The start of the trail towards Mu Gompa is pleasantly flat, so you can focus more on the unfolding beauty around you. As we were well into the middle of autumn, in October, and at a relatively high altitude, the further we went, the more bleached the trees at the foothills became, in different shades of red and yellow. The first glaciers touching the valley floor could be seen, right up to the fields. This is ‘Gompa’ country, with some small monasteries tucked away under protruding rock on the cliff face. The sky remained a clear blue as it got warmer. A lot more familiar Buddhist features were prominent, at some points with hundreds of prayer tablets. We dipped down to the riverbank, taking a faster bankside route thus avoiding the villages of Chho and Nyile. A number of trekking groups trekked all the way to these villages the night we were in Phule, in order to take a day trip to Mu Gompa. I would not recommend that. It is unnecessary extra walking resulting in less of the desired cultural experience of family and monastic life.