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TREK AID offers a wide
variety of trekking Itineraries to suit your parties needs.
Below is a 24 day tour
following a pilgrim route north of the Annapurna range to Muktinath’s
‘sacred flame’, visiting five Tibetan refugee settlements. The Trans
Himalaya Aid Trek.
Day 1.
Meet Heathrow. Fly via to
Kathmandu, Nepal.
Day 2. Arrive Kathmandu mid
afternoon, transfer to Lhasa Guest House.
Day 3. Group
breakfast, trek planning meeting. PM tour to Swayambhu, Patan and
Bodhanath.
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Day
4.Group breakfast, collect personal rental gear. PM walk to Asan
Bazar and Durbar square pagoda temples. Early night. Day
5. Early departure to Pokhara by coach. PM free, at Lake
House. Day 6. Visits to Tibetan refugee settlements,
Trek Aid charity projects, visit Pokhara lakeside. Day
7. Trek up lush hillsides and rice paddies to Dhumpus ridge and
on to Potana & Austrian camp.
Starting from Pokhara
the expedition follows the southern slopes of Machapuchare and the
Annapurna Range soaring 26,000ft above, travelling through fertile land
inhabited by Nepalese tribal people: Chetri, Pun and Gurungs.
Day
8. Spectacular views of the
whole Annapurna massif from the ridge top Austrian camp, then descend an
hour to Karre, and by coach three hours to district headquarters, Beni.
Lodge after lunch at Galeshor.
Turning north through
transitions from tropical to conifer, to Tibet-like high altitude canyons,
the trek follows the Kali Gandaki river, through and beyond the Himalayan
range by the deepest river gorge in the
world.
Day 9. Riverside trails to
tropical Tatopani village. Part-day rest to visit hot
springs. Day 10. Entering the worlds deepest gorge, an
age old trade link to Tibet, trek to Ghasa. Day 11. Up
through pine woods, the valley opens out under Dhaulagiri into a
spectacular plain and we are north of the Himalayas.
In
passing north of the Himalayan crest the expedition now climbs into a
different world. The tropical Hindu lowlands are left behind and we emerge
into spectacular canyonlands, on the border of the Kingdom of Mustang,
where the cultural influences are Tibetan Buddhist and the people are
Thakali, Bhotia, Lo.ba, Tibetan and Manang.ba. There are Tibetan
monasteries to see at Khobang, Tukche, Marpha, Kagbeni and
Muktinath. |
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Day 12. From
Tukche, merchant centre of the old Tibet trade, to the refugee camp at
Tserok and on to Marpha. Grand merchant houses of the traders, and
fortress-like Tibetan villages perched on cliffsides, replace the thatched
Hindu tribes houses of the fertile south. Day 13.
Marpha to Ekli Bhatti via Jomsom, amid high canyonlands. Lodge early to
avoid high winds.
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Day
14. Slow acclimatising pace above 10,000ft climbing out of the Kali
Gandaki canyon to Jarkhot and the Hindu/Buddhist shrines at Muktinath with
its 'miraculous' sacred flame coming out of water - a focus of pilgrimage
for several thousand years for Hindu’s and Buddhists alike. Day
15. Descend from our highest camp, Muktinath (12,500ft) to Ekli
Bhatti for half day rest at lodge. Day 16. Ekli Bhatti
to Tserok refugee settlement, evening party and Tibetan costume dances, a
Trek Aid culture conservation scheme. Lodge at Marpha. Day
17. Marpha to Kalopani or Ghasa, returning along wide flat
riverside flanked by Annapurna 1 and Dhaulagiri. Day
18. Kalopani to Tatopani, via the steep Kali Gandaki gorge. Part
day rest at hot springs camp. Day 19. Tatopani to
Galeshor, last trek night in lodge. Day 20. Walk to
Beni and drive to Pokhara, PM rest at Lake House. Day
21. Rest day in Pokhara, optional visits to refugee camps to
finish Trek Aid projects. Day 22. Drive to Kathmandu.
Lhasa Guest house. Day 23. Free in Kathmandu for
souvenir shopping and personal trips around the bazaar and the old city.
PM flight. Day 24. Morning arrival at London
Heathrow.
Group leaders may have to adapt day by day
itineraries during an expedition to allow for bad weather, group members
preferences, keeping the trip flexible to suit the needs of the
party.
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