Everest Sacred Gokyo Lakes, Gokyo Ri & Sherpa Culture Lodge Trek
Christmas & New Year Trip Options!
Nepal Himalaya Trek
Our Everest Sacred Gokyo Lakes and Sherpa Homeland lodge trek in Nepal, run at Christmastime and also as a custom excursion any time of the year, is a spectacular lodge to lodge trek through some of the most breathtakingly beautiful landscapes in the Nepal Himalaya, with the world’s highest 8000-meter peaks soaring majestically far overhead. The sacred, turquoise Gokyo Lakes are breathtakingly beautiful, Gokyo Ri (5360m) offers perhaps the best Everest panorama in this sublime region, and the Gokyo valley, the Everest region’s least trekked valley, breathtakingly beautiful under crisp, blue December skies, visiting the Sherpa’s Tibetan Buddhist monasteries, exploring their rich culture, as we celebrate being out in the world once again. The sacred, turquoise Gokyo Lakes valley, where colorful prayer flags flutter at the top of Gokyo Ri (5360m), is the Khumbu’s ‘hidden valley’, with many secrets to reveal. Remote routes to Phortse and Pangboche offer more incredible Himalayan views, rare bird and wildlife sightings, and some of the Khumbu’s most traditional Sherpa villages.
Kamzang Journeys’ Sacred Gokyo Lakes & Sherpa Homeland Nepal trek is a window into traditional Sherpa villages and their Tibetan Buddhist monasteries (gompas), their mountain Buddhist culture, and the Khumbu Sherpas’ sacred peaks and valleys. Renown for the highest Himalayan peaks in the world, the Everest region is also incredibly spiritual, and we will visit its many colorful Buddhist gompas, and chat with the monks of Tengboche, Pangboche, Namche, Khumjung, Khunde, Thame, Khari, and Lawudo Gompas.
December is a wonderful month to trek in the Everest region, the Himalayan peaks accentuated by clear, blue skies, without the large number of trekkers who visit during the peak months. Wildlife such as the Himalayan thar, musk deer, wolves, snow leopards, clouded leopards, danphe (Nepal’s national bird), blood pheasant, Himalayan snow-cock, snow-pigeon, and chukar roams these Himalayan mountainside. Himalayan peak views don’t much any better than the views while trekking in the Khumbu region of Nepal! Join us for this unforgettable trek through Nepal’s spectacular Everest region, a best-of Himalayan trek …
Why Trek in the Everest Region with Kamzang Journeys?
Kamzang Journeys has perhaps the safest acclimatization schedule in the Khumbu, with both Sherpa and Western guides leading your trip along with the experienced Kamzang Journeys team. Our Everest High Passes trek focuses on cultural immersion as well as Himalayan peaks, and we often visit Sherpa houses for a cup of ‘chang’ or salt butter tea! Lhakpa + Kim are experienced photographers and are happy to share tips for photographing in the region. We carry a full medical kit along with oxygen (and sometimes a PAC bag), Kim has an extensive medical background and we have a nearly perfect record of mountain safety.
Our Kamzang trekking in the Everest region style means we carry a private heater for cold lodges, a library of books on Everest and the Khumbu region, hot water bottles for your sleeping bag, and a colorful caravan of yaks with Sherpa yak drivers to carry your bags (and enhance your photos). Choose from the extensive lodge menus for all meals, which are accompanied by snacks, a candy jar, chocolate, biscuits, and other desserts, and a choice of herbal teas, hot drinks & freshly brewed coffee. Our water is filtered using the best western gravity filter.
Kim, Lhakpa, and the Kamzang Journeys Team have 20 years of trekking experience in the Everest (Solu Khumbu) region. Kim first trekked in the Everest region in the 90s, later teaching English in the Everest region. Lhakpa Sherpa (Khumbu Adventures) comes from Thame, his wife Doma’s family is from Pangboche, and their relatives own many of the lodges in the Khumbu. We have numerous Sherpa friends + contacts in the region, lots of invaluable support throughout the Everest trek! Our staff all come from the Solu region, along the Jiri to Lukla trail, now known as the Hillary & Norgay Everest Trek
Trek
Everest Sacred Gokyo Lakes & Sherpa Homeland Lodge Trek | Christmas & New Year Trip! – Nepal Himalayan Trekking
Day 1 – Thursday, 12 December 2024 – Arrive Kathmandu | Transfer Kathmandu Guest House
Day 2 – Kathmandu | Optional World Heritage Sightseeing
OR Drive Mulkot (Ramechhap) | Transfer Hotel
Day 3 – Fly Lukla. Trek Monjo
+ Helicopter Lukla Option (+$375)
Day 4 – Trek Namche Bazaar | Sunset Everest Views!
Day 5 – Namche Bazaar | Acclimatization Day, Everest View Hikes & Namche Cultural Explorations
Day 6 – Trek Thame | via Khari Nunnery
Day 7 – Trek Khunde | Visit Khunde Monastery & Hillary Memorial
Day 8 – Trek Dole | via Khumjung Monastery & Yeti Scalp
Day 9 – Trek Machermo
Day 10 – Trek Gokyo
Day 11 – Gokyo | Climb Gokyo Ri 5360m
Day 12 – Gokyo | Day Trip Scoundrel’s Point & Fifth Lake
Day 13 – Trek Phortse | High Route
Day 14 – Trek Pangboche | High Route
Day 15 – Pangboche | Ama Dablam Base Camp Day Hike 4580m
Day 16 – Trek Namche Bazaar | Visit Tengboche Gompa
Day 17 – Trek Phakding
Day 18 – Trek Lukla
Day 19 – Fly Kathmandu | Transfer Kathmandu Guest House
+ Helicopter Option (+$375)
Day 20 – Tuesday, 31 December 2024 – Trip Ends | Transfer TIA Airport
Travel Advice
+ We strongly recommend scheduling an extra day in Kathmandu post-trek in case of flight delays or cancellations out of Lukla!
+ Purchase travel insurance with helicopter evacuation!
+ Purchase trip cancellation + travel insurance!
Private Trips & Customized Journeys
We’d love to customize a private trip or extension for you according to your dates. We can customize your journey to include more days in the Kathmandu Valley, Chitwan or Bardia National Park, Pokhara, Bhutan, Tibet or elsewhere. Inquire for helicopter tours and travel options!
Nepal Modules
Nepal & Kathmandu Modules | Customize Your Trip!
Kim Bannister Photo Gallery | Trip & Trek Photos
Kim Bannister Photography
Watch the Everest High Passes Trek Video!
Everest High Passes Trek | Adam D on Vimeo
Cafe Caravan & Dolpo Prints & Paintings
Dolpo Artist Tenzin Norbu creates wonderful Dolpo paintings, the prints (and some originals) available from our Cafe Caravan at Boudhanath Stupa.
Kamzang Journeys Products
Duffel bags, t-shirts, camp towels, buffs, handcrafted leather passport wallets, totes + bags, Himalayan textile pillow covers + more available in Kathmandu!
Kamzang Journeys Products
Kamzang Design Etsy Shop (On-Line)
Many of these handcrafted products designed by Kim and local craftspeople are available in Kathmandu, including much of the tribal silver collection …
Kamzang Design Etsy Shop
Client Highlights & Reviews
Travelers’ Comments
Itinerary
Everest Sacred Gokyo Lakes & Sherpa Homeland Lodge Trek | Christmas & New Year Trip! – Nepal Himalayan Trekking
Day 1 – Arrive Kathmandu 1340m (4395′) | Transfer Kathmandu Guest House
Welcome to Nepal! You will be met at Tribhuvan International Airport by a representative of Kamzang Journeys, generally Nuru Sherpa. Look for a sign with your name on it as you leave the arrival area. We strongly suggest purchasing a NTC (Nepal Telecom) SIM card (e-SIM or regular SIM) as you leave the airport, often useful for data in the mountain regions of Nepal. We will transfer you to the Kathmandu Guest House (or see Great Stays tab for luxury, boutique, and other hotel options in the Kathmandu Valley) where your room has been booked for you. Drink plenty of water to hydrate after your flight, and enjoy your first evening in Kathmandu …
We’ll need a papery copy of your travel medical insurance, and a photo of your passport and Nepali visa; please have them ready to give-show to Nuru once you arrive at the Kathmandu Guest House. Please ask if you need your gear checked, or have shopping or sightseeing questions.
Thamel is a myriad of shops of all imaginable varieties, bakeries, cafes, restaurants, bars, hotels, spas, climbing walls, colorful banners and signs, and eccentrically clad backpackers. Enjoy dinner at Roadhouse Cafe, New Orleans, Yin & Yang, Third Eye, or one of Thamel’s other restaurants. (B)
Day 2 – Kathmandu (& Helicopter Lukla Tomorrow)
Enjoy a free day exploring Kathmandu’s many World Heritage sites or embark on a tour of the beautiful Kathmandu valley, surrounded by Himalayan snow peaks (See Kathmandu Valley Tours for optional tours with Nuru or another qualified Kathmandu city guide, car, and entrance fees included). Or just relax at the hotel, visit the spa, have a massage, wander Kathmandu’s fascinating streets, pop into neighborhood Hindu temples and Newari-styled courtyards, join in on koras of the Buddhist temples. (B)
OR
Day 2 – Drive Mulkot (Ramechhap) 475m | Transfer Raj Riverside Resort or Kwality Beach Resort
You have an option to either spend your extra day in Kathmandu, or to drive to Mulkot (Ramechhap) and spend the night in a hotel before your flight to Lukla tomorrow. During the peak season in Nepal, there are essentially no Lukla flights permitted out of the Kathmandu Domestic Airport. The flights are instead operating out of Manthali Airport in Ramechhap, a 4 – 5 hour drive from Kathmandu. We will transport you by private vehicle to your hotel in Mulkot (about 35 km from the Manthali Airport) on the iconic Sun Khosi River. The hotels have a pool (as you’re now at 475 meters, so generally quite hot) and descent restaurants. You will fly early the next morning to Lukla to begin your Everest trek, either with your guide or meeting your guide in Lukla. (B)
Distance Driving: 95 km
Cafe Caravan & Dolpo Gallery
Dolpo Artist Tenzin Norbu creates wonderful Dolpo paintings, the prints (and some originals) are available from our Cafe Caravan at Boudhanath Stupa, housed in one of Boudha’s original historic buildings, decorated in a bright, Tibetan style and overlooking the magnificent stupa!
Massage in Kathmandu (Ramji of Relieving Hands)
Ramji is a blind masseur trained by Seeing Hands in Kathmandu, who now offers wonderful at home (or hotel) massages, with his own massage table and oil. He is truly a master masseur, a real healer and VERY highly recommended. His prices are extremely reasonable. Let us know if you want help to arrange a massage.
Relieving Hands by Ramji
Sightseeing in Kathmandu
Nuru Wangdi Sherpa (Khumbu Adventures & Café Caravan) has his Kathmandu guide license and a large SUV vehicle, and can arrange any sightseeing you might want to do in Kathmandu and the Kathmandu valley. He is often available for guiding your excursions as well.
Mobile & WhatsApp: +977 9803633783
Kathmandu | World Heritage Sightseeing Tours – Pashupatinath, Boudhanath, Durbar Square & Swayambunath
Kathmandu is filled with World Heritage sites and sacred destinations, crowded with traditional neighborhoods and colorful festivals. Spend a few days exploring Nepal’s exotic capital and the history-laden Kathmandu valley. We can arrange sightseeing guides and vehicles as required. See Kathmandu Heritage & Happenings for more details.
We recommend beginning with Pashupatinath in the early morning and moving on to Boudhanath mid-morning. Hindu Pashupatinath on the sacred Bagmati river and its sacred temple complex is one of Nepal’s most important sites, a powerful cremation site, and Nepal’s most important Hindu temple. Here, monkeys run up and down the steps of the burning ghats, and trident-bearing saddhus draped in burnt-orange and saffron sit serenely meditating when they’re not posing for photos-for-rupees. Local guides can explain the significance of the complicated ceremonies. Please be respectful when taking photos.
Boudhanath, in the midst of traditional monasteries (gonpas in Tibetan) and hung with long strings of multi-colored prayer flags, attracts Sherpas, Tibetans, and tourists alike for daily circumambulations (koras) of the iconic stupa. The striking Buddha eyes of Boudhanath Stupa watch over a lively and colorful Tibetan community and attract pilgrims from all over the Himalayan Buddhist realm. There are wonderful spots for lunch at Boudhanath (Roadhouse Cafe has wood-oven pizzas and a breathtaking view of the stupa and colorful Nepals circling it), and it’s a good place to learn the technique of thanka painting and purchase a thanka (Buddhist mural). See also Bhaktapur for more options for shopping for thankas.
Wander through the many temples, pagodas, courtyards, and the museum at Kathmandu Durbar Square, a timeless gathering spot and a UNESCO World Heritage site. Kathmandu Durbar Square, including the old royal palace, is Kathmandu’s ‘Palace Square’, a showcase for the world-renowned artisans and craftsmen of Kathmandu and a synthesis of Hindu and Buddhist palaces, temples, stupas, and statues. The Malla and Shah kings ruled over the Kathmandu Valley during the centuries of the building of the layers of this Durbar Square. Along with their opulent palaces, the square surrounds numerous courtyards and temples, all works of art with intricate and often erotic carvings. Kathmandu Durbar Square is known as Hanuman Dhoka Durbar Square, a name derived from a statue of Hanuman, the monkey devotee of Lord Ram, at the entrance of the palace. The social, religious and urban focal point of the city, Durbar Square is often the site of festivals, marriages, and other ceremonies such as Teej. Some important structures are Hanuman Dhoka Palace, Kumari Ghar (Abode of the Living Goddess), Taleju Temple, built between the 12th and 18th centuries, the 17th century stone inscription set into the wall of the palace with writings in 15 languages.
In the evening (take the interesting back streets from Durbar Square) climb the many steps to the gilded Swayambhunath stupa (known as the monkey temple) which rises from the Kathmandu valley floor at 1420 meters and is one of the holiest Buddhist sites in Nepal. Swayambunath, the ‘self-created’ stupa, was founded over 2000 years ago at a time when the Kathmandu valley was filled by a large lake, with a single lotus in the center. Mythology says that Manjusri, a bodhisattva, drained the lake with one cut of his sword and the lotus flower was transformed into the stupa. From its commanding views of Kathmandu, circumambulate Swayambunath’s white-washed stupa, painted with distinctive Buddha eyes, the complex a unique synthesis of Buddhism and Hinduism. Another interesting time to visit Swayambunath is in the mornings when Nepalis visit the temple dedicated to the God of Smallpox with colorful offerings for the goddess.
Stop to photograph reflections in Kathmandu’s many pokharis or ponds, including the beautiful Rani Pokhari (queen’s bath) near New Road, and the Naga Pokhari (pond of the snake gods of the underworld) just beyond the palace gates. The many bathing ghats, square enclosures with steps leading down to water spouts, often decorated with naga heads, are also interesting and colorful gathering spots.
Day 3 – Fly (or Helicopter) Lukla 2850m/9350′. Trek Monjo 2835m/9300′
Nuru will transfer you to the domestic airport for your flight to Lukla. Just after sunrise, you’ll embark on the spectacular 25-minute flight over the Kathmandu valley and along snow-capped Himalayan peaks to the renowned Hillary Norgay Airport in Lukla. You will have time to organize your duffel bag for the porter(s) and then enjoy a hearty breakfast at Paradise Lodge on the other side of the airstrip before you start trekking into the incredible Everest region!
Leaving the bustling village of Lukla, packed with colorful shops, restaurants, bars and still a bit of Sherpa character (as well as dzobkios or dzos, a mix of yak and cow) you being to trek north, with snow-capped Karyolung peak in the distance. The quaint, checkered and green village of Chaunrikharka, with its many whitewashed chortens and a Hillary school, sits in the valley just below the trail. The trail takes you above a rhododendron-choked forest, over the school and gonpa (monastery), and past the checkered fields of barley, spinach, and potatoes of the village. You are trekking along the Dudh Kosi (river) on a centuries-old trading trail from Nepal to Tibet. It is well-traveled by stout, heavily loaded Nepali porters and used to be used by Tibetan traders (Khampas, most distinguishable by the length of red or black tassel wrapped around their heads) conducting business between the weekly markets of Lukla and Namche with Chinese and Tibetan goods brought over the 5700m Nangpa La (pass) from Tibet. The pass, and customs, have been closed for about a decade over trade issues between Nepal and China, sadly. The Khumbu has now lost a bit of its unique character without the border trade from Tibetan, and these lively Tibetan traders.
Half an hour out of Lukla you reach the idyllic hamlet of Chheplung. Up valley rises the sacred peak of Khumbila, a black triangle that dominates the valley. From the small hamlet of Thado Kosi, while crossing the metal bridge, you will have your first view of the three statues peaks of Kusum Khangkaru to the east. Half an hour of lovely trekking over cobbled trails brings you to Ghat and the best-maintained cluster of mani stones and prayer flags in the Khumbu. The local lama, owner of the Lama Lodge in Ghat, is responsible for this magical setting. The inscriptions on the carved mani rocks is either ‘Om Mani Padme Hung’ (‘Hail to the jewel in the lotus”, the mantra for the next lifetime) or ‘Om Ma A Hung Baja Guru Padma Side Hung’ (the mantra to Guru Rimpoche to remove obstacles).
Once at Phakding, a lively village a half hour’s walk from Ghat, you’ll stop for lunch at Ang Sani, Jangbu & son Nawang’s Shangri La Lodge. Nawang has recently renoved the lodge, and opened a stylish cafe with great cappuccinos from an Italian coffee maker. Leaving Phakding, you’ll trek by the small tea-houses servicing the locals and workers in Phakding, cross a long suspension bridge over the Dudh Kosi, past the new lodges and trek above the river, climbing through evergreen forests to reach the first lodge of Benkar. Look up to the protruding rocks for Himalayan thar, and some of the rocks that we pass are almost remelted granites or migmatypes, rocks similar to gneiss but with more swirls. Continuing over a small bridge, you continue through larger Benkar, the first village to attend the Monjo school. Another suspension bridge, several small tea houses serving local fare, and another climb, and you reach Chumoa, with apple and peach trees that bloom in the springtime. One more small bridge and a last climb on uneven stone steps to reach Monjo, where you will stop at Kailash Lodge, run by the lovely Yangti Sherpa, for the night. Monjo is a small Sherpa village tucked away in the forests high above the Dudh Kosi where Kim taught English years ago, only the newer part of the village visible from the trail. There is a newly reconstructed monastery above the school, and above that a steep drop-off and good view of tomorrow’s hike. (6 hrs) (B, L, D)
Distance:13km
Day 4 – Trek Namche Bazaar 3465m/11,365′ (Moonlight Lodge)
After a short walk past Monjo School with Khumbila Peak (or Khumbu Yul La) looming majestically ahead, you’ll enter the gateway to the Sagarmatha National Park. Descending steeply on a stony trail to the river, cross a long suspension bridge to reach the hamlet of Jorsale, and then cross one more long bridge before taking the lower trail that follows the sandy riverside trail, the shores peppered with large, rounded river rocks. You’ll trek for about 45 minutes to reach the long, iconic suspension bridge, the upper (new) bridge above the lower (rebuilt) bridge which now features an Everest bungee jump!
Bring your five-colored Tibetan prayer flags to hang on the bridge over the confluence of the Dudh Kosi (‘milk river’) and the Bhote Kosi (‘river from Tibet’) and send prayers out into the Everest region! The steep 1½ hour climb to Namche on a dusty, rocky, switch-backing trail is broken halfway up the hill by your first view of Everest, Lhotse and Nuptse. Local women sell delicious oranges at this resting point, which you’ll share with other trekkers. Another 45 minutes of climbing, mostly off the main trail amongst the evergreens, and you’ll arrive at the old trading village of Namche Bazaar, now a thriving trekking metropolis. You’ll have a short tour of the shopping and bakeries in Namche before heading up steep stone steps to your guest house, Natang and Pemba’s idyllic Moonlight Lodge (now run by their son Nima), scenically situated at the top of Namche (and with great showers!).
Namche Bazaar, once called Nauje and now the most prosperous trading village on the old trade route with Tibet, sits in an amphitheater surrounded by mountains. From Namche we have perfect views of Kongde Ri in front of us, Kangtega, Thamserku and Kusum Khangkuru to the east and Khumbila to the back. Down-valley the hills and valleys along the route from Solu to Khumbu from Jiri sit shrouded in hazy shades of steely-grey and blues.
If you arrive on Friday or Saturday, you’ll arrive for the once famous Namche Saturday Market. Otherwise, head up to Moonlight Lodge for a sunny lunch. The rest of the day is free to relax and explore the crowded main streets of Namche, and enjoy any of these options. The Sherpa Cultural Center (a wonderful photographic museum) and the reconstructed traditional Sherpa house (next door), the interesting Namche Gompa Visitors Center at Namche Gompa, and the newly opened Tenzin Norgay Sherpa Heritage Center at the National Park Headquarters. From the Heritage Center at sunrise and sunset, we’ll be treated to fabulous views of Everest, Lhotse and Nuptse, Amadablam, Thamserku and the pink and orange hues down valley. Indulge yourself at one of the many bakeries (we love Sherpa Barista), shop for some yak bells or hand-woven Himalayan hats, chat with the sociable Sherpas of Namche, or just relax at the lodge in preparation for the trek. There is a Sherpa Adventure Gear shop run by our friend Zangbu, with a great variety of real trek gear if you find that you’re missing warm clothes; and often with gear on sale! Watch out for dzobkios and shaggy Himalayan cows wandering the narrow streets …
We recommend a short sunset hike to the viewpoint at the Tenzin Norgay Cultural Center if the clouds hold off. Moonlight Lodge has a great hot shower, a large library, beer and wine (although it’s always better to wait until we return to Namche to indulge), and delicious home-cooked meals so there is really no reason to leave at all if you’re feeling lethargic in the sunny dining room. (3½-4 hrs) (B, L, D)
Distance: 5.5km
Day 5 – Namche Bazaar (Acclimatization Day) | Everest Viewpoint Hike, Sagarmatha Next Cultural Center. Sunrise & Sunset Panoramas, Museums, Cultural Centers & Namche Monastery
If you’re in Namche for the famous Saturday Market (which starts on Thursday evening), spend part of the day exploring the bustling market, a feast of colors, smells, and colorfully clad Sherpa women up from their villages for the weekly event. It’s as much a social gathering as the produce, meat, and essential goods market, so the atmosphere is spirited and lively, a great photographic opportunity. The Tibetans used to encamp in the center of town in a muddy bazaar (potato fields in the summer) touting their goods from China.
We recommend a great hike with your guide, past the helicopter pad (look back for broad views of the Namche ampitheater), through pine and fir forests to the Guru Rimpoche murals, and up to the magical hamlet of Zarok. You can continue higher up and loop around the Shyangboche Airstrip for Everest and Himalayan views, or continue down earlier; all beautiful cultural loops returning back to Namche. The hike is worth the effort for the panoramic views of Everest, Lhotse, Nuptse, Thamserku, Kantega, Kusum Khangkuru, Tarboche and Ama Dablam! Visit the incredible Sagarmatha Next center (see below) the incredible Sagarmatha Next cultural and enviromental center, where you can also shop for locally produced artwork from recycled trash, and get a capuccino on the sunny slate deck. Finally, hike back to Namche via the steep stone steps to the large mani wall.
SAGARMATHA NEXT | This innovative center, finished in 2021, is situated just below the Everest viewpoints, definitely a must-visit when in the Khumbu. There is a wonderful short introductory video, an art gallery, an outdoor sculpture gallery, a shop, a café, an information center and an interactive Everest climb experience. “Sagarmatha Next strives to promote sustainable tourism in the Khumbu region. Our aim is to change the perception around waste and provide support to the local stakeholders of the region, by bringing innovative and sustainable solutions for solid waste management. All profits generated will be reinvested in improving the waste management in the Khumbu region. Being home to the world’s highest mountain, the Khumbu region receives an ever-growing flow of visitors from across the globe. While this has brought socio-economic development in the area, it has also put a lot of pressure on biodiversity and the region delicate ecosystem during the last few decades.
Stepping into the Visitors Centre, you will be transported into a world-class museum: with new technology and great storytelling. We need a new way to interpret the world around us; a world where we are not thrusted with opinions but allowed to interpret and decide for ourselves. Sagarmatha National Park attracts visitors from all over the world and it is the ideal place to start a new movement. A movement where we understand the importance of local, a movement where we are aware of our actions, a movement where we know our environmental footprint, a movement where we are conscious and take every action in a mindful manner. At the Visitors Centre, you will find information about Sagarmatha National Park and the Khumbu region including history, geography, culture, climbing and trekking, Flora & Fauna, as well as the environmental challenges that we are facing and possible solutions.” (4 – 6 hrs) (B, L, D)
Day 6 – Trek Thame 3805m/12,480′ | via Khari Monastery
A lovely hike through evergreen and rhododendron forests, trekking high above the Bhote Kosi river to the traditional Sherpa village of Thame. Your Sherpa guide will show you the route to the left of Namche Gompa high up above the village to the old mani stone hill, now being excavated to build Namche’s new lodges. Continue north on this relatively flat and wide trail, contouring around several old Sherpa villages, past many mani walls, and around white-washed chortens with Buddha eyes, until you reach the scenic village of Thamo where the Nepal army used to have a customs post to control the Tibetan trade over the Nangpa La. The pass is now, sadly, closed to Tibetan traders. Leaving Thamo, stop for a visit to the beautifully reconstructed Khari Nunnery (ani gompa), which houses lovely nuns originally from Tibet.
KHARI GOMPA | “In 1959, as the Chinese Cultural Revolution raged through Tibet destroying Buddhist monasteries and artifacts and killing thousands of monks and nuns, Khari Rinpoche Lobsang Tsultrim and some of his students fled Tibet. He and his followers crossed over the treacherous Nangpa La (pass) into Nepal and found refuge in the foothills of the Himalayas near Mount Everest. They settled in the village of Thamo. In 1962 some Thamo villagers offered land and in 3 days built a monastery for the nuns and their Lama on the hillside above the village. This became Khari Gonpa, a small Tibetan Buddhist nunnery. By 2002 the prayer hall (lhakang) at the nunnery was too small to accommodate the nuns and local community of Sherpas and Tibetans, and it was in serious disrepair. At that time, His Holiness the Dalai Lama requested the 3rd Khari Rinpoche Tenzin Yonten to design and build a new prayer hall in the same location as the original one. Today the magnificent new lhakang is finished.” – Tara Foundation USA
After a visit to the nunnery, you trek through lovely Samde, which has small shrines to mountain deities in the middle of their fields. Another hour of contouring, with small ascents and descents along the trail,
brings you to the Thame Bridge. Just before crossing, gaze up at the wonderful murals of Guru Rimpoche and other Buddhist figures on a rock face high over the Bhote Kosi. You’ll hike for 20 minutes along the intersecting stream to reach Thame, an old village of snaking rock walls, yak paddocks, and traditional slate-roofed Sherpa houses. Thame Gompa, perched up to the north of the village, is one of the oldest in the Khumbu, and one of the gompas that celebrates the Dunche festival in the summertime.
You stay the night at Lhakpa’s uncle Doctor Kami (of Khunde Hospital) and his wife Dawa Dolma’s Valley View Lodge, with the best tongba (fermented millet beer, served in a bamboo container with a long straw and hot water) in the Khumbu. The lovely cook’s lively daughter is named Chandika, and was 10 years old studying at Thame School in 2021, and The Kamzang Fund now sponsors Bipana Rai, age 12 and in class 3 in 2021, who used to stay with Sonam Chhuten’s family.
Take the afternoon to climb to Thame Gonpa, one of the oldest in the Khumbu, and wander around the walled village. Lhakpa’s niece Doma Tenzing teaches at the Thame School, and was also aided in finishing her college degree in Kathmandu The Kamzang Fund. She is now married and living along tomorrow’s trail to Namche. Kunga Palmo, her sister Doma Rigzin’s 5-year-old daughter, also attends kingergarten (2021) in Thame. Just around the corner (or over the ridge) in Thame Thang, Lhakpa’s sister Serki and her husband Pasang live in their modest Sherpa house. Their daughter Mingma Choki, who attended Khumjung School, now studies in Kathmandu. Mingma’s older sister Pasang Lhamu, finished her schooling at Khumjung and college (+2) in Kathmandu, and in 2022 was applying to universities. And she now works at our Cafe Caravan in Boudha! Their cousin Sonam Chhuten, used to attend Thame School (where she walked 2 hours each way every day from Mende) but now boards at Khumjung School. The Kamzang Fund has sponsored these three lovely girls for their educations for many years, as well as their other cousin Zangmu, also from Thame.
To the west of Thame near the Tashi Labsta La (5755m) which leads to the Rolwaling Valley is Papchermo Ri (6273m), and Sundar Peak (5360m) is just to the north of Thame, a day-climb. (5 hrs)
Distance: 8.8km
OR | Save this day as an extra day which you can use on the trek or do once back in Namche …
Day 7 – Trek Khunde 3855m/12,638′
Re-crossing the bridge over the Bhote Kosi, trek back along the trail to Namche until you reach a large intersection in the midst of the pine forest, leading to Khunde. Heading up, you’ll ascend over 100 meters to the airstrip at Syangboche. From the ridge just above the airstrip, climb gradually a large, whitewashed chorten, and continue on to more ancient chortens to the left of the yak breeding center for spectacular Everest and Himalaya views, a great perspecitive on the coming Everest hike! Continue to hike through the stone walls, and ascend on stone steps, through a magical landscape of protruding rocks, ancient, weather-worn mani stones, whitewashed chortens and craggy rhododendrons, peppered with chortens and chulung (memorial chortens). Pause for the mind-bogglingly beautiful views of Kumbila, Taboche, Ama Dablam, Thamserku, Kangtega, Kusum Khangkuru, Everest, Lhotse and Nuptse en route.
You may spot Himalayan thar grazing on the hillsides, and possibly iridescent danphe and chortling chukars. Finally, a short descent on more stone steps to reach the entrance (kane) chorten of Khunde. Having cleansed yourself, hike past an ancient, long mani wall, past a newly reconstructed white-washed stupa with Buddha eyes, and past the small, beautiful Khunde Mani Lhakang, and afterwards past the Hillary Hospital where Lhakpa’s uncle Dr Kami Sherpa is the head doctor, to your lodge for the night.
The adjoining villages of Khumjung and Khunde are some of the original villages of the Khumbu region, both about 600 years old and wonderful examples of local Sherpa architecture with their winding stone walls, yak paddocks, potato patches and wood and slate houses. Perhaps we will run into Sherpa friends who will invite us in for some salt-butter tea, climbing up a wooden ladder over the straw-lined manger to get into the main house on the first floor. Both villages sit below Khumbila, the sacred Sherpa peak surrounded by lhaso (shrines to mountain deities), above a famous rock mural of Guru Rimpoche. The views of Ama Dablam from this valley are breathtaking, and very close!
At Khunde Guest House, enjoy a delicious Sherpa lunch in the sunroom, including their famous Sherpa chili sauce. The lodge has expansive mountain views from the warm, glass-windowed dining room. If you have energy to spare, your guide will take you for a great hike up to the Hillary Memorial, and then return to the lodge via the Khunde Monastery, happily tired and ready for a home-cooked Sherpa meal back in the dining room for sunset.
HILLARY MEMORIAL & GONG RI AFTERNOON HIKE | The side trip to Hillary Memorial (4050m), land the prayer-flag covered peak just above, locally referred to as Gong Ri, is a relatively easy hike (approximately 45-minutes) along a gradually ascending trail through a hillside lightly wooded with fir and juniper above Khunde Monastery. Just before reaching the monastery, take the intersecting trail heading left to a scenic ridge with a nearly 360-degree view of Himalayan peaks. The dramatic ridge top setting was dedicated as a memorial to Edmund Hillary’s wife, Louise, and his 16-year-old daughter, Belinda, who died tragically in a plane crash just outside of Kathmandu in 1975. The plane was heading to Phaplu Airstrip. Just above the memorial chortens to Louise and Belinda Hillary is a chorten built by local Khunde inhabitants to honor Sir Edmund Hillary. Turn left at the ridge for a lovely viewpoint rest stop, and right to reach the Hillary Memorials and continue up to Gong Ri, about 100m higher.
Views from the memorial include Everest, Lhotse, Nupte, Tabuche, Ama Dablam, Kangtega, Thamserku, Kusum Kangkaru, Kwongde and Pharchamo, as well as the twin villages of Khunde and Khumjung just below Khunde Gompa, Shyangboche, Namche and Monjo down the valley, and Tengboche and Pangboche to the north. From the ridge, look to the west to the Thame valley leading to the Nangpa La, once an important Tibetan trade route. The narrow valley before the Thame valley is rumored to be the home of several yetis. Returning, you can stop at Khunde Monastery for a visit; the gonpa monks often perform afternoon pujas, otherworldly as the afternoon clouds fill the Himalayan valley. (4+ hrs) (B, L, D)
Distance: 9.6km
Day 8 – Trek Khumjung 3800m/12,465′ & Dole 4050m/13,284′
Leaving Khunde, trek down the valley leading to the adjoining village of Khumjung, hiking along old trails lined by lichen-covered stone walls, past traditional Sherpa houses and ancient, moss-covered mani stones towards the end of the plateau. Ama Dablam looms majestically (and photographically) ahead as you explore these cultural Sherpa villages. Along the flanks of sacred Khumbila, you’ll pass ‘chu lung’, or memorial chortens, and ‘lhaso’, or square chortens with sticks and prayer flags, edifices constructed for the local gods of the Khumbu. You will also see ‘kar sur’, which are square edifices for the gods in the middle of local fields. ‘Lhasa’ are the smaller edifices in front of Sherpa houses and lodges, ‘deity houses’ where incense is burned in offering every morning.
Descending into Khumjung (the Green Valley), notice the long, beautiful mani wall and the Khumjung Secondary School below, established by Hillary in the 1970s. Contour through ancient rock walls through the lower half of the village to Khumjung Gompa, one of the oldest in the Khumbu (approximately 500 years) and home to one of two existing Yeti scalps on the planet (the other being in Pangboche). Taking the left fork, your trail intersects the trail from Namche at a metal bridge that spans a gap in the trail. From here, climb up stone steps, and stop for a rest at the top of the impressive new series of stone and cement steps with railings. Along the way, you are likely to see wildlife such as Himalayan Thar and the spectacularly hued danphe, Nepal’s national bird. Continuing to climb gradually on a sandy trail for another hour or so, you’ll reach Mong La, where we stop for a scenic lunch at Boudha Lodge, perched spectacularly on this (nearly) 4000m ridge pass. Across the valley sits Tengboche Gompa, backed by Thamserku and Kusum Kangaru, its gilded rooftops glittering in the afternoon sun.
Leaving Mong La, round the ancient mani wall and whitewashed chorten, and descend through pine and rhododendron forests on a sandy, switchbacking trail, with stone steps hugging the cliffside on the lower half, to reach Phortse Tenga. There are wonderful views of Phortse backed by Tarboche and Amadablam along the way. The route is beautiful, past frozen waterfalls, up cathedral-like stone staircases, through old rhododendron and Himalayan birch forests, across small rivers, and past tiny Sherpa hamlets. The forest is home to several musk deer, shy creatures which peer out at us through the tangle of rhododendron.
Ascending, you arrive at the summer settlement of Dole a few hours later, having had your first view of the 8000 meter Cho Oyu, and will stay for the night at the lovely Yeti Inn (ask the owner about the name). Dole translates as ‘plenty of stones’, and anyone who has extra energy can cross the stony stream bed and ascend either of the neighboring ridges for some good Himalayan views. Dole is a cold spot as the sun drops below the ridge at 2:30, but it comes up early in the morning to make up for the often chilly evening. Sit around the warm lodge stove and enjoy a cozy Himalayan evening. Please always tell your guide of your afternoon plans if you prefer to hike alone. (6 hrs) (B, L, D)
Distance: 9.59km
Day 9 – Trek Macherma 4430m/14,530′
Continue to trek up the incredibly beautiful Gokyo valley on tundra-like terrain, with well-worn trails cutting paths in the hard-packed earth. You will gain elevation as you trek along the trail high above the valley floor, Cho Oyu looming in front of us at the border of Nepal and Tibet for the later part of the walk. You hike pas small Sherpa herding huts en route, the first a singular lodge above local Sherpa huts. After a few more hours of trekking, you arrive at the charming yak herding settlement of Luza, one of the many seasonal settlements of the Khunde and Khumjung inhabitants. The next one is Macherma, which you reach 45 minutes later, having climbed steeply out of Dole to a set of prayer flags marking the end of the settlement, and ascending and descending once again to Macherma. Macherma is the name of a local female goddess, who we hope will bless your stay here!
You stay at the luxurious Tibetan-styled Namgyal Lodge, and enjoy some good Sherpa cooking around the warm dining room stove. Try the ‘thukpa’, traditional, warming, and delicious. Namgyal is half Sherpa and half Tibetan and plays the ‘damyin’, or Tibetan guitar. Again, anyone wanting an afternoon hike for acclimatization and views, perhaps visiting with the resident yaks, is free to climb up the ridges on either side of Macherma. (4 hrs) (B, L, D)
Distance: 5.1km
Day 10 – Trek Gokyo 4790m/15,711′
Another sublime trekking day as you head towards Gokyo, which sits just below 4800 meters, and the sublimely beautiful valley of the Gokyo Lakes. Another climb to start the day as you hike up to the Tibetan prayer flags (lung-ta in Tibetan) and cairns on the ridge and then descend gently with Fanga, a single lodge across the river from the seasonal village of Nha across the river. Past Fanga where the trail narrows, you descend and then climb again on stone steps on an often icy trail, with frozen waterfalls to our left. You soon reach the confluence of the Dudh Kosi coming from the Gokyo valley and the stream coming from the Nzozumba Glacier and cross this river on a small metal bridge.
Finally, you have reached the idyllic Gokyo valley and the small first lake, now partially filled with algae, surrounded by sculptural cairns just ahead. Ruddy Shelducks float on the far end of this lake as well as the next two lakes up the valley. In the Gokyo valley, the character of the trekking changes abruptly. The opaque powder blue lakes are often on the verge of freezing over, and sometimes perform a Himalayan symphony of expanding and retracting ice. You have entered the grassy ablation valley running beside the Ngozumpa Glacier.
Continue trekking on a rocky, winding trail for half an hour to the second lake and soon after have your first sight of Gokyo, the ever-expanding seasonal ‘trekking village’ (once just a kharka), built beside the third, and biggest lake. In this grassy ablation valley running beside the Ngozumpa Glacier, the character of the trekking changes abruptly. The opaque powder-blue lakes are often on the verge of freezing over, and sometimes perform a Himalayan symphony of expanding and retracting ice. Gokyo has become something of a Himalayan resort without the crowd – at least in terms of the comfortable lodges with sunrooms, unbeatable views, excellent food, and warm stoves. A more spectacular setting is difficult to imagine, and your guesthouse, the Cho Oyu View Lodge, perfectly situated on the lake-side, is a little piece of heaven. Dali Sherpa, our host, is a good friend, and with her two kids, Tenzin and Ang Tashi, has now expanded and improved their little lakeside lodge. (B, L, D)
Distance: 4km
GOKYO LAKE KORA | An hour+ Buddhist ‘kora’ hike around Gokyo Lake, passing the beach and Buddhist and Hindu ‘temples’ on the opposite side, stopping at the sandy beach across from the lodges, watching the Ruddy Shelducks and other birdlife. (1½ hrs)
LODGE OPTION | Stay at Gokyo Eco Lodge or Thanka Inn (most rooms have attached bathrooms, WiFi) for an extra $25 per person per night. (4 hrs)
Day 11 – Gokyo | Climb Gokyo Ri 5360m/17,580′
We’ve scheduled two full days at this lake side Himalayan paradise, enjoy your time by the lake and climb up Gokyo Ri with your Sherpa guide on the first day here if you’re feeling acclimatized. (B, L, D)
GOKYO RI CLIMB | A morning climb to Gokyo Ri (Peak) (5360m) for wonderful Everest and Himalayan peak views and spectacular views of the Gokyo Lakes, Ngozumba Glacier, the glacial valley. The Himalayan peak panorama includes Everest, Lhotse, Nuptse, Makalu, Cho Oyu, Pumori, Cholatse, Tarboche, Thamserku, Gyachen Kang + more. The views are fantastic in the morning, the middle of the day or for sunset, but don’t forget to bring a torch if you opt for a ‘sunset on Everest’ views, which in our opinion is better than the sunrise view when the sun rises behind the Himalayan peaks. To the west is the Renjo La (4515m) pass, tomorrow’s goal, and the gateway to the Thame Valley and the Nangpa La, which the Tibetans cross with their yaks en route to Namche. (3½ – 4 hrs)
Distance: 3.5km
Day 12 – Gokyo | Gokyo Valley Scoundrel’s View Day Hike
Another day in the wonderful Gokyo Lakes region, with lots to do in this incredibly scenic valley. If you didn’t get up Gokyo Ri yesterday you’ll have another chance to get to the top and enjoy the views today. Or opt to just grab a chair, sit by the lake and relax. You ARE on vacation, and it’s an amazing location on the shores of the Himalayan Gokyo Lake!(B, L, D)
FIFTH LAKE & SCOUNDREL’S VIEW HIKE | A beautiful day hike heading north up the Gokyo valley, past the glacial Fourth Lake (Thanak Tsho), heading towards the Fifth Lake (Ngozumba Tsho) and the snowy massif of Cho Oyu on the border of Tibet. There are several trails that snake up this valley, one emerging on the ridge overlooking the Ngozumpa Glacier, another passing right next to the eerily deserted fourth lake with its white, stony beach. All trails have views of Everest and the Himalayan range, so the hike is never dull! The unobstructed view of Everest from Scoundrel’s Point (4995m) is a great reward for the walk, about a 13 km round trip journey from Gokyo and about 2½ hours from Gokyo. (5-6 hrs r/t)
SUNSET MORAINE VIEWS | Don’t miss a quick hike up the moraine ridge in the back of the village for glorious sunset colors on Cho Oyu, the skies turning golden and pink down the valley towards Cholatse, Tarboche and Thamserku. (½ hr)
Day 13 – Trek Phortse 3780m/12,398′ | via Tarboche West High Route
A truly epic day of wonderful hiking on high mountain trails which skirt the ridges on the west of the river. You will trek back along the lakes, across the metal bridge and to a few minutes below the stone steps, where you cross the river on a small bridge to the small hamlet of Nha. Stay low and hike through old grazing settlements and soon after gradually climb back up, contouring on a high trail along the western side of Cholatse and Taboche peaks. The trail undulates, so although we lose 1000 meters during the day it’s a challenging hike. Pass lichen-covered rocks, ancient mani walls and large mani stones en route, and looking back you will have a continuous unobstructed view of Cho Oyu and the glacial valley, and ahead of Ama Dablam. There are several very traditional seasonal Sherpa villages, with yaks and Tibetan Snowcocks in the walled enclosures, and you will stop for lunch about four hours after leaving Gokyo at Thore, the second seasonal village.
After lunch, there are two or three more hours to hike, a few ridges topped with chortens, magnificent views of Taboche, and lots of wildlife, so enjoy the day. You’ll arrive early afternoon at Phortse, in time to stop at the colorful Phortse Gompa at the very top of the village. Phortse, a maze of small, walled lanes, traditional houses and now many newer lodges, is one of the oldest villages in the Khumbu. The village perches scenically on the promontory protruding from Taboche, which towers majestically above it. Many daphne, musk deer and blood pheasants live in the woods that border the village, and you can almost always see them early and late in the day.
You stay at Phortse Guest House, which has a wonderful dining room, great views and good electricity. The lodge is run by a lovely Sherpa couple, Ba Nuru and his wife Pasang. Ba Nuru is a many-time Everest climber and one of the main participants in the Phortse Climbing School, founded by Conrad Anchor and his wife. The new Climbing Center, medical post and climbing wall are right in back of the lodge. (6 hrs)
Distance: 16km
Day 14 – Trek Pangboche 3900m/12,792′ | via Tarboche East High Route!
It’s a breath-taking hike today, leaving Phortse on the northeastern side heading towards Tengboche Gompa across the deep river gorge below. The trail skirts the high ridges of Taboche Peak, often precipitous but always safe, and offers fantastic views around every corner. Everest, Nuptse and Lhotse dominate the northern skyline, while Ama Dablam is close enough to touch to the east and our old friends Kantega and Thamserku grace the valley below us. After an hour of scenic walking, climb a small pass for a few hundred steep meters (4080m), descend and eventually reach Upper Pangboche, where you’re encouraged to wander the old alleys and take a peek inside Pangboche Gompa, at approximately 500 years old one of the four oldest gompas (monasteries) in the Khumbu.
Contouring above the newer Lower Pangboche, pass a high mani wall, some memorial chortens and the school before dropping down to your lodge in Lower Pangboche. Pangboche is a lovely village with views across the river to the trail to Ama Dablam Base Camp and the old airstrip at Mingbo. You stay at the last lodge in the village, Sonam Lodge, owned by Lhakpa’s (ex) brother-in-law, Gyurme. Gyurme is one of the many lodge owners that we will meet along the way who has summited Everest many times. From the three-sided windows of the dining room, you will be treated to a sunset over Ama Dablam, Everest, Lhotse and Nuptse. (3½ hrs)
Distance: 6km
Day 15 – Pangboche | Day Hike Amadablam Base Camp 4580m/15,040′ (Sonam Lodge & Amadablam Support Lodge)
We’ve scheduled an acclimatization day in Pangboche, a highlight of your Everest trek featuring an amazing hike up the Mingbo valley to Ama Dablam Upper & Lower Base Camps (4580m & 4535m). Lhakpa’s sister-in-law (Doma’s younger sister) Nyima Lhamo and husband Lhakpa own the Amadablam Support Lodge at the lower base camp, strung with colorful prayer-flag and popular with Ama Dablam climbers. This beautiful valley is still used as a yak herding seasonal settlement.
After descending to the river on the trail just beyond the lodge and crossing on a small bridge, you have a short, steep climb up the hillside in front to the plateau, above which are several doksas (kharkas, or summer settlements). Climb again steeply on a spiderweb of trails, ascending the hillside to reach the eroded side of the riverbed. Cross a sandy section of trail and continue to climb along a rocky, ridgeline trail following the glacial stream bed to eventually reach lively, colorful Ama Dablam Base Camp, dominated by Ama Dablam shining brightly in the afternoon sun. The views throughout the day are sublime, especially Pumori and Taboche, which tower above to the east. You’ll visit the higher base camp first, ablaze with yellow and orange tents, and perhaps get to watch climbers ascending the snowy summit before descending to Nima Lhamo’s lodge for a delicious Sherpa lunch in the sun. The descent back to Pangboche is much quicker, and you’ll be back at the lodge by mid-afternoon, with time for a shower or warm washing water. (6½ hrs r/t) (B, L, D)
Distance: 8km
Day 16 – Trek Namche | via Tengboche Gompa 4000m/13,120m
Continuing back down the valley, you leave Pangboche by passing by the numerous trekking lodges and shops of Lower Pangboche and exiting the town through the open chorten (kane). You’ll descend on a beautiful and well-worn trail lined with ancient mani walls and whitewashed chortens with Boudha eyes, down to the Imja Khola far below. After crossing the river on a new metal bridge (look below to see the old bridge), we hike on wide yak-trails through the hamlet of Devoche, passing ancient, moss-covered mani stones and Devoche (Deboche) Gompa, a nunnery (ani gompa) established in 1925 on the right side of the trail. Stop for a peek into this old monastery, the equally ancient-looking nuns, many from Tibet, often perform mid-day pujas. Deboche is associated with Tengboche monastery up the hill. Soon after passing the nunnery, you will pass the few small lodges of Devoche and then ascend a relatively steep, switchbacking trail through a dense rhododendron forest for a good half an hour to reach Tengboche (4000 meters), backed by the massive wall of Kangtega and well-known for its large monastery, Tengboche Gompa. Tengboche is the largest monastic community in the Everest region and one of the Khumbu’s most important monasteries. Also known as Dawa Choling Gompa, was built in 1916 by Lama Gulu and has strong links to Rongbuk Monastery in Tibet. In 1934 the monastery was destroyed by an earthquake and rebuilt. In 1989, it was destroyed for a second time by a fire and again rebuilt.
Take some time to visit Tengboche Gompa before the steep, hour-long descent on a dusty, hill-side trail to Phunki Tenga. From here, you cross the Dudh Koshi on a new bridge and heading back up steeply through pine forests, and past small local settlements to Tashi and Lhakpa’s Amadablam Lodge at Kyangjuma. You’ll stop for a scenic lunch on the terrace, gazing out on the majestic Ama Dablam. From here, it’s an easy hour and a half contour around many brushy hillsides to reach Namche, Moonlight lodge, hot showers, good food and a glass of wine or cold beer. (5 ½ hrs)
Distance: 13.3km
Day 17 – Trek Phakding 2610m/8560′
Leaving Namche along the same trail that you hiked up over a week ago, you’ll trek down the steep hill past the Everest viewpoint to the prayer flag covered suspension bridge, continue on an hour to Jorsale where you cross the river yet again on a suspension bridge. Jorsale is the home of Phuru Diki, one of the girls the Kamzang Fund has sponsored since class 3 (she finished nursing school in Kathmandu and is now studying nursing in Sydney). After one last steep hill to the National Park gate, you reach the welcome sight of Monjo. You might run into Dali, the mother of Dawa Yangi and Nimalee, two Monjo sisters that the Kamzang Fund has sponsored for school. Dawa Yangi is now finished with her degree in Hotel Management & Tourism in Kathmandu and is married with two children, living in Kathmandu, while Nimalee is married with a young daughter, living in Pangboche.
You have another hour and a half of hiking back to Phakding, where you cross the bridge over the river and hike back to Phakding, where you’ll stay at Ang Sani, Zangbu and their son Ngawang’s Paradise Lodge. (5 hrs)
Distance: 15.4km
Day 17 (Alternative Route) – Trek Chhuserma | The Beyul 2660m/8725′
Leaving Namche along the same trail that you hiked up over a week ago, you’ll trek down the steep hill past the Everest viewpoint to the prayer flag covered suspension bridge, continue on an hour to Jorsale where you cross the river yet again on a suspension bridge. Jorsale is the home of Phuru Diki, one of the girls the Kamzang Fund has sponsored since class 3 (she finished nursing school in Kathmandu and is now studying nursing in Sydney). After one last steep hill to the National Park gate, you reach the welcome sight of Monjo. ou might run into Dali, the mother of Dawa Yangi and Nimalee, two Monjo sisters that the Kamzang Fund has sponsored for school. Dawa Yangi is now finished with her degree in Hotel Management & Tourism in Kathmandu and is married with two children, living in Kathmandu, while Nimalee is married with a young daughter, living in Pangboche.
You have another hour and a half of hiking back to Phakding, where you skip the bridge and hike along the same side of the river, well away from other trekkers. Your destination is Nima’s and his American wife’s charming Beyul & Hermitage Lodge where you will enjoy Himalayan views on their terrace, sit around the stove with the welcoming family, eat an organic meal from their own garden and enjoy true peace. This is a unique lodge and a chance to get to know Sherpa culture with some Western amenities! (5 hrs)
Distance: 15.4km
+ The Beyul (+$65)
Day 18 – Trek Lukla 2850m/9348′
Trekking down to the river, you’ll again cross on the bridge and start your hike uphill through Chharikharka. You will finish the trek back at Dawa Phuti & Ang Pasang’s Eco-Paradise Lodge where everyone stays in the new en-suite rooms. In the evening you will have yet another Sherpa feast (after hot showers) and perhaps try some of Dawa’s famous Sherpa tongba. This cozy dining room is one the nicest in the Everest region, so it’s always an added treat to return there after the trek. Ang Pasang works for the airport, so you are in good hands for your flight out the next morning. You will say goodbye to your guide and porter tomorrow morning, to take the evening to hand out their tips and perhaps treat them to a drink! Guides + porters living up in the Everest region are always happy to receive un-needed clothes as well. (3 hrs)
Distance: 6.6km
Day 19 – Fly (or Helicopter) Kathmandu
Bags packed and ready to go before the sun rises as you fly (or helicopter) out of Lukla to Kathmandu early this morning. And taking off from the Hillary Airstrip is just as exciting as landing! Flights out of Lukla are sometimes delayed by bad weather, so we suggest booking an extra day in Kathmandu in case of cancellations. In Kathmandu, back at the Kathmandu Guest House, hot showers await, and grubby clothes can be dropped at the laundry. In the evening head out to dinner at one of Thamel’s many restaurants and celebrate your epic trek through the Everest region! (B)
TRAVEL NOTE | We strongly recommend scheduling an extra day in Kathmandu in case of flight delays or cancellations out of Lukla or Ramechhap. A shared helicopter is an additional $375.
Day 20 – Trip Ends | Transfer TIA
Transfer to the Tribhuvan International Airport (TIA) for your flight home. Namaste + Tashi Delek! (B)
Not Enough of Nepal?
We highly suggest taking advantage of your trip to Nepal, adding on excursions into the Kathmandu Valley, Pokhara, Bandipur, Gorkha, the Annapurna Foothills, and Chitwan and Bardia National Park. Enjoy heritage tours, mountain biking, Kathmandu valley hiking, Himalayan panoramas with a hike down from the Chandragiri Cable Car, whitewater rafting, yoga and meditation courses, Nepali cooking classes, Buddhist or Hindu retreats, and much more. There are many wonderful, boutique, luxury, and heritage lodges in the Kathmandu Valley, and many options for world heritage sightseeing tours, bicycle trips, hikes, and craft-cuisine tours. Nepal boasts world-class restaurants, chic cafes, timeless alleyways to wander through, countless Hindu and Buddhist festivals, and lots of great shopping.
Don’t miss an Everest sightseeing flight or epic helicopter tour, sightseeing trips to Bhaktapur, Patan, and Panauti (Kathmandu Valley’s other historic and/or capital cities), a weekend at Shivapuri Heights Resort or Dwarikas in Kathmandu, a night at the Fort Hotel in Nagarkot for sunrise and sunset Himalayan panoramas, a spa and wellness getaway at the ultra-luxurious Dwarikas Dhulikhel Resort and visits to ancient temple and monastery complexes such as Namo Buddha, Changu Narayan, and Dakshinkali. Spend a night at The Old Inn in Bandipur or Three Mountain Lodge en route to Pokhara, or The Famous Farm in Nuwakot, and get to know Nepal’s Newar heritage.
Enjoy a luxury 3-6 day trek in the Annapurna Foothills, staying in the wonderful Ker & Downey luxury lodges. Relax in heritage style at Temple Tree Resort in Pokhara for some pampering at the spa and infinity pool, try out paragliding, zip-lining, and enjoy a morning of boating on the lake and the hike to Shanti Stupa. Once refreshed, drive to Chitwan National Park, spending a few nights at Maruni Sanctuary Resort or Tiger Tops Tharu Lodge for wildlife and bird spotting, river trips, and safaris in style. Tiger Tops also owns Karnali Lodge at Bardia National Park, reached by flight from Kathmandu, and there are nearby archeological sites to visit nearby.
Namaste!
Nepal Modules
Nepal & Kathmandu Modules | Customize Your Trip!
Date & Price
2024 Dates
12 Dec – 31 Dec (Special Christmas Trek!)
20 Days
2024 Christmas & New Year’s Trek Price
$3680
+ Phu Tashi, Mingma or Gombu Sherpa
$4180
+ Kim & Lhakpa for Special Christmas Departures
Helicopter Options
Private or shared (when available) helicopter options from most lodges to Namche, Lukla or Kathmandu. Price dependent on number of passengers in the helicopter.
+ Single Upgrade Kathmandu Guest House – $60 (Garden) + $150 (Deluxe)
+ Single Upgrade Lodges – $250 (Subject to Availability)
+ Gokyo Eco Lodge or Thanka Inn Upgrade – $25 (Per Person, Per Night at Gokyo)
Includes
- Kathmandu Guest House (Option to Upgrade to Boutique or Luxury Hotel )
- Kathmandu – Lukla – Kathmandu Fights
- All Sagarmatha National Park Trekking Permits
- 20+ Years of Experience in the Everest Region
- Local Khumbu + Kathmandu Support
- Local Expertise + Sherpa Contacts en Route
- Options for Helicopter Flights
- Rescue Service (Cost Not Included)
- Oxygen Saturation Meter
- Airport Transfers
- Kamzang Lodge Trekking
Meals + hot drinks from lodge menu, French Press coffee, filtered drinking water, double rooms at our Kamzang-approved Sherpa lodges, small medical kit + O2 monitor, Sherpa guide + porter(s), local support in the Khumbu with our network of Sherpa friends, office support in Kathmandu, local knowledge + 20+ years of experience in the Everest region!
Excludes
- International Flights
- Nepal Visa
- Trip Cancellation or Travel Medical Insurance
- Rescue Service Cost
- Helicopter Shuttle
- Meals in Kathmandu
- Equipment Rental
- Beer, Wine, Bottled Drinks, Bottled Water + Toilet Paper
- Bakery Items + Packaged Snacks
- Showers, Laundry + Battery Charging
- Hot Water Bottles or Boiled Drinking Water (For Filling Water Bottles)
- Tips for Staff
Tips & Extra Cash
Allow $250 – $350 for meals (while not on trek), drinks + extras (see ‘excluded items’) on trek + tips. We recommend $200 – $250 per trekker as tips for the staff.
Kathmandu Guest House Single & Double Upgrades
+ Deluxe Upgrade Kathmandu Guest House (3 Nights) – $135
+ Suite Upgrade Kathmandu Guest House (3 Nights) – $225
Kathmandu Guest House | Extra Nights Room Price
Includes Breakfast & Taxes
Standard Single – $55
Standard Double – $65
Deluxe Single – $100
Deluxe Double – $110
Suite Single – $130
Suite Double – $140
Map
Highlights & Reviews
TripAdvisor Reviews!
Trekker Highlights & Reviews
Trekkers’ Comments
Trek Highlights
- The Gokyo Lakes + Gokyo Valley Trek
- Gokyo Ri Peak
- Everest, Lhotse + Nuptse Mouintain Views
- Ama Dablam Base Camp + Sunset Views
- Tengboche, Pangboche, Namche Bazaar + Khumjung Monasteries
- Sherpa Tibetan Buddhist Culture
- Cozy, Traditional Sherpa Lodges
- Namche Bazaar + Saturday Market
- Rhododendron Season in the Spring
- Himalayan Wildlife
- The Best of Trekking in the Nepal Himalaya!
Trekkers’ Comments
Kamzang Journeys is the best in the Everest region! Some of the most spectacular landscapes in the Nepalese Himalayas. A window on the traditional villages of Sherpas and the “gompas” (monasteries), their Buddhist culture of mountains as well their summits and sacred valleys. The Everest area is a very spiritual and colorful place. We flew to Lukla, at the base of Himalayan peaks, where I spent a little more than three weeks hiking around the world’s highest mountains. Namche, a wonderful mountain perched village, Chuckung, where for the first time I reached the summit of a mountain at more than 5000 meters, Gorak Shep, at the base of Mount Everest where I climbed Kala Patthar (5600m), the Cho La and Renjo La and much more! Thanks to Kim and the entire Kamzang Journeys team for allowing me to discover this wonderful place!
– Adam D, Everest High Passes Trek 2015
Watch the Video!
Everest High Passes Trek | Adam D on Vimeo
Awesome guide, perfect arrangements and detailed advice! We loved our trek to Everest base camp, thanks a lot to Kamzang Journeys!
– Karen + Wang (USA), Private EBC Trek 2019
We went on 19 day trek through the Khumbu with Phu Tashi Sherpa of Kamzang Journeys. He is an excellent guide and a terrific person (and a pretty good card player). Tashi is very attentive and tuned into his clients from a health, acclimatization and safety standpoint as well as overall comfort and enjoyment of the trip. He is super knowledgeable about routes, peaks and wildlife, and we also appreciated that he is from the area and shared info with us about villages, customs, and the history of what we were seeing and experiencing. On top of this, he seems to know just about everyone. We didn’t realize how important this is until we saw first hand some trekkers who weren’t doing so well. A good network of contacts is vital in that situation! Beyond all of this, he is a kind and caring person with a great sense of humor. After spending almost 3 weeks with him, we truly miss him and hope to trek with him again.
– Kay + Jamie (USA), Private Everest High Passes Trek 2016
Thank you for everything you did to make our anniversary trip special. From the extras at our hotel rooms to the amazing quality, warmth and hospitality of every person who works with you – we were blown away by the trip you planned. We loved meeting you, Lhakpa, Doma and all the guides, drivers and porters who created such a hassle-free and seamless environment for us to explore beautiful Nepal. Thank you so much – you created a truly life changing and unforgettable trip for us.
– Kim + Bob (USA), Private Amazing Nepal Trek 2016 (Honeymoon Trip)
I really enjoyed my cultural trek in the Khumbu and the Everest region with Kamzang Journeys! It was good to have a local guide in Tashi. He was such a quiet and gentle guy, and I was impressed with his respect for culture and Buddhist philosophy. I was able to learn about the way of life in the villages and about the gardens and crops, and it was also interesting to visit the monasteries and hear about Buddhist practices and philosophy. The route chosen was great – away from the main trekking routes and very scenic. I could feel myself becoming more acclimatized and fitter after a few days above 3000m. Basanta was such a cheerful porter and always greeted us with a big smile. All the flights and connections went smoothly thanks to Lhakpa and Doma in Kathmandu, and Tashi and the host from Paradise Lodge at Lukla. Doma was very generous with her time and went with me to see Durbar Square. Kathmandu Guest House was lovely and the staff were so helpful, especially Binod. So a very memorable trip. Thanks so much!
– Maureen H (Australia), Private Everest Cultural Trek 2015
Tsering Sherpa is marvelous, extremely responsible, serious, devoted, very thoughtful, discreet and very pleasant to trek with. He is very helpful, well travelled, speaks good English, is well-mannered and has a good experience as a mountaineer and a climber. He is very powerful, strong and quick, and smiles a lot! He seems to know everybody on the trail, is active in his community and is respected by other Sherpas. On trek he was a good counsellor on food, and of course respectful of tradition and of the Tibetan Buddhist faith. With him we felt very secure as he knows the trail and all the short cuts.
– Nan + Odette (France), Private Everest Base Camp Trek 2014
Viney was my private guide to trek to Everest base camp in October 2013. I felt very secure with him the entire time. He was always attentive to my wellbeing from the time we started in x (kim pls fill in) where we ended up slogging through rainfall and mud due to the cyclone left over from India, all the way through to the end of our trip in Lukla. I could count on him without a doubt every day of the entire 3 weeks we spent together. Thanks to Viney for an excellent trek!
– Lori C (USA), Private Everest High Passes Trek 2014
Last May I spent almost three weeks hiking with Mingma in the Khumbu region of Nepal and we explored the Gokyo lakes, Gokyo valley and we climbed Gokyo Ri. Mingma is an experienced mountain-guide, knows all the summits in the region, the Sherpas and routes. He is responsive of the challenges, strong and kind, but he is very calm in case of difficult situations. While we walked together, he was attentive and he always tried to accommodate my phyisical condition and my spiritual eagerness. We spent wonderful time together and I immensely enjoyed every moment of the trek. I am planning to walk with him again in 2015!
– Kati K (Hungary), Private Gokyo Lakes Trek 2014
Tashi was the perfect guide for me. I was going solo, and looking mostly for solitude; Tashi’s temperament was the perfect match for mine. When he had something to say, it seemed eerily to come right when I was about to ask him a question about the very thing he started to speak about! He has a real passion for the natural world he lives in and for the Sherpa people and their traditions, too. I ended up falling ill with something and here again Tashi was the perfect guide – helpful but not smothering or overly-solicitous. I will be back, and with my family and I’m certain to request that Tashi accompanies us when we return.
– Nick A-H (UK), Private Everest Base Camp Trek 2014
Tsering Sherpa is marvelous, extremely responsible, serious, devoted, very thoughtful, discreet and very pleasant to trek with. He is very helpful, well travelled, speaks good English, is well-mannered and has a good experience as a mountaineer and a climber. He is very powerful, strong and quick, and smiles a lot! He seems to know everybody on the trail, is active in his community and is respected by other Sherpas. On trek he was a good counsellor on food, and of course respectful of tradition and of the Tibetan Buddhist faith. With him we felt very secure as he knows the trail and all the short cuts.
– Nan + Odette (France), Private Everest Base Camp Trek 2014
Viney was my private guide to trek to Everest base camp in October 2013. I felt very secure with him the entire time. He was always attentive to my wellbeing from the time we started in x (kim pls fill in) where we ended up slogging through rainfall and mud due to the cyclone left over from India, all the way through to the end of our trip in Lukla. I could count on him without a doubt every day of the entire 3 weeks we spent together. Thanks to Viney for an excellent trek!
– Lori C (USA), Private Everest High Passes Trek 2014
Last May I spent almost three weeks hiking with Mingma in the Khumbu region of Nepal and we explored the Gokyo lakes, Gokyo valley and we climbed Gokyo Ri. Mingma is an experienced mountain-guide, knows all the summits in the region, the Sherpas and routes. He is responsive of the challenges, strong and kind, but he is very calm in case of difficult situations. While we walked together, he was attentive and he always tried to accommodate my phyisical condition and my spiritual eagerness. We spent wonderful time together and I immensely enjoyed every moment of the trek. I am planning to walk with him again in 2015!
– Kati K (Hungary), Private Gokyo Lakes Trek 2014
Kim and her colleagues at Khumbu Adventures arranged a solo trek for me at very short notice in November 2013 – and did it even whilst most of them were leading another trek in Mustang! They made the complex easy. From a wonderful guide to helping me arrange evacuation when I got sick, I was always in knowledeable, kind, efficient hands. I recommend Kamzang Journeys without reservation and I’ll be using them when I return to Nepal in September 2014!
– Nick A (UK), Private Everest Trek 2013
Kim Bannister Photo Gallery | Trip & Trek Photos
Kim Bannister Photography
Travel Reading | Enhance Your Trip!
Travel Books
Sherpa Books
Stories & Customs of the Sherpas – Frances Klatzel
Gaiety of Spirit – Frances Klatzel
Online Articles + Documentaries on Everest Region
Everest High Passes Trek – Adam D on Vimeo
Glacier Works – David Breshear’s Interactive Site
Everest by Drone | National Geographic Adventure
Battle of the Himalayas: The Fight to Film Everest – BBC Four Documentary
1953: First Footsteps – Sir Edmund Hillary & Tenzin Norgay – National Geographic
Sherpas | The True Heroes of Mount Everest – Film Adventure
Glory or Death | Climbing Mount Everest – True Sports (YouTube)
On Mount Everest, Sherpa Guides Bear the Brunt of the Danger – NPR
Lakes Expanding Dangerously in Everest Glacier – BBC
Rivers of Ice – Vanishing Glaciers – BBC
Everest – National Geographic Adventure
Climbing Everest Then & Now – National Geographic Adventure
Everest Revealed: Photos by Renan Ozturk – National Geographic Adventure
Flying a Drone at Everest – Himalayan Aerials
The Everest Avalanche 2014 – YouTube
Living Through the Himalayan Thaw – Himalayan Times
Nepal Quake Caused Minimal Damage to Everest Trails – Reuters
Nepal Before & After the Earthquake – New York Times
Jan Morris: No One Else Needs to Climb Everest – New Statesman
Airport Near Everest is its own Perilous Adventure – New York Times
Sherpa – They Die, We Go Home – New York Times
On Mount Everest – Surviving and Earthquake & an Avalanche – New York Times Lens Blog
Climate Model Suggests Glaciers Could Nearly Disappear – New York Times
Forty Years of Everest – YouTube
Nepal Drains Dangerous Everest Lake – BBC
The Epic of Everest – BBC Four
Sherpaland Gets a Makeover – Nepali Times
On Thin Ice in the Khumbu – Nepali Times
Taking the Pulse of Ngozumba – BBC
Former Miss Nepal an Everest Helicopter Pilot | ABC News
Yaks in the Everest Region | YouTube (Kamzang Journeys)
Contact & Details
Everest Trek Guide
Phu Tashi, Mingma or Gombu Sherpa
Kim & Lhakpa for Special Christmas Departures
Kamzang Journeys Contact
Kim Bannister
kim@kamzang.com
kamzangkim@gmail.com
Mobile: +(977) 9803414745 (WhatsApp), 9863196743
On-Trek Satellite Phone: +88216 21277980 (Nepal)
Kathmandu Contact
Khumbu Adventures
hiking.guide@gmail.com
Lhakpa Dorji Sherpa Mobile: +(977) 9841235461, 9705235461
Doma Sherpa Mobile: +(977) 9841510833, 9705510833
Nuru Wangdi Sherpa Mobile: +977 9803633783 (WhatsApp)
Follow Us on Facebook
Kamzang Journeys Facebook
Kathmandu Arrival Hotel
Kathmandu Guest House
Nepal Tourist Visas
You can get your Nepal visa at TIA International Airport (or any land border) when you arrive in Nepal, or before you leave home at a Nepali Embassy or Consulate. When you arrive at immigration in Kathmandu, scan your passport at the visa machines (no photo needed) or produce your online, printed visa-on-arrival form, pay the visa fee, and go to the appropriate immigration line.
15 Days – $30
30 Days – $50
90 Days – $125
Tourist Visa Extension (15 days) – $45 (+$3 Additional Day))
Nepal Visa
Nepal Visa Information
Kathmandu Guest House
Ward: 16, Street name: Saatghumti, Area: Thamel, District: Bagmati, City: Kathmandu, Zone: Bagmati, Phone: +977 14700004
Health Information
Nepal Health Information
CDC
We also recommend bringing probiotics with you to help prevent infections while on trek. Doctor’s recommendation!
Travel Medical Insurance
Required for your own safety. We carry a copy of your insurance with all contact, personal and policy information with us on the trek and our office in Kathmandu keeps a copy. Note that we almost always trek over 4000 meters (13,000′) and that we don’t do any technical climbing with ropes, ice axes or crampons.
Global Rescue Rescue Services
We recommend (but don’t require) that our trekkers sign up for Global Rescue services as a supplement to your travel medical insurance. You can book this directly through our Kamzang Journeys site.
Global Rescue
Medical On-Trek
Please do have a full check-up before leaving home, and inform us of any medical issues. This is for YOUR OWN safety. Your guides bring a small medical kit, but you’ll want your own medications with you.
DO bring all prescription medications and rehydration powders-electrolytes. We advise bringing your own Diamox, Ciprofloxin, Azithromycin + Augmentin. We do have all of these with us, but the Western versions are generally more reliable than the Indian equivalents. See Gear List for a full list of recommended medications for the trek.
Travel Reading | Enhance Your Trip!
Travel Books
Not Enough of Nepal?
We highly suggest taking advantage of your trip to Nepal, adding on excursions into the Kathmandu Valley, Pokhara, Bandipur, Gorkha, the Annapurna Foothills, and Chitwan and Bardia National Park. Enjoy heritage tours, mountain biking, Kathmandu valley hiking, Himalayan panoramas (and a hike down) from the Chandragiri Cable Car, whitewater rafting, yoga and meditation courses, Nepali cooking classes, Buddhist or Hindu retreats, and much more. There are many wonderful, boutique, luxury, and heritage lodges in the Kathmandu Valley, and many options for world heritage sightseeing tours, bicycle trips, hikes, and craft-cuisine tours. Nepal boasts world-class restaurants, chic cafes, timeless alleyways to wander through, countless Hindu and Buddhist festivals, and lots of great shopping.
Don’t miss an Everest sightseeing flight or epic helicopter tour, sightseeing trips to Bhaktapur, Patan, and Panauti (Kathmandu Valley’s other historic and/or capital cities), a weekend at Shivapuri Heights Resort or Dwarikas in Kathmandu, a night at the Fort Hotel in Nagarkot for sunrise and sunset Himalayan panoramas, a spa and wellness getaway at the ultra-luxurious Dwarikas Dhulikhel Resort and visits to ancient temple and monastery complexes such as Namo Buddha, Changu Narayan, and Dakshinkali. Spend a night at The Old Inn in Bandipur or Three Mountain Lodge en route to Pokhara, or The Famous Farm in Nuwakot, and get to know Nepal’s Newar heritage.
Enjoy a luxury 3-6 day trek in the Annapurna Foothills, staying in the wonderful Ker & Downey luxury lodges. Relax in heritage style at Temple Tree Resort in Pokhara for some pampering at the spa and infinity pool, try out paragliding, zip-lining, and enjoy a morning of boating on the lake and the hike to Shanti Stupa. Once refreshed, drive to Chitwan National Park, spending 2 or 3 nights at Maruni Sanctuary Resort or Tiger Tops Tharu Lodge for wildlife and bird spotting, river trips, and safaris in style. Tiger Tops also owns Karnali Lodge at Bardia National Park, reached by flight from Kathmandu, and there are nearby archeological sights to visit nearby.
Nepal Modules
Nepal & Kathmandu Modules | Customize Your Trip!
Notes on Itinerary
Although we try to follow our trek itinerary, it is ONLY a guideline based on years of experience trekking in many Himalayan regions. At times local trail, river or weather conditions may make a deviation necessary; rivers may be impassible, snow blocks passes, and landslides wipe out trails. The trekking itinerary and campsites may also vary slightly depending on the group’s acclimatization rate or sickness, or improved campsites and lodges.
The Himalaya are our passion, and we take our trekking and cycling trips seriously. Although everyone is here on vacation, please come with a dollop of patience and compassion added to your sense of adventure …
Arrival Kathmandu
Arrival in Kathmandu
You will be met at the airport by a representative from Khumbu Adventures (see Contact & Details tab). Look for a sign with your name on it as you leave the airport. You will be transferred to the Kathmandu Guest House where your rooms have been pre-booked … Please hydrate!
Nepal Tourist Visas
You can get your Nepal visa at TIA International Airport (or any land border) when you arrive in Nepal, or before you leave home at a Nepali Embassy or Consulate. When you arrive at immigration in Kathmandu, scan your passport at the visa machines (no photo needed) or produce your online, printed visa-on-arrival form, pay the visa fee, and go to the appropriate immigration line.
15 Days – $30
30 Days – $50
90 Days – $125
Tourist Visa Extension (15 days) – $45 (+$3 Additional Day))
Nepal Visa
Nepal Visa Information
Kathmandu Guest House
Ward: 16, Street name: Saatghumti, Area: Thamel, District: Bagmati, City: Kathmandu, Zone: Bagmati, Phone: +977 14700004
Arrival Hotel
Kathmandu Guest House
International Medical Center Kathmandu
CIWEC
Nepal Temperatures + Clothing
See Gear Tab for trekking and cycling clothing, as well as medical supplies recommendations.
Kathmandu during the spring and autumn trekking seasons is usually quite warm (t-shirt, sandals, light pants or skirts) during the day, and gets chilly (light fleece or jacket) in the late afternoon and evenings. Nights can be cold enough for a sweater and/or jacket, or warm enough for t-shirts. Summer is hotter and wetter, and you’ll need a rain jacket and umbrella. The winter months (late Nov – March) are chilly in the mornings and evenings, cold enough that you might start the day in a down jacket, but often warming up enough to wear a t-shirt by mid-day. Nights get cold enough for a down jacket if you’re sitting outside, although many restaurants have heaters or fire pits. It never snows in Kathmandu. Keens, Chacos or other hiking sandals are great for wandering around Kathmandu, and for trekking in lower altitudes. Crocs are good to have for rooms, showers and at camp when trekking or cycling.
Trekking is a mixed bag of temperatures. LAYERS are the key as hot can change quickly to freezing crossing the passes and snowfalls are common. We often have some rain below 3000 meters in the spring and early autumn, and it can rain hard in the summer. Have a wide range of layer-able trekking clothes for summer to winter temperatures. Keep a lightweight down jacket or synthetic jacket with you at all times, available inexpensively in Kathmandu. A lightweight rain poncho and umbrella for trekking are recommended in the spring and summer seasons. Be prepared! See our ‘Gear’ tab for full details on gear, shoes, clothing, electronics, and meds for the trek.
There are lots of real gear shops (North Face, Mountain Hardwear, Marmot, Sherpa Gear, OR) and many ‘fake’ and Nepali-made shops in Kathmandu, so if you don’t think you have the right gear starting the trip, it is easy to pick up gear once in Kathmandu. We have sleeping bags to rent, duffel bags, camp towels and buffs to purchase, and you’ll get a FREE Kamzang Journeys t-shirt for the trip!
Dress conservatively in Kathmandu and on the trail as a rule. Shorts are okay if they aren’t too short, short mini skirts aren’t recommended. Sleeveless t-shirts are absolutely fine, but perhaps avoid skimpy tank tops on the trail. Super tight lycra and very skimpy doesn’t go over so well with village elders or remote villagers, and will generally limit your ability to have meaningful interactions with Nepali villagers. Many of the younger generation in Nepal wear modern Indian or Western-influenced clothes but remember that you haven’t signed up for a beach or surf vacation. Use your good judgment, and be an ambassador for western travelers! Please ask Kim or your guide if unsure about appropriate clothing, we’re always happy to advise.
Nepal Cultural Issues
Nepalis are very open and welcoming, but there are a few issues you should be aware of to make your stay in Nepal more fulfilling. Use your right hand to pass things, shake hands or do most anything. Left hands are somewhat taboo. Nepalis often place their left hand on the right forearm when passing things to others, a sign of respect. Best not to pat kids on heads, or point feet ahead of you at monasteries. Don’t walk over someone’s legs or feet, but put your hand down in front of you to signal them to pull their legs to the side. Take off shoes and hats when going into Buddhist monasteries and Hindu temples, don’t use flashes inside monasteries or temples if possible and be respectful when attending pujas (prayer ceremonies). You can talk and move around, all religious are very tolerant, but be aware of your level of voice and where you are walking. Don’t sit on Buddhist monastery benches, they are used as tables. You will often be shown to low, carpeted sitting areas in the back of a monastery. If you’re served tea, it’s fine to accept (in fact, the servers will be happy to give you tea), but also fine to say ‘no thank you’, putting your hand up. If you don’t want more tea, often the salt-butter variety, simply cover your cup with your hand.
Nepalis don’t anger quickly in general, so try not to raise your voice if exasperated or angry as it only will make the situation worse. Do bargain at shops, with taxis and rickshaws, but don’t fleece people as many people are quite poor and need to make a living. Give small donations on the streets if you choose to, but try not to encourage begging and be aware of who you are giving your money to. If you do want to donate to a good cause, ask about our Kamzang Fund or other responsible organizations.
Tips for Staff
We recommend $250-300 per person to go into the tip pool for the staff, which can be given to Kim in Kathmandu in $US. We also pitch in to buy our incredible staff drinks on the last night, or any other night that you feel like treating them to a bottle of Kukure Rum or a few beers!
Tips in General
Tips are always appreciated but they don’t need to be extravagant. 100-300 NRP to carry bags to/from your room is fine, the women who clean your room will be happy with 200-300 NRP when you leave, and 300-500 NRP is great for your airport transfers. Round-up taxi fares, in general. A larger tip would be expected for a day trip in a private car, perhaps 500 NRP, and a tour guide might get 500-100 NRP. 10% is included in most restaurant and hotel bills in Nepal, and if it’s not included it’s still expected. You can round-up the restaurant bills as well.
Cash, Credit Cards & ATMs
ATMs are available all over Kathmandu, and give up to 25,000 NRP per transaction, in general. You can also change money at the hotel counter (a good rate usually) or just outside the hotel at any of the money changers. They’re quite competitive. You’ll want cash in NRP with you on the trek for local shopping, drinks, beers, snacks, beer, laundry and charging electronics. There are usually local crafts and textiles to buy along the way as well! Credit cards are accepted at hotels, most larger restaurants and cafes, and most of the larger gear, craft and pashmina shops in Kathmandu.
Pampering Yourself & Shopping in Kathmandu
We’re happy to book your rooms before or after the trek at boutique and luxury hotels, resorts and spas in Kathmandu and the Kathmandu Valley. We’re happy to help with advice on where to purchase the most authentic crafts, pashmina or other hand-made Nepali products in Kathmandu. We sell local handicrafts at our Cafe Caravan at Boudha, as well as delicious cakes, coffees, meals and snacks.
Cafe Caravan & Dolpo Prints & Paintings
Dolpo Artist Tenzin Norbu creates wonderful Dolpo paintings, the prints (and some originals) available from our Cafe Caravan at Boudhanath Stupa, and more recently the artist Tenzing Samdup also sells his Dolpo prints at the cafe. We also have an extensive selection of ‘caravan’ handicrafts, coffees, teas, t-shirts, ceramic mugs and Himalayan books for sale …
Kamzang Journeys Products
Kamzang Journeys duffel bags, Kamzang Journeys t-shirts, Kamzang Journeys camp towels, Kamzang Journeys buffs, handcrafted leather passport wallets, totes and bags, handcrafted Himalayan textile pillow covers and more unique, handcrafted tribal silver and Himalayan textiles available from Kim here in Kathmandu.
Kamzang Journeys Products
Kamzang Design Etsy Shop (On-Line)
Many of these handcrafted products designed by Kim and local craftspeople are available in Kathmandu, including much of the tribal silver collection …
Kamzang Design Etsy Shop
Great Stays
See our ‘Great Stays’ tab for our picks of some of the best heritage, boutique or interesting hotels, guest houses, and lodges in the Kathmandu Valley and elsewhere in Nepal.
Not Enough of Nepal?
We highly suggest taking advantage of your trip to Nepal, adding on excursions into the Kathmandu Valley, Pokhara, Bandipur, Gorkha, the Annapurna Foothills, and Chitwan and Bardia National Park. Enjoy heritage tours, mountain biking, Kathmandu valley hiking, Himalayan panoramas (and a hike down) from the Chandragiri Cable Car, whitewater rafting, yoga and meditation courses, Nepali cooking classes, Buddhist or Hindu retreats, and much more. There are many wonderful, boutique, luxury, and heritage lodges in the Kathmandu Valley, and many options for world heritage sightseeing tours, bicycle trips, hikes, and craft-cuisine tours. Nepal boasts world-class restaurants, chic cafes, timeless alleyways to wander through, countless Hindu and Buddhist festivals, and lots of great shopping.
Don’t miss an Everest sightseeing flight or epic helicopter tour, sightseeing trips to Bhaktapur, Patan, and Panauti (Kathmandu Valley’s other historic and/or capital cities), a weekend at Shivapuri Heights Resort or Dwarikas in Kathmandu, a night at the Fort Hotel in Nagarkot for sunrise and sunset Himalayan panoramas, a spa and wellness getaway at the ultra-luxurious Dwarikas Dhulikhel Resort and visits to ancient temple and monastery complexes such as Namo Buddha, Changu Narayan, and Dakshinkali. Spend a night at The Old Inn in Bandipur or Three Mountain Lodge en route to Pokhara, or The Famous Farm in Nuwakot, and get to know Nepal’s Newar heritage.
Enjoy a luxury 3-6 day trek in the Annapurna Foothills, staying in the wonderful Ker & Downey luxury lodges. Relax in heritage style at Temple Tree Resort in Pokhara for some pampering at the spa and infinity pool, try out paragliding, zip-lining, and enjoy a morning of boating on the lake and the hike to Shanti Stupa. Once refreshed, drive to Chitwan National Park, spending 2 or 3 nights at Maruni Sanctuary Resort or Tiger Tops Tharu Lodge for wildlife and bird spotting, river trips, and safaris in style. Tiger Tops also owns Karnali Lodge at Bardia National Park, reached by flight from Kathmandu, and there are nearby archeological sights to visit nearby.
Nepal Modules
Nepal & Kathmandu Modules | Customize Your Trip!
Kathmandu Valley Sightseeing & Tours
See our Kathmandu Tours tab for lots of idea of how to experience the real Nepal.
Kathmandu & Kathmandu Valley Information
Our ‘Insider’ list of things to do, places to go, what to visit, the most happening restaurants and the best hotels in Kathmandu and the beautiful Kathmandu Valley.
Happenings in Kathmandu
Gear
Kamzang Journeys Products
Kamzang Journeys duffel bags, t-shirts, camp towels and buffs. Handcrafted leather passport wallets, totes and bags, unique Himalayan textile pillow covers, cashmere stoles and more!
Kamzang Journeys Products
Gear List
A guideline, not a bible, for the gear you will (probably) need on the trek. Do ask (or send gear links) if you have questions! Everyone has their own method of gearing-ups for the mountain, so although these suggestions are based on 20+ years in the Himalayan regions, they may not be exactly what you bring on a trek. Layers are essential for trekking, and quality is more important than quantity. It’s worth investing in some new, warm, lightweight trekking gear! Kim will check your gear before the trek, if needed.
One duffel bag per person. The airline regulations allow 15 kg per person for mountain flights (including your daypack). We find ways to adjust, but be aware of this limitation and please try to limit your duffel bag and daypack combined to no more than 20 kg (50 lbs) total.
- Duffel Bag
- Day Pack (30-40 L)
- Sleeping Bag (-20 to 0F/-15 to -25C Recommended. NOTE the lodges in the Everest region have quilts or duvets in the rooms, so your sleeping bag doesn’t need to be quite as warm. Other trekking regions do not necessarily provide quilts or duvets)
- Trekking Boots, Trekking Shoes &/or Running Shoes
- Crocs (Evenings & Washing)
- Down Jacket(s) &/or Vests (Can be Lightweight Down Jackets. Layering Recommended)
- Wind/Rain Jacket & Pants (Inquire for Your Trek)
- Trekking Pants (2)
- T-Shirts (2)
- Long-Sleeve Shirts (2)
- Technical Jacket (Depending on Other Jackets)
- Thermal (Lightweight) Top & Bottom
- Evening Thermal Top & Bottom (Synthetic &/or Down Pants Optional)
- Socks (3-5)
- Down Booties (Optional)
- Gloves (Lighter Pair & Heavier Pair for Passes)
- Thermal Hat
- Baseball Cap &/or Wide-Brimmed Hat
- Camp Towel
- Trekking Poles (Recommended)
- Micro Spikes (REQUIRED for Passes. INQUIRE)
- Sunglasses (Extra Pair Recommended)
- Reading Glasses (Extra Pair Recommended)
- Head Lamp (Extra Recommended)
- Water Bottles | Nalgenes (2-3)
- Water Bladder (Optional, Recommended)
- Watch (with Alarm)
- Battery Chargers & Extra Batteries
- Camera or Smart Phone (Optional)
- USB Adapter with Multiple Ports (Recommended)
- SteriPen &/or Squeeze Filter Bottle (Optional)
- Travel Umbrella (Optional)
- Laundry Detergent or Bio-degradable Clothes Soap (Purchase in Mountains)
- Book(s) or Kindle &/or Audiobooks
- Zip-Lock | Plastic Bags
- Toilet Paper
- Toiletries
- SPF Sunscreen & Lip Balm
- Personal Medical Supplies
- Hand Sanitizers (Small)
- Reusable Wipes (Recommended, Not Single Use)
- Rehydration | Electrolytes (Required)
- Snacks (Required, Namche)
Available in Namche Bazaar
- Snacks, Chocolate, Snack Bars, Dried Fruit & Nuts
- Laundry Detergent
- Most Trekking Gear (Real + Knock-offs)
- Lemon Tang (Make Lemonade!)
- Batteries
- Trekking Poles
- Micro Spikes
Shopping & Snacks in Nepal
Almost all gear is now available in Kathmandu, from real (North Face, Mountain Hardwear, Sherpa Gear, Marmot or at some shops in Thamel) to inexpensive knock-offs or good Nepali brands. The real gear shops take credit cards. There are many camera and mobile shops, and you can pick up good quality chocolate, snack bars (including gluten free, organic and vegan) and lots of other varieties dried fruits, nuts and snacks in Kathmandu. And, of course, you can shop for pashminas (or cashmere, or fakes, please ask if unsure), good quality silver, handicrafts and locally produced specialty products. We also have a large variety of good quality, unique handicrafts at Café Caravan in Boudhanath.
Lodge Note
Inside the lodge dining rooms, the wood or yak-dung stoves heat the room very well and you’ll often strip down to a t-shirt! Mornings and evenings in your rooms are chilly to cold though, and before the fires are lit you’ll want to put on your thermals! In the Everest region, there are always duvets or quilts available, but not always in other trekking regions, so bring an appropriate sleeping bag for your trek.
Suggested Medical Supplies
Your guide will have a have a small medical kit, including Diamox (for acclimatizing), antibiotics, bandages, re-hydration, antihistimines, painkillers and anti-inflammatory drugs. Please bring a supply of all prescription and personal medications. Please have a check-up before leaving home, and inform us of any medical issues. This is for YOUR OWN safety!
SUGGESTED MEDS | Dexamethasone, Nifedipine & Diamox (altitude), Azithromycin, Ciprofloxacin & Augmentin (antibiotics), blister bandages, Tegaderm &/or bandages, knee & ankle supports/braces (if required), ACE bandage for sprains & strains, cough drops.
Bring whatever pain meds you generally use (Ibuprofen, Paracetamol/Tylenol, Diclofenac), meds for diarrhea (Loperamide/Imodium) and nausea (Ondansetron), antihistamines (non-drowsy & Benadryl is good for a drowsy antihistamine that might help with sleep), as well as any medications that you take regularly or that your doctor prescribes. We recommend picking up a combination Salmeterol & Fluticasone inhaler locally, good for (from a doctor trekking friend) “high altitude cough due to reactive airways, which is kind of like temporary asthma. The ingredients in the inhaler relax the bronchial passages and calm inflammation in the airways.”Stay away from sleeping medications, drugs in the codeine-opiate-narcotic family and other drugs that suppress your breathing (not a good at altitude). And don’t forget electrolytes! Have some with you in your pack (as well as snacks) daily …
We’re happy to take excess medical supplies off your hands when you leave if you won’t need them. We use lots of the large amount we have with us to treat locals, our staff and our trekkers…
Kim’s Gear Suggestions
I generally wear a trekking t-shirt, trekking pants, a mid-weight long-sleeve shirt, a lightweight synthetic jacket (sometimes paired with a vest), often starting the morning in a lightweight pair of long underwear. I carry a lightweight wind-rain jacket and pants, an extra pair of socks, gloves, a baseball cap and hat in my daypack, and on colder days also have a lightweight down jacket with me.
I use a 35 L Osprey daypack with a bladder, and an extra Nalgene to refill water on the trail, and often use trekking poles. I generally trek in running shoes, although I use boots on very cold days and over passes, and sometimes on hot days I also trek in Keen or Chaco sandalas. I often carry Crocs with me in case of river crossings and to give my feet a break at lunch (Tevas, Chacos and Keen sandals take a long time to dry and are relatively heavy), and I carry micro-spikes on pass days. I always have snacks, electrolytes, my camera or iPhone, sunscreen, hand sanitizer and some toilet paper, a small medical kit and a SteriPen.
Good trekking boots or running shoes that you’ve hiked in before the trek are essential. You don’t ever need climbing or plastic boots (for mini-crampons or micro-spikes). Trekking poles are not required but strongly recommended, especially for going down passes which are often steep and icy, and for treks with river crossings and rocky trails. Bring gators if you tend to use them but they’re not required if you don’t own a pair. Micro-spikes (mini-crampons) or YakTrax are useful (or essential) for pass crossings (inquire before the trek). We have an ice ax and rope with us during some treks for pass crossing days, for extra safety.
Good (polarized) sunglasses are essential. Do bring an extra pair in case you lose or break them. Don’t forget a sun hat and/or a baseball cap, perhaps an extra headlamp, and have plenty of sunscreen and lip balm with SPF! Don’t get caught with blistered lips that don’t heal at altitude!
Nights are chilly to very cold, so a down jacket(s) and a WARM sleeping bag are essentials. We recommend a down sleeping bag of -10 to -20 F (-18 to -28 C). Mine is -20 F. At lower altitudes I open it and sleep under it like a quilt, and up higher am toasty warm during cold nights. NOTE sleeping bag ratings don’t correspond to how warm they need to be at altitude. Campsites at higher altitudes can be freezing at night and in the morning. The dining tent is a Tibetan style ‘yurt’ with cotton rugs (dhurries), tables and camp chairs on the ground. It warms up in the evenings when everyone is inside having soup, but it is still important to have warm clothes for the evenings. I change into thermals for the evening at camp and to sleep in when we get to camp; stretchy yoga pants over thermal underwear, light down vest and/or jacket over thermal layers. I love my down (or synthetic) booties at night in the tent! We have blankets for everyone if needed, and we even have a small propane heater on some treks …
Bring XL plastic bags or stuff sacks in your daypack in case of rain. The weather is changeable in the Himalaya, so we recommend that everyone has a strong, waterproof duffel bag for the trek. We supply covers that go over the duffel bags to protect them from rain, dirt + rips.
Day Pack
We recommend a 30-45 liter day pack. Better to have it too large than too small as on pass days you’ll need to carry more warm gear, and you can always cinch daypacks down. Many packs come with internal water bladders, or you can purchase them separately; very good for ensuring that you stay hydrated. Make sure your pack fits comfortably when loaded before bringing it trekking!!
In your day pack, you’ll carry your camera or phone, approx 2 liters of water, a jacket, lightweight wind and/or rain pants (often), a thermal hat, a baseball cap or sun hat, a buff (optional, but great to have on dusty trails), gloves, sunscreen, snacks, electrolytes, maybe something to purify water, hand sanitizer, a small bit of medical supplies, a pack-cover and often a lightweight down jacket. I slip my Crocs in for lunchtime stops or unexpected river crossings, and almost always carry a lightweight down jacket!
Drinking Water
We bring KATADYN (or equivalent) expedition-sized water filters along on the trek for fresh drinking water, ecologically the best way to get water in the Himalaya’s fragile trekking regions. Bring your own SteriPen or Sawyer squeeze filter for a back-up filtered water system during the day if you already have one. We bring ours as well, so this is optional. Please bring at least 2 Nalgene or other water bottles in addition to your water bladder.
WATER NOTE | We do not provide boiled water for filling water bottles on our camping treks although there is endless hot water for herbal, black or green teas, hot chocolate, hot lemon as well as delicious Indian chai and Kashmiri tea.
Snacks
You will NEED snacks hiking at altitude, even if you’re not a big snacker. Bring your favorite energy bars, gels, chocolate bars, dried fruit and nuts, jerky or whatever else gives you quick energy. Emergen-C and/or other electrolyte mixes are important in water bottles or before or after the trekking day; it is ESSENTIAL to bring electrolytes with you in your day packs in case you cramp up, get diarrhea or otherwise need them.
Rentals
We have (approximately) 0F super-down sleeping bags to rent for $2.50 per day on our Nepal & Tibet treks. You might want a warmer sleeping bag (I use a -20F); if so, please do bring your own, as we want you to be warm while sleeping at night!
Packing & Extra Gear Storage
It’s easy to pack and unpack from a duffel bag, especially when the temperature drops. It’s a good idea to invest in a strong, waterproof duffel such as a North Face or one of our Kamzang Journeys duffels. You can store extra gear and computers at the hotel while we’re trekking.
Shopping & Snacks in Nepal
Almost all gear is now available in Kathmandu, from real (North Face, Mountain Hardwear, Sherpa Gear, Marmot or at some shops in Thamel) to inexpensive knock-offs or good Nepali brands. The real gear shops take credit cards. There are many camera and mobile shops, and you can pick up good quality chocolate, snack bars (including gluten free, organic and vegan) and lots of other varieties dried fruits, nuts and snacks in Kathmandu. And, of course, you can shop for pashminas (or cashmere, or fakes, please ask if unsure), good quality silver, handicrafts and locally produced specialty products. We also have a large variety of good quality, unique handicrafts at Café Caravan in Boudhanath.
Everest Region
‘Landscapes Revealed’ Everest Geology Blog Posts
How did the Himalayas get to be Earth’s highest mountain range? | Karen Grove
Trekking in the Khumbu region of the Nepal Himalayas, Part 1: from Kathmandu to Namche | Karen Grove
Trekking in the Khumbu region of the Nepal Himalayas, Part 2: All hail to Ama Dablam | Karen Grove
Trekking in the Khumbu region of the Nepal Himalayas, Part 3: to Everest Base Camp and Goyko | Karen Grove
Trekking in the Khumbu region of the Nepal Himalayas, Part 4: from Gokyo back to Lukla | Karen Grove
The Everest | Solu Khumbu Region
Nepal’s Solu Khumbu, widely known as the Everest region, is a diverse region of spectacular Himalayan panoramas, diverse flora including blue pine, juniper and silver fir, rare wildlife and some of the highest mountains on the planet. The Khumbu is the original Sherpa homeland, a region of Nyigma-pa Tibetan Buddhist monasteries, ancient chortens, lung-ta (prayer flags), glaciers, Himalayan passes, high pasture lands and once traditional villages which are now often (but not always) crowded with trekking lodges and colorful shops. The region is dominated by the sacred Khumbila peak, which rises above Khumjung and Kunde, two of the larger villages in the area, with Mount Everest, Lhotse and Ama Dablam towering over the village from the opposite side. The elevation of the Khumbu ranges from 2840 meters to the 8,848 meter summit of Mount Everest.
There are several ways to enter the Khumbu, the most commonly trekked part of the Everest region. Most people fly into the Hillary Airstrip in Lukla (2840 meters), and the second most popular route is via Jiri, a diverse trek of 7-8 days crossing numerous smaller passes and ridges, and trekking through traditional Hindu, Rai and Tamang villages. The third route is via the old mountaineering trail of Shipton, Hillary and all of the original mountaineers starting in Tumlingtar (or before that, way back when), following the Aun River for a few days before veering west and trekking in very hilly, beautiful country through sprawling Rai villages until the Jiri route is intersected. The last route is via the Rolwaling Tashi Laptsa Pass, a challenging six day trek from Barabise and Chariot, through the realm of the goddess Tashi Tseringma (according to Sherpa mythology), which crosses the somewhat treacherous Tashi Laptsa Pass (5755 meters) to reach the Thame valley. The last route is from Tibet, a trail not open to Westerners and often closed even for Nepalis and Tibetans. From the Tibetan side traders cross the Nangpo La (5710 meters) and trek down several days through a glacial valley where Sherpas have their ‘doksas’, or seasonal herding villages, to reach Thame and Namche Bazaar.
The Everest (Khumbu) region is entered through the Sagarmatha National Park at the top end of Monjo (where Kim taught school in 2001). The Sagarmartha National Park is a UNESCO world heritage site since 1979, an area of 1148 square meters which ranges from 2840 – 8840 meters. The buffer zone was established in the late 90s to give some income to the villages between Lukla and Monjo. Namche Bazaar is a bustling old trading village at the fork of three valleys, situated in an amphitheater of peaks. The far left valley leads to Thame valley and Tibet, the middle valley leads to Gokyo Lake and the far right valley leads to the Khumbu Glacier, formed during the last great Ice Age approximately 500,000 years ago, and Everest Base Camp. This valley branches off to the right about half way up and leads to the Chhukhung Valley and the base of the Island Peak climbing route.
The Khumbu region, with a population of about 4000, gets from 10-20,000 Western trekkers per year, and probably double that amount of Nepali staff and local porters coming to the markets at Lukla and Namche with their goods to sell.
Mount Everest, also referred to in Sherpa and Tibetan as Chomolungma, was recognized as the highest peak in the world in 1856 by the Great Trigonometrical Survey of India (it was until then known as Peak XV). Everest was named after Sir George Everest, the British Surveyor General of India, by the Royal Geographical Society in 1865.
The first mountaineers to attempt to climb Everest were British, and the first attempt made in 1921 from the Tibetan side as Nepal was then closed to foreigners. This 1921 expedition reached 7000 meters on the North Col, the 1922 expedition climbing on the North ridge reached 8320 meters but tragically 7 porters were killed in an avalanche while descending. George Mallory & Andrew Irvine attempted to climb Everest on 8 June, 1924, perhaps even submitting before disappearing. Mallory’s body was discovered in 1999 on the North Face of Everest, at 8155 meters; the question of whether or not they summited Everest still remains a mystery.
Nearly 30 years later Tenzing Norgay and Edmund Hillary succeeded in making the first official ascent of Everest, climbing on the southeast ridge route in 1953 to reach the summit of Chomolungma together!
Notable Himalayan peaks include Everest (8848m), Lhotse (8516m), Nuptse (7861m), Makalu (8462m), Cho Oyu (8201m), Ama Dablam (6812m), Mera Peak (6476m), Island Peak (6189m), Cho Polu (6735m), Khumbutse (6640m), Kwongde Ri (6187m), Thamserku (6623m), Kang Guru (6981m), Kusum Kanggaru (6367m), Changtse (7580m) & Cholatse (6440m).
Kathmandu Tours
Not Enough of Nepal?
We highly suggest taking advantage of your trip to Nepal, adding on excursions into the Kathmandu Valley, Pokhara, Bandipur, Gorkha, the Annapurna Foothills, and Chitwan and Bardia National Park. Enjoy heritage tours, mountain biking, Kathmandu valley hiking, Himalayan panoramas with a hike down from the Chandragiri Cable Car, whitewater rafting, yoga and meditation courses, Nepali cooking classes, Buddhist or Hindu retreats, and much more. There are many wonderful, boutique, luxury, and heritage lodges in the Kathmandu Valley, and many options for world heritage sightseeing tours, bicycle trips, hikes, and craft-cuisine tours. Nepal boasts world-class restaurants, chic cafes, timeless alleyways to wander through, countless Hindu and Buddhist festivals, and lots of great shopping.
Don’t miss an Everest sightseeing flight or epic helicopter tour, sightseeing trips to Bhaktapur, Patan, and Panauti (Kathmandu Valley’s other historic and/or capital cities), a weekend at Shivapuri Heights Resort or Dwarikas in Kathmandu, a night at the Fort Hotel in Nagarkot for sunrise and sunset Himalayan panoramas, a spa and wellness getaway at the ultra-luxurious Dwarikas Dhulikhel Resort and visits to ancient temple and monastery complexes such as Namo Buddha, Changu Narayan, and Dakshinkali. Spend a night at The Old Inn in Bandipur or Three Mountain Lodge en route to Pokhara, or The Famous Farm in Nuwakot, and get to know Nepal’s Newar heritage.
Enjoy a luxury 3-6 day trek in the Annapurna Foothills, staying in the wonderful Ker & Downey luxury lodges. Relax in heritage style at Temple Tree Resort in Pokhara for some pampering at the spa and infinity pool, try out paragliding, zip-lining, and enjoy a morning of boating on the lake and the hike to Shanti Stupa. Once refreshed, drive to Chitwan National Park, spending a few nights at Maruni Sanctuary Resort or Tiger Tops Tharu Lodge for wildlife and bird spotting, river trips, and safaris in style. Tiger Tops also owns Karnali Lodge at Bardia National Park, reached by flight from Kathmandu, and there are nearby archeological sites to visit nearby.
Namaste!
Nepal Modules
Nepal & Kathmandu Modules | Customize Your Trip!
Kathmandu Valley Guided Sightseeing Day Tours
+ Kathmandu World Heritage Guided Sightseeing Tour (Full Day) | Pashupatinath, Boudhanath & Swayambunath ($125)
+ Kathmandu World Heritage Guided Sightseeing Tour (Half Day) | Pashupatinath & Boudhanath ($75)
+ Kathmandu World Heritage Sightseeing Car – No Guide (Morning or Evening) | Swayambunath ($35)
+ Kathmandu World Heritage Guided Walking Tour (Half Day) | Kathmandu Durbar Square ($50)
+ Kathmandu World Heritage Guided Tour (Half Day) | Patan Durbar Square ($65)
+ Kathmandu Valley World Heritage Sightseeing Tour (Full Day) | Bhaktapur & Changu Narayan ($135)
+ Kathmandu Valley Heritage + Craft Tour (Custom Tours)
+ Cycling Trip in Kathmandu Valley (Custom Trips)
+ Everest Express Sightseeing Flight ($225)
+ Everest Sightseeing Helicopter Tour (Custom Tours)
TOUR NOTE | Additional tour member + $30. Entrance fees not included.
Kathmandu Heritage Multi Day Tours & Hikes
Kathmandu Valley | Heritage Treks & Tours – Nepal
Kathmandu | Full Day World Heritage Sightseeing Tour | Boudhanath, Pashupatinath & Swayambunath
Kathmandu is filled with World Heritage sites and sacred destinations, crowded with traditional neighborhoods and colorful festivals. Spend a few days exploring Nepal’s exotic capital and the history-laden Kathmandu valley. We can arrange sightseeing guide, vehicles and guides as required. See Kathmandu Heritage + Happenings for more details.
We recommend beginning with Pashupatinath in the early morning, and moving on to Boudhanath mid-morning. Hindu Pashupatinath on the sacred Bagmati river and its sacred temple complex is one of Nepal’s most important sites, a powerful cremation site and Nepal’s most important Hindu temple. Here, monkeys run up and down the steps of the burning ghats, and trident-bearing saddhus draped in burnt-orange and saffron sit serenely meditating, when they’re not posing for photos-for-rupees. Local guides can explain the significance of the complicated ceremonies. Please be respectful when taking photos.
Boudhanath, in the midst of traditional monasteries (gompas) and hung with long strings of multi-colored prayer flags, attracts Sherpas, Tibetans and tourists alike for daily circumambulations (koras) of the iconic stupa. The striking Buddha eyes of Boudhanath Stupa watch over a lively and colorful Tibetan community and attract pilgrims from all over the Himalayan Buddhist realm. There are wonderful spots for lunch at Boudhanath (Roadhouse Cafe has wood-oven pizzas and a breathtaking view of the stupa and colorful Nepals circling it), and it’s a good place to learn the technique of thanka painting and purchase a thanka (Buddhist mural). See also Bhaktapur for more options for shopping for thankas.
Wander through the many temples, pagodas, courtyards and the museum at Kathmandu Durbar Square, a timeless gathering spot and a UNESCO World Heritage site. Kathmandu Durbar Square, including the old royal palace, is Kathmandu’s ‘Palace Square’, a showcase for the world renown artisans and craftsmen of Kathmandu and a synthesis of Hindu and Buddhist palaces, temples, stupas and statues. The Malla and Shah kings ruled over the Kathmandu Valley during the centuries of the building of the layers of this Durbar Square. Along with their opulent palaces, the square surrounds numerous courtyards and temples, all works of art with intricate and often erotic carvings. Kathmandu Durbar Square is known as Hanuman Dhoka Durbar Square, a name derived from a statue of Hanuman, the monkey devotee of Lord Ram, at the entrance of the palace. The social, religious and urban focal point of the city, Durbar Square is often the site of festivals, marriages and other ceremonies such as Teej. Some important structures are Hanuman Dhoka Palace, Kumari Ghar (Abode of the Living Goddess), Taleju Temple, built between the 12th and 18th centuries, the 17th century stone inscription set into the wall of the palace with writings in 15 languages.
In the evening (take the interesting back streets from Durbar Square) climb the many steps to the gilded Swayambhunath stupa (known as the monkey temple) which rises from the Kathmandu valley floor at 1420 meters and is one of the holiest Buddhist sites in Nepal. Swayambunath, the ‘self created’ stupa, was founded over 2000 years ago at a time when the Kathmandu valley was filled by a large lake, with a single lotus in the center. Mythology says that Manjusri, a bodhisvatti, drained the lake with one cut of his sword and the lotus flower was transformed into the stupa. From its commanding views of Kathmandu, circumambulate Swayambunath’s white-washed stupa, painted with distinctive Buddha eyes, the complex a unique synthesis of Buddhism and Hinduism. Another interesting time to visit Swayambunath is in the mornings, when Nepalis visit the temple dedicated to the God of Smallpox to with colorful offerings for the goddess.
Stop to photograph reflections in Kathmandu’s many pokhari’s, or ponds, including the beautiful Rani Pokhari (queen’s bath) near New Road, and the Naga Pokhari (pond of the snake gods of the underworld) just beyond the palace gates. The many bathing ghats, square enclosures with steps leading down to water spouts, often decorated with naga heads, are also interesting and colorful gathering spots.
+Entrance Fees not Included for Single Person
Kathmandu | Half Day World Heritage Patan Durbar Square Sightseeing Tour
Visit the third of Kathmandu’s ancient capitals, known as ‘The City of Fine Arts’, best if you have an extra day in hand as Patan is also rich in cultural heritage, has many lovely roof-top cafes for lunch and world-class museums. Some of the highlights of Patan are its Durbar Square, the Krishna Temple within the palace complex of Patan (entirely made of stone, with 21 distinctive spires), and Hiranya Varna Mahavir, or the Golden Buddha Temple.
+ Entrance Fees not Included for Single Person
Kathmandu Valley | Full Day World Heritage Bhaktapur & Changu Narayan Sightseeing Tour
One more day in Kathmandu, with a sightseeing excursion by private vehicle to Bhaktapur. Bhaktapur which translates as ‘Place of Devotees’ and is also known as Bhadgaon, is an ancient Newar city approximately 15 kilometers east of the Kathmandu Valley. Bhaktapur is one of three ancient capitals of the Kathmandu valley, the capital of the Newar Kingdom and a city of artisans and craftspeople famous for its art and architecture: intricate carvings, sculptures, paintings, thankas, pottery, statues and temples, or pagodas. Bhaktapur has a well-preserved ‘durbar square’, or palace square, and has been named a World Heritage site by UNESCO because of its incredible temples, pagodas, wood carvings, stone carvings and metalwork. Bhaktapur is also famous for its yogurt, called curd in Asia, a taste which hasn’t been duplicated anywhere.
Spend the day exploring Bhaktapur and its rich cultural heritage, where a majority of enthnic Newaris live in traditional ways, and life seems to stand still. There are many great restaurants and cafes to rejuvenate, and it’s possibly the best spot in Kathmandu for purchasing a thanka after watching the technique, as well as shopping for endless other locally produced crafts. Bhaktapur is home to countless local festivals, so if you are lucky and arrive on a festival day, enjoy the timeless and colorful events unfold.
You’ll also visit at Changu Narayan, a few km from Bhaktapur and one of Kathmandu’s oldest Newari temple villages. Legend has it that Changu Narayan was given to the daughter, Champak, of a Kashmiri king of Nepal when she wedded the prince of Bhaktapur. The important Vishnu temple is one of the oldest temples in all of Nepal, and was damaged during the 2015 earthquakes.
+ Entrance Fees not Included for Single Person
Everest Sightseeing Mountain Flight
An hour long extravaganza of the world’s 8000 meter peaks. Airport Transfers not Included. (+$250 or Market Price)
Everest Sightseeing Helicopter Tour
Inquire for prices and options for a once in a lifetime helicopter trip flying right over Everest Base Camp, Kala Pattar, the Khumbu Glacier, plus incredible views of Everest, Lhotse, Nuptse, Cho Oyu, Makalu, Ama Dablam, Pumori and more! Cost per helicopter, option to stop at Everest View Hotel for an ‘Everest breakfast’. (+$Inquire for Options)
Cycling Trip Kathmandu Valley
Many options for day trips, or extended trips, in the Kathmandu Valley. We can customize a cycling trip for you in partnership with one of our knowledgeable partners in Kathmandu. (+$Inquire for Options)
Shivapuri Heights Cottages
A wonderful get away 20 km north of Kathmandu, Shivapuri Heights Cottages are stylishly designed and personal cottages built around a ‘common house’, where you can breakfast overlooking the stunningly beautiful Kathmandu valley. Massages available on request. (+$Inquire for Options)
Extra Days in Kathmandu | Customize your Journey!
We have plenty of great suggestions for extra days, or weeks, in Nepal! See our Nepal & Kathmandu Modules | Customize Your Trip! for ideas to put together the perfect journey.
We recommend Kathmandu Valley heritage tours to Bhaktapur or Patan (the Kathmandu Valley’s other historic capital cities), mountain biking, river rafting, yoga retreats, get-aways to Gorkha, Bandipur, Panauti or Namo Buddha to visit traditional hill villages, temples, monasteries and fortresses or a tour of the Newari temple of Changu Narayan and a night at the Fort Hotel in Nagarkot for sublime Himalayan panoramas!
Everest sightseeing flight or an epic helicopter tour over Everest Base Camp, a luxurious stay at Temple Tree Resort & Spa in Pokhara or Himalayan Front in Sarangkot, paragliding, hiking or zip-lining over Phewa Lake, a spa + wellness getaway at Dwarikas Resort in Dhulikhel, a relaxing, luxury wildlife excursion to Chitwan National Park staying at Tharu Lodge or Maruni Sanctuary Lodge, a chic wildlife safari in Bardia National Park at Tiger Tops, a weekend of adventure, sauna and pampering at The Last Resort or 5-star treatment in historic Dwarika’s Heritage Hotel in Kathmandu.
Kamzang Journeys can customize any of these wonderful excursions for you!
Everest Heli Tours
Everest Helicopter Tour Kwondge | Dinner Sunset & Sunrise over Everest – Yeti Mountain Home
An epic private helicopter tour for an extra day in the spectacular Khumbu region. Sunset dinner and sunrise breakfast overlooking some of the best Himalayan views on the planet! Board your private helicopter from Namche for the quick flight to Kwongde YMH Lodge, and enjoy lunch overlooking this vast panorama of peaks. Views include some of the highest peaks on the planet, including Everest, Lhotse, Makalu, Cho Oyu, Gyajung Khang (the highest peak under 8000m), and the majestic Ama Dambam. From the YMH Lodge, you can look down on Kwonde Lake, generally hidden, and up the awe-inspiring Khumbu valley. The Kwongde YMH (Yeti Mountain Home) is a luxury lodge, one of the world’s highest hotels in one of the Himalaya’s most dramatic locations. Your epic helicopter tour finishes back in Namche Bazaar, but you have the option to charter the helicopter back to Lukla or Kathmandu.
+ Price Per Helicopter – Namche to Namche ($1800)
+ Max 4 Passengers
+ Price Per Person Yeti Mountain Home – Breakfast + Dinner ($175)
+ Single Supplement ($75)
Everest Mountain Helicopter Sightseeing Tour | Namche to Namche | Lukla, Everest Base Camp, Cho La Pass (Gokyo Valley), Renjo La Pass (Thame Valley) & Namche
A once in a lifetime helicopter tour of the Everest region’s spectacular peaks, glaciers, and Himalayan passes! Your private helicopter picks you up in Namche Bazaar, from where you will fly over the Khumbu Glacier and to Everest Base Camp, as well as the incredible Everest icefall. You will have a chance to stop on Kala Pattar for photos of this spectacular setting. Back in your helicopter, your flight path takes you over Dzongla Lake, the glaciated Cho La pass, and into the stunningly beautiful Gokyo valley, flying low over the turquoise Gokyo Lake, with another touch down to splash some sacred lake on yourself before crossing the Renjo La pass to the traditional Thame valley, the old trade route to Tibet. Your epic helicopter tour finishes back in Namche Bazaar, but you have the option to charter the helicopter back to Lukla or Kathmandu.
+ Price Per Helicopter ($2750) – Namche to Namche
+ Max 4 Passengers
Everest Mountain Epic Sightseeing Tour | Kathmandu to Kathmandu | Lukla, Everest Base Camp, Cho La Pass (Gokyo Valley) & Namche
The full helicopter deal, all the way from Kathmandu to Everest Base Camp, and much more! A once in a lifetime helicopter tour of the Everest region’s spectacular peaks, glaciers, and Himalayan passes! Your private helicopter picks you up at Tribhuvan Airport in Kathmandu, from where you will fly up to the fabled Tenzin Norgay airport in Lukla. After a cup of tea in Lukla, you will reboard your helicopter and fly over the Khumbu Glacier and to Everest Base Camp and the sublime Everest icefall. You will have the unique chance to stop at Everest Base camp for photos of this spectacular setting.
Back in the helicopters, your flight path takes you over beautiful Dzongla Lake, the glaciated Cho La pass, and into the stunningly beautiful Gokyo valley, flying low over the turquoise Gokyo Lake and down the Gokyo Valley. Your epic helicopter continues by flying back over Namche Bazaar, and back through Nepal’s lush middle hills to Kathmandu.
+ Price Per Helicopter ($5000) – Kathmandu to Kathmandu
+ Max 4 Passengers
Great Stays
BOUTIQUE & LUXURY HOTELS | KATHMANDU VALLEY
Kathmandu Guest House
Kathmandu Guest House
The Kathmandu Guest House is one of Kathmandu’s first hotels, originally a Rana Palace. Located in the heart of Thamel, the Kathmandu Guest House is a beautiful, lively hotel with a large garden and lovely outdoor cafes, centrally located in Thamel with a wide range of restaurants, cafes, yoga and shopping surrounding it. KGH offers a wide selection of rooms, including their wonderful deluxe rooms.
“Travelers know that the frenetic pace of a crowded city like Kathmandu needs an escape. The Kathmandu Guest House, a converted Rana dynasty mansion with fragrant gardens and airy corridors, has provided the peaceful refuge of choice since 1967. Since the days of being the first and only hotel in Thamel, the packed tourist district of Kathmandu, it’s become something of an institution. It’s close to everywhere and its gate is the meeting point that nobody can mistake. As a guidebook put it, “Kathmandu Guest House acts as a magnet for mountaineers, pop stars, actors and eccentric characters.” Even the Beatles stayed here in 1968. Whether you’re returning from the mountains or arriving from the airport, come and relax at the courtyard restaurant, order a cup of fine Italian coffee or a chilled Gorkha Beer, and escape for a moment in the historic surroundings of Kathmandu’s most loved guesthouse.”
Kathmandu Guest House Timeline
KGH History
Dwarika’s
Dwarika’s Hotel
Dwarika’s, Kathmandu’s premier hotel built and decorated with traditional Kathmandu valley architecture, is an oasis of calm located near the airport, where you can relax by the pool, visit the award-winning spa, enjoy the serene, historic surroundings and dine at one of their world-class restaurants.
“Dwarika’s Hotel was registered in 1977, with the idea of reviving the architectural splendour of the valley. All the terracotta work was made in the valley, using local clay and skills. The couple also incorporated elements of Nepal’s diverse cultural heritage, including those from beyond the valley, when designing the rooms. The furniture was crafted by families of traditional carpenters, and the linen, textiles and embroideries were hand woven and used Nepali patterns. In all purposes, Dwarika Das Shrestha took some of the finest elements of Nepali crafts, and presented them in a way that had not been done before. In explaining his vision, he once stated: “My project is to recreate a 15th-17th century environment where tourist and Nepali alike would have a sensation of the original. The hotel as a commercial enterprise is merely a vehicle to finance and carry my dream forward.”
History of Newari Culture in Kathmandu. Inspiration for the Heritage Architecture of Dwarika’s
Newari History in Kathmandu
History of Dwarika’s
Dwarika’s History
Dwarika’s Resort Dhulikhel
Dwarika’s Resort
A top-notch resort, with a wonderful spa, and wellness, and yoga retreats, on the Kathmandu Valley rim. “With the belief in the need for maintaining harmony between the body, mind, spirit and the planet for a peaceful, healthy and balanced life; the Dwarika’s Resort is built on the philosophy of respecting nature and self. The resort takes its inspiration from ancient Hindu Vedic scriptures (Vedas), Buddhist medicine and traditional Himalayan knowledge. The Himalayan belt has been home to holistic healing and wellbeing for more than three thousand years. The region’s approach to wellbeing, its serene natural beauty and rare medicinal herbs has attracted great sages through time. The Hindu Vedic scriptures describe Ayurveda, the science of life, as a comprehensive approach to wellbeing that encompasses the study of biology, spirituality, psychology, astronomy, nutrition and beauty. Originating from the same roots the Buddhist approaches to wellbeing also follows similar path and views health as harmony between the mind, body, spirit and one’s environment.
The resort has been designed based on the knowledge of these ancient understanding about holistic wellbeing with all the spaces being consecrated and brought to life. The lifestyle spaces within the resort are designed to attract positive energy and keep negative energy at bay. When you go around the resort you can find details we have placed in various spaces to ensure the energy within the resort is as positive as possible. For example, the resort is surrounded by Cactus (Ketuki), which is believed to cleanse the space around it of all the negative energy and attract positive energy instead. Hence, adding to the calm and nurturing environment offered within the resort. The resort also offers various activities within these spaces to enhance and add value to our guests’ experience.”
Yak & Yeti
Yak & Yeti
Yak & Yeti is one of Kathmandu’s historic 5-star hotels, steeped in history, with a lovely pool and garden, located just off Durbar Marg, a tree-lined, upscale road of shops and hotels. ” Yak & Yeti opened in 1977 as a 120 room, 5-star hotel – the first of its kind in Nepal. A new wing of an additional 150 rooms was built in harmony with the architectural features of the old palace, Lal Durbar, bringing the room total to 270. The whole hotel is a sumptuous array of beautiful artifacts, art, and traditionally crafted fixtures. Attention to detail has been meticulously considered throughout, giving the feeling you aren’t just in a hotel as much as an art gallery or museum. Over the years the hotel has been upgraded and extended and now boasts a shopping arcade, a swimming pool, two tennis courts and a state-of-the-art fitness center and luxury spa.”
Hyatt Regency
Hyatt Regency
The Hyatt is a stylish, 5-star hotel located near Boudhanath, with a large pool, a great buffet breakfast, a gym and a mix of Buddhist and Hindu decor in the lobby and rooms. “Hyatt Regency Kathmandu is a five-star luxury hotel and resort in Kathmandu, set on 37 acres of landscaped grounds and created in the traditional Newari style of Nepalese architecture. This beautiful hotel and resort is located on the road to the Boudhanath Stupa: the most holy of all Tibetan Buddhist shrines outside of Tibet and a UNESCO World Heritage Site located within a five-minute walk from the hotel. The hotel is just 4km (2.4m) from the Tribhuvan International Airport and 6 km (3.7m) from the city center of Kathmandu.”
Hotel Tibet
Hotel Tibet
“Since 1998, Hotel Tibet has set the standard for showcasing the warmth of Tibetan hospitality. Newly renovated post-COVID, we have worked towards merging modern elements with traditional Tibetan aesthetic to provide you with the utmost convenience and comfort and to make your stay with us a memorable experience. We have newly-renovated rooms, divided into deluxe, club, and suite categories that combine contemporary and traditional Tibetan designs. Our rooms are especially designed with your comfort in mind, featuring plush bedding, modern furnishings, and elegant decor.”
Dusit Princess
Dusit Princess
Kathmandu’s BEST rooftop bar, restaurant and pool. Brother of the owner of Hotel Tibet, which shares the property. “Make Dusit Princess Kathmandu your base for exploring Nepal’s vibrant capital. Comfort, value and convenience will define your stay, with warm Thai and Nepalese hospitality woven into every moment. Conveniently located in upmarket Lazimpat, the hotel has international restaurants and Narayanhiti Palace Museum on its doorstep.”
Marriott
Marriott
The Marriot was completed in 2020, located just near Nag Pokhari, with Kathmandu’s best buffet! “Retreat to Kathmandu Marriott Hotel, a 214-room contemporary hotel in the capital city of Kathmandu. Settle into spacious, well-appointed rooms and suites, many with views of the Himalayan range. Dine in our hotel restaurants, featuring International cuisine at Thamel Kitchen and Asian cuisine at Edamame. Relax at Raksi Music Bar with delicious food and beverages overlooking our waterfall terrace. Get pampered in our full-service hotel spa and salon, take a dip in our outdoor pool or work out in our 24-hour fitness center.”
Sheraton Hotel
Sheraton Hotel
One of Kathmandu’s great rooftop bars and pools! “Surrounded by the Himalayas, The Sheraton Kathmandu Hotel is conveniently located along the city’s main road, Kantipath. Once the Royal Palace for the kings of Nepal, The Narayanhiti Palace Museum is nearby as are embassies, banks and corporate offices. Tribhuvan International Airport is forty minutes away.
Kathmandu’s most popular tourist area, Thamel is located adjacent to the hotel and is filled with restaurants, bars, cafés and shops. In addition to traditional woolen items, pashmina shawls and scarves, as well as mountaineering equipment, you can savor some delightful Nepalese cuisine, including dumplings called momos, dal, and kwati, a delicious Newari curry soup made with a variety of beans.
This 20,000 SM GFA, 218-key Sheraton Hotel is located on a 6,647 SM site in the center of Kathmandu. The hotel includes food and beverage, a 900 SM banquet hall, meeting rooms, spa and gymnasium facilities and back-of-house areas.”
The Terraces
The Terraces
“The Terraces Resort and Spa is a luxury resort in Nepal, offering stunning views of the Kathmandu Valley and majestic Himalayas located near the border of Bhaktapur with easy access from Lalitpur. We provide the perfect environment to unwind, reconnect with nature and celebrate life’s special moments. Our friendly and professional staff is dedicated to catering to your every need, guiding you to discover the best of Nepal’s culture and nature through bespoke activities and tours. Immerse yourself in the historical sites of Bhaktapur or venture into the scenic landscapes of Lakuri Bhanjyang, creating unforgettable experiences that embrace the essence of Nepal. The Terraces is not just a luxury resort in Kathmandu – it is a destination where you can savor life to the fullest.
The resort, located just 16km from Kathmandu’s Tribhuvan International Airport, fuses international sensibilities with the best of what Nepal has to offer: Stunning mountain views, fresh air, wide open spaces and organic food. Each spacious room or suite comes with a terrace balcony. The only barrier between you and the beautiful world outside is floor-to-ceiling windows.”
BOUTIQUE HOTELS
There are many other boutique and character-filled hotels and guesthouses around the Kathmandu Valley. Just a few that we like listed, but this is not AT ALL an extensive list.
KATHMANDU | THREE CAPITALS
Potala Guesthouse – Thamel
Hotel Roadhouse – Thamel
Kantipur Temple House – Thamel
Nepali Ghar – Thamel
Aloft by Marriot – Thamel
Hotel Mulberry – Thamel (Pool)
1905 Suites – Nag Pokhari
Hotel Manaslu – Lazimpat
Hotel Shambala – Bainsbari – Maharajganj (Pool)
Babar Mahal Vilas – Babar Mahal
Hotel Padma – Boudhanath
Rokpa Guest House – Boudhanath
Hotel Shambaling – Boudhanath
Hotel Tibet International – Boudhanath
Hotel Lotus Gems – Boudhanath (Pool)
Cozy Nepal – Patan
Pahan Chhen – Patan
Traditional Stay Patan – Patan
The Inn Patan – Patan
Traditional Homes | Swota – Patan
Peacock Guest House – Bhaktapur
Hotel Heritage – Bhaktapur
KATHMANDU VALLEY & AROUND
The Fort Resort – Nagarkot
Hotel Mystic Mountain – Nagarkot
Gaia Holiday Home – Dhulikhel
Gokarna Forest Resort – Gokarna
Shivapuri Heights Cottages – Budhanilkanta, Shivapuri
The Old Inn – Bandipur
The Famous Farm – Nuwakot
Gorkha Gaun Resort – Gorkha
Terraces Resort – Lhakuri Bhanjyang Lamatar
Balthali Village Resort – Panauti
Park Village Resort – Budhanilkhanta (Pool)
POKHARA & AROUND
Begnas Lake Resort – Begnas Lake (Pool)
Hotel Karuna – Pokhara
Temple Tree Hotel & Spa – Pokhara (Pool)
Lakeview Resort – Pokhara
Hotel Barahi – Pokhara (Pool)
Summit River Lodge – Kurintar (Kathmandu – Pokhara Highway)
Ghale Gaun Homestay – Ghale Gaun (Near Besi Sahar)
FARMHOUSES & HOMESTAYS
Namo Buddha Resort – Namo Buddha
Herb Nepal – Bhaktapur
Nagarkot Farmhouse – Nagarkot
Srijana Farms – Tansen, Palpa
The Bosan Farmhouse – Bosan Danda
Almost Heaven Farm – Ilam
Barpeepal Bisauni Homestay – Ilam
KATHMANDU POOLS
Hyatt Regency – Boudhanath
Dwarika’s Hotel – Near Airport
Park Village Resort – Budhanilkhanta
Hotel Shanker – Lazimpat
Hotel Shambala – Bainsbari – Maharajganj
Marriott – Nag Pokhari
Yak & Yeti – Durbar Marg
Hotel Mulberry – Thamel
Photos
KIM BANNISTER PHOTOGRAPHY | HIMALAYAN TREKS, CYCLE TRIPS & TRAVELS
Kim Bannister Photography
CYCLE THE HIMALAYA PHOTOS
Guided Cycling Trips
KAMZANG JOURNEYS | ALL ABOUT US IN PHOTOS
Explore Kamzang Journeys
KAMZANG JOURNEYS | YELLOW TENT PHOTOS
The Yellow Tent of Eternal Happiness
HIMALAYAN WILDLIFE, BIRDS & FLOWERS PHOTOS
Himalayan Wildlife, Birds & Plants
HIMALAYAN DESIGN & CULTURAL PHOTOS
Himalayan Design & Cultural Photos
KAMZANG JOURNEYS GROUP PHOTOS
Kamzang Journeys Groups
KAMZANG JOURNEYS STAFF PHOTOS
Kamzang Journeys Staff
THE KAMZANG FUND & KAMZANG KIDS PHOTOS
The Kamzang Fund
NEPAL JOURNEYS PHOTOS
Nepal Journey
INDIA JOURNEY PHOTOS
India Journeys
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Tibet Journeys
BHUTAN JOURNEYS PHOTOS
Bhutan Journeys
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Mongolia Journeys
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South East Asia Photos