They own restaurants, run trekking businesses and pray at the local Buddhist temples.

Hometown U.S.A: Boulder, Colo.

November 28, 2010|By David Kelly

The kitchen was hopping, orders flying in from every direction, and Jangbu Sherpa was smack in the middle, deep-frying samosas while eyeballing a simmering yak stew.

Waiters rushed in — more momos, more thupka, more papadums!

Sherpa stayed cool, never breaking a sweat. And why would he?

He's reached the summit of Mount Everest 10 times, seen men swept off high peaks, and survived an avalanche on K-2, the world's most dangerous mountain.

"When I stood on Everest," he said, glancing up from a pot of boiling oil, "I felt like I was standing on top of the sky."

These days he stands over a hot oven at Sherpa's Adventurers Restaurant & Bar in downtown Boulder, serving up Nepali and Tibetan fare.

Jangbu is one of a small but growing population of Sherpas who have left Nepal for this well-heeled town in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains.

Once considered little more than high altitude baggage handlers, the hardy Himalayan mountaineers have blossomed in Boulder. They own restaurants, operate trekking businesses and pray in the town's Buddhist temples. And like all Sherpas, they share the same last name.

No one knows how many live in and around Boulder, though some put the number at more than 100 and counting.

"This is a good state for Sherpas," said Lhakpa Sherpa, who runs a restaurant with a big, fuzzy yeti lurking stiffly near the buffet. "There are a lot of connections because we meet so many people from Colorado in Nepal."

Sherpas are an ethnic group that originated in eastern Tibet and migrated to Nepal. Known for reliability and endurance, they are highly valued as porters and guides for climbing expeditions.

"All the Sherpas in Boulder are from the Solu-Khumbu district near Mount Everest," said Pasong Sherpa, a Buddhist-monk-turned-chef who moved here 10 years ago. "Everyone in the Khumbu knows Boulder."

His wife, Kandu, said the city's open spaces, 5,430-foot altitude and majestic wall of mountains make her feel at home. "In my daughter's kindergarten class they even learn the Tibetan alphabet," she said.

Unusual perhaps, but not for Boulder.

Home to the University of Colorado, this progressive town has a longstanding infatuation with all things Himalayan, especially Buddhism. Naropa University, the country's first accredited Buddhist college, is here along with the Boulder Shambhala Center, a nationally known meditation retreat.

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