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Tuesday, November 3, 2020

Ghandruk Restricted to Visit until 21 November.

Ghandruk Restricted to Visit until 21 November. 

KATHMANDU: Ghandruk is a popular tourist destination which is restricted to tourist visits until 21 November. This decision was taken by the Ghandruk Tourism Management Committee in view of the growing number of COVID-19 events. 



Mr. Kasam Gurung, Chairman of the Tourism Management Committee, said that both domestic and domestic visitors were barred from visiting Ghandruk until 21 November. Before then, all the hotels and lodges will be closed.He added that the required decisions would be made after 21 November at a meeting. 

Ghandruk is a famous Gurung village located 32 km from Pokhara in the north-west. It is the trekking gateway to the Annapurna region 

, particularly the Annapurna Base Camp and the Annapurna Sanctuary.

Mount Everest Empties In Nepal as Covid-19 Hits Tourism

As infections spread, the Himalayan country's economy has taken a blow from a lack of climbers and a plunge in remittances. 


KATHMANDU, Nepal. Nepal attracted so many mountain climbers just last year that a human traffic jam of hundreds of mountaineers snarled a trail to the top of Mount Everest in puffy jackets.The crowds were evidence of how rapidly, some said, the alpine tourism industry in Nepal had developed, becoming a lifeline for the region. Tourism brought more than $2 billion to Nepal, one of the poorest countries 

in Asia, last year and employed a million people, from porters to pilots.Much of it was halted by the pandemic. The trails snaking through the Himalayas, including those leading to Everest Base Camp, are abandoned. This fall season, fewer than 150 climbers have arrived, immigration officials reported, down from thousands last year. Countless Sherpas and seasoned mountain guides were put out of business, allowing many to plant barley or graze yaks to live on the empty slopes.

Many Nepalis believe that this nation might be held back for years by the cumulative impact of the coronavirus and the hammer blow to the economy. 


Upendra Lama, an out-of-work mountain porter who now depends on donations from a small aid group to feed himself and his baby, said, 'I always think I'm going to die of hunger before Corona kills me.' How long will this continue?

While similar questions are being raised by the whole community, Nepal has little tools to help people cope. Covid-19 cases are gradually growing, and with about 1,000 intensive-care beds for a population of 30 million, once they fall into a serious condition, the authorities have told people who get sick to stay home. Out of sight and undetected, an undisclosed number can die. 

It is better to see the economic ruins. Hotels and teahouses are boarded up, sticking to the mountain faces. For the near future, pubs, gear shops and even some of the most famous watering holes in the capital, Kathmandu, have disappeared, including the Tom and Jerry bar, which acted as a backpacker's beacon for decades. 

"There is no hope in sight," the owner of the bar, Puskar Lal Shrestha, said. 

Another casualty has been remittances from Nepalis working abroad. When times were healthy, millions of people sent money back from across Asia, from the Persian Gulf countries in particular.

Last year, total remittances were almost $9 billion. Nepal relies on remittances more than just about any other country.

Many Nepalis held unglamorous jobs, such as security guards or maids. But the money was good, especially for people from a country where the average income is the equivalent of $3 a day.

Now many of them have been laid off. Some have been sent home, while others remain trapped in foreign countries, with no work and the specter of deportation hanging over them.

The pause in remittances has frightened many families. Several people who were interviewed said they had been forced to move to cheaper apartments and to take their children out of private schools and send them instead to government schools they considered inferior.

“If the world does not get a corona vaccine soon, our remittances, which contribute around 30 percent to the national G.D.P., will completely dry up,” said Sujit Kumar Shrestha, the general secretary of Nepal’s Association of Foreign Employment Agencies.

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As the economy ails, hospitals are filling up. Doctors say that the wealthy and the politically connected are monopolizing hospital beds, leaving the poor who get sick with nowhere to go.

“Our health system is weak, and the monitoring mechanism is even weaker,” said Dr. Rabindra Pandey, who works for Nepal Arogya Kendra, an independent organization of public health experts. “Well-connected and wealthy people can easily access private hospitals and afford their fees, but many of the poor are dying.”

With winter fast approaching and the Hindu festival season in full swing, public health experts warn that Nepal’s Covid-19 crisis is about to get worse. The country has reported around 175,000 infections, roughly the same rate per capita as India next door. And although its reported deaths remain fewer than 1,000, testing remains low and the consensus among Nepali doctors is that virus infections and deaths are many times higher.

The virus has reached its tentacles into rural areas and remote towns that just a few months ago had few or no reported cases. Government officials have been accused of exploiting the pandemic to make money. A parliamentary committee is looking into accusations that officials close to the prime minister, K.P. Sharma Oli, inflated prices of key medical supplies. The officials have denied the allegations.

In some areas, Covid-19 has cut through entire families.

Dharma Kumar Shrestha, an elderly man who ran a small business importing clothes, checked into a hospital in southern Nepal in late September to seek treatment for asthma, the beginning of a chain of events that killed nearly half his family. He caught Covid-19 in the hospital, family members said. Two of his sons who visited him then got infected.

With the hospitals filling up, and the authorities ordering people to recover at home, the sons went back to their village. They got sicker. When one called for an ambulance, the driver refused, afraid of getting sick himself.

Within two weeks, Mr. Dharma and two sons had died.

“What could be worse news than this?” asked Suman Shrestha, a younger relative. “Let’s pray no one else has to face our fate.”

Health experts say that many of Nepal’s infections have come from Nepali workers traveling back from India. India is now No. 2 in the world in terms of reported Covid-19 infections — around eight million, right behind the United States.

Nepal lives in India’s shadow. Its economy, strategic affairs, and overall health are constantly rearranged by what happens in its huge neighbor to the south.

Partly because of the boost from tourism, Nepal’s economy had been growing faster than India’s, at nearly 6 percent in 2019. Usually, at this time of year, jet after jet would thread the mountain ranges by Kathmandu’s international airport and disgorge thousands of well-heeled tourists, including many Indians, eager to hike in the Annapurnas or up to Mount Everest base camp.

Last year, more than a million tourists visited. The average spent more than $50 a day.

Tourism officials expect that at least 800,000 people employed in the tourism industry will lose their jobs. Among the first to go, officials said, will be the 50,000 or so high-altitude guides, Sherpas and others in the trekking ecosystem. Some have started protesting on the streets of Kathmandu, urging the government to give them loans to help feed their families and threatening to vandalize the tourism board’s office if they get no relief.

“Guides, once known as the real agents of tourism, have been left in the lurch,” said Prakash Rai, a climbing guide who participated in the recent protests. “We have no means to survive this crisis.”

Not long ago, some people inside and outside the country were saying that Nepal’s tourism industry had spun out of control. Nepal was so eager to welcome climbers, these critics said, that the Everest scene had become unruly and dangerous.

Despite the rise in Covid-19 cases, other parts of the economy, like manufacturing, are trying to sputter back to life, and some schools have reopened. Travel restrictions imposed this spring and summer have been eased. A mass exodus has begun from the cities to far-flung villages as Nepalis head home to celebrate the Hindu holidays of Dashain and Tihar.

Yet such movement is bypassing tourist areas.

Pokhara, a beautiful lakeside city in the center of the country, has become a ghost town. At this time last year, it teemed with trekkers.

But as Baibob Poudel, a Pokhara hotelier, said, “I haven’t seen a single foreigner here since April.”



Bicycle tour to revive tourism in Nepal

Bicycle tour to revive tourism in Nepal 


KATHMANDU: Nepal's travel agencies have joined hands by organizing a bicycle tour to revive the COVID-19 impacted tourism industry in Nepal. 

In support of the Nepal Tourism Board, the Trekking Agencies Association of Nepal (TAAN), the Nepal  Mountaineering Association (NAM), and the Nepal Travel and Tour Association (NATTA) have arranged a bicycle tour.

The Nepal Bicycle Tour began with cycling from the office of the Nepal Tourism Board. Mr. Dhananjaya Regmi, the board's CEO, saw the cyclists off. Cyclists can ride from the western part of Mahendranagar to the eastern part of Pashupatinagar. The bike tour will be organized by renowned cyclist and Everest summit man Pushkar Shah. In their three-week-long sojourn, the riders 

would travel a distance of 1624 KM. Board member Deepak Mahat said that this bike tour will help the tour help breathe new life into the tourism industry affected by COVID-19 and promote the Board's message throughout the nation as the cyclist pedal across the world.

The Qatari Royal Family entered the base camp on a trip to climb Mount Amadablam.

 

The Qatari Royal Family entered the base 
camp on a trip to climb Mount Amadablam. 

Kathmandu: Qatar Royal Family team, including Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdullah Al Thani of Qatar, 
has reached the 6,812meter Mount Amadablam base camp, located in the Everest area of Eastern Nepal. 
The team is going to 
try to climb Mount Amadablam. 

It is estimated that the team, comprising 14 members from different countries, 
will hit the summit of Mount Amadablam in the next two weeks.

Ishwori Poudel, managing director of the expedition's Himalayan Guide Nepal, 
says the team reached the base camp on Sunday afternoon. 
Sherpas are currently repairing the ropes and ladders. The team is expected to 
complete the task by two weeks if the weather is favorable, "Says, Poudel." 
Last week, the team left 

Kathmandu for Lukla on Monday.


New Height of Mt. Everest soon to be Announced

 New Height of Mt. Everest soon to be Announced

The new height of Mt. Everest is now soon to be announced by both Nepal and China. In 2019 when the Chinese President visited Nepal, both countries had signed a “Memorandum of Understanding” agreement to announce the new height of Mt. Everest.

For the first time in 1955, the Indian team surveys the height of Mt. Everett to be 8848m (29,029ft) above sea level which is still the official height of Everest till this date. Also in 1975, the Chinese survey had also confirmed the same height. Similarly, some unofficial survey was also done after that. In 1992, the Italian Survey lopped seven feet off the standard height, measuring it at 29,022 feet above sea level. But again in 1999, American scientists pushed the height a little higher, saying the mountain reached up to 29,035 feet above sea level. But on these all surveys, Nepal had almost no any role.

So, due to this confusion and not having a role in any of those surveys, Nepal Government announces to measure the new height of Everest in collaboration with China. It is also believed that after the massive earthquake in 2015, Mt. Everest may have been shrunk which made more compulsion to measure the height again.

By taking the Bay of Bengal as its Sea level, the Nepalese side had already measured the height of Everest. But due to covid and some other reasons, the Chinese survey was delayed. Now with recent news, we knew that the measurement from the Chinese side had also been completed by taking the Yellow sea as its sea level. So within a few days, both the Nepalese & Chinese Government will announce the new height of Mt. Everest.  


Friday, October 16, 2020

Bahrain prince and expedition team successfully scale Mt Manaslu

Bahrain prince and expedition team successfully scale Mount Manaslu


The prince of Bahrain and his expedition team successfully scaled Mount Manaslu (8,163 meters) on Thursday.

According to the Department of Tourism (DoT), the liaison officer of the base camp informed the department about the successful ascent to Mt Manaslu. “Fourteen climbers from Bahrain and three mountain guides have successfully climbed the mountain at 7:10 am this morning,” an official at the department said.  

The team including the prince of Bahrain Shaikh Nasser bin Hamad Al Khalifa had reached the base camp of Mt Manaslu on Tuesday. The expedition team has already ascended Mt Lobuche (6,119 meter) on October 3.

After the mountaineering activities were suspended due to COVID-19, the expedition team of Bahrain prince made the first ascent of 2020.

The government suspended spring season climbing as a precautionary measure for the safety of the climbers. Mountaineering activities resumed in July after a hiatus of nearly six months due to the COVID-19 pandemic. An 18-member expedition team including a member from the royal family and three nationals from the United Kingdom had arrived in Kathmandu on September 16. The DoT issued the climbing permit to the team on September 22.

The DoT has issued climbing permits to four teams for three mountains namely Mt BarunTse (7,129 meter), Mt Manaslu and Mt Gyalzen (6,151 meter). The department has collected Rs 1.91 million as royalty from expedition teams attempting to scale mountains this autumn.

A team of high-profile climbers led by Bahrain Prince Mohamed Hamad Mohamed Al Khalifa successfully scaled Mt Manaslu this morning, making it to the only summit of Nepal’s 8,000-metre peak in the autumn season

 “The team members scaled the peak after they found a fair-weather window,” he informed.

The climbers started summit push last night from Camp III following the summit route prepared by a rope-fixing team of Sherpa climbers. “Bahrain nationals including prince Al Khalifa and three British citizens of the Bahrain Royal Guard Expedition along with the first South Asian to complete all 14 peaks above 8,000m Mingma Sherpa, Kami Rita Sherpa, Tashi Lakpa Sherpa and Sanu Sherpa reached the summit point of Mt Manaslu,” Guragai quoted climbers as sharing from the mountain.

The team, which also climbed Mt Lobuche in the Everest region for acclimatization before heading to Mt Manaslu, also plans to scale Mount Everest in 2021.

The team members include British nationals Richard Warren McConnel, Phillip Clough and Christopher Anthony. Bahrain nationals in the team include Ebrahim Mohamed Abdulla Ebrahim Mohamed, Mohamed Ali Jasim Ahmed Alboainain, Arafat Hamood Naji Ghurbah, Ebrahim Khalil Ebrahim Zayed Mohamed Aljazzaf, Ahmed Said Ahmed Isa Alkabbi, Arif Feroz Shah Murad Qalunder Ghulam, Mohamed Adul Rahman Yusuf Alkawari, Khaled Ali Hasan Ebrahim Hasan Aldossery, Abdulaziz Rafea Abbar Khalaf Alabed, Khaled Sultan Mohamed Abdulla Alsheerwai, Murad Mohamed Yusuf Abdul Sayed, Ebrahim Ali Salem Jaber, Saud Hamad Mubarak Hamad Eid and Mohamed Isa Abdulla Yusuf Alqais.

Wednesday, October 14, 2020

The American man who became a porter on Everest

 The American man who became a porter on Everest

Tamara Hardingham-Gill, CNN • Updated 12th October 2020

(CNN) — It might not seem that way when you read harrowing accounts of climbers perishing on its treacherous slopes, but there's an easy way to climb Everest, and there's a hard way.

Nate Menninger, a young adventurer from Boston, definitely took the hard way.

Rather than the hike up the world's tallest peak, like most trekkers, with the support of an organized climbing outfit, the 26-year-old decided to take a job as one of the first-ever non-native Everest porters.

That meant being paid $15 a day for hauling gigantic packs weighing up to 220 pounds (100 kilograms) along rugged, high altitude trails, huddling with fellow porters in freezing huts at night for rest, and sharing their basic rations.

Along the way, he made a film about his experiences, which he hopes will shine a light on the largely unsung work of Everest porters and the precarious way they eke out a living in one of the planet's toughest environments.

Harsh reality

In 2019, Nate Menninger became one of the first foreign-born porters on Mount Everest.

Menninger came up with his idea to become a porter after spending a season working as a guide in Nepal, teaching himself Nepalese and becoming fascinated with the work and lives of these human hauliers.

Equally fascinated by Everest, but unable to afford the tens of thousands of dollars needed to cover the cost of the permit and support needed to reach the summit, he hit upon an idea to climb it for free.

"When I was guiding that summer, I saw how porters lived for the first time," he tells CNN Travel. "I saw them sleeping on the floor. I saw how they ate, and how strong they were.

"And I realized if I climbed Everest as a porter, I wouldn't have to pay $35000 to $65,000. I would actually get paid to climb Everest.

"That was the only feasible way I could attempt the mountain at the age I was."

Menninger eventually scaled back his original plan to reach the top of Everest, settling for making a film about his time among the porters on the still arduous 11-day hike from the town of Lukla, at 9,400 feet above sea level, to Everest Base Camp.

"My goal was to have the exact same experience as the porters no matter what," he explains. "I wanted to see if I could handle what it's like to have this job and if I could be as strong as a porter has to be."

His grueling experience is chronicled in the hour-long documentary "The Porter."

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Physically demanding work

Porters are required to carry packs, known as badis, to supply the region with necessities.

The physical and emotional toll of the job is laid bare as Menninger is captured struggling with the weight of a pack that consisted of multiple bags lashed together, then trying to sleep at night in crowded porterhouses.

Subsisting mainly on a diet of rice with lentils, he lost over 20 pounds over the course of the expedition and didn't shower for more than three weeks.

Menninger says he tried to fully embed himself into the lives of the porters, but accepts his experiences only scratched the surface.

"It's not a sight you see a lot over there," he explains. "I tried to take the worst scenario possible every time. If the other porters were sleeping on the floor, I wanted to sleep on the floor.

"I just wanted to be another guy in the room while people were doing their thing."

It wasn't just his appearance -- a muscular six-foot-plus that towered over his Nepalese colleagues -- that set him apart. It was also the temporary nature of his new job.

"I had a very different experience than a normal porter would because I was just coming in for one trip," he says. "It was just a snapshot. I wasn't really relying on the money.

"And in terms of everything that they go through, I'm just experiencing a fraction of the emotion and the physical output."

A typical day would involve waking up at around 7:30 a.m. and going to the client's hotel to collect their bags, before tying the bags together and beginning to trek.

"One porter carries two clients' bags, that's how it works," he says. "You move very quickly. Most of the day, you're looking down."

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Menninger hauled packs consisting of multiple bags lashed together.

Babin Dulal/'The Porter'

Porters have to pay for their own food and accommodation during expeditions, and Menninger says some regularly forgo meals in order to keep costs down.

"If you want to survive, you have to try to save the money you spend on food," he says. "One porter would cut his rations in half. He would eat half meals to save money."

While working an expedition, porters will spend around $7 a day on food and housing, and the charges rise the further up the mountain they go.

"By the end your costs are over $20, so you're actually losing money while you're working," he says. "So you really rely on tips."

As porters aren't tipped until day 11, they essentially have no idea whether the expedition has been financially worthwhile until they've more or less completed it.

Menninger made $15 a day during his 11-day expedition and he and his fellow porters, who mostly hail from villages near Base Camp, received a $100 tip each.

Menninger visibly struggled with his load during the filming.

Babin Dulal/'The Porter'

"Some people tip well, some don't," he says. "At that point, it's just the luck of the draw, whether you make $500 dollars or $50. It just depends on your expedition."

They receive their tip on the final evening of the expedition but work a 12th-day "pro bono" to escort the climbers to the airport.

"Then the next day, or maybe a few days later you'll go on another expedition," he adds. "And you could do that five or six times in a season back to back."

Since returning to the United States last year, Menninger has remained in contact with the porters he worked with during his time at Everest.

He admits to being apprehensive about showing his former colleagues the completed film.

"It was very nerve-wracking," he says. "I was very, very worried about what they'd say, because it was [showing] their job on an international scale. But they said it wasn't tough enough."

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Local-foreigner divide

Menninger's experiences on Everest are documented in the film "The Porter."

Babin Dulal

Back on Everest, life isn't getting any easier for the porters. The Covid-19 pandemic has impacted the region's mountaineering industry, which generates around $300 million for Nepal every year.

The mountaineering industry that surrounds Everest has been under added scrutiny after 2019 was plagued by overcrowding, with climbers becoming stuck in a queue to the summit, above the peak's highest camp at 26,247 feet.

There were at least 11 deaths, making it one of Everest's deadliest climbing seasons, a high death toll largely attributed to difficult weather conditions, lack of experience, and the growing commercialization of expeditions.

Adding to the problems, says Menninger, is a lack of communication between the porters and their mostly wealthy clients.

"The guides speak a little bit, but porters don't really speak to their clients at all and clients don't speak to their porters.

"So there's no cultural exchange. Usually, with traveling, you go somewhere to learn more. To meet other people and exchange ideas."

He's seen the divide between locals and tourists first hand and believes the lack of communication has created many issues.

"There's this separation between our mountain and their mountain," he continues.

"Their trash and our trash. It's a terrible way to treat the situation."

While he's loath to tell potential climbers what a good or a bad tip is, Menninger wishes more were aware of how much porters rely on the money due to their low salaries, as well as how much workers contribute to the overall Everest experience.

"The people that live there make everything possible," he says. "Even if you go and don't have a porter and just carry your own bags.

"Everything you enjoy, the hotel, the restaurant. Everything has pretty much been carried by a porter at some point.

"So whether you are using a porter or not, you're benefiting from their work. So make sure you talk to your porter. Find out how much they're making. Ask and be curious."

The Porter: The Untold Story at Everest from Nate Menninger on Vimeo.

Menninger says he was "very humbled" by his experiences with the porters, particularly as someone from a relatively wealthy background, and hopes his film will elevate the porters of Everest by demonstrating what they're able to endure and how hard they work.

"Even if you go to Everest, you will not see where your porters sleep. The movie is the first time you'd see this.

"I wanted to show that these people were strong, proud, and powerful and that anyone can have pride in any job in the world," he adds.

Friday, October 9, 2020

Nepal waives off quarantine and COVID insurance provision for tourists visiting Nepal after 17 October

Nepal waives off quarantine and COVID insurance provision for tourists visiting Nepal after 17 October
9th Oct 2020 | Kathmandu: Nepal is all set to open borders for International tourists from 17 October. The proposal presented by the Ministry of Culture, Tourism and Civil Aviation on the cabinet meeting at the Prime Minister's residence has been approved. Now a foreigner with 17 hours prior to the Covid-19 negative report can travel to Nepal. The foreigner is no longer required to stay seven days of hotel quarantine. However, tourists should undergo an instant PCR test at Tribhuwan International Airport. The government also plans to waive off 500$ COVID Insurance but the foreigner should assure that they will cover their medical expenses themselves. Foreigners fulfilling the criteria will be provided on arrival visas at the airport after October 17. The Ministry of Culture, Tourism and Civil Aviation has confirmed that they are ready to issue new protocols for tourists visiting Nepal and the protocols will be released after confirming with the Covid-19 Crisis Management Centre. Source: The Himalayan Times

Monday, September 21, 2020

Snow Leopard Ang Rita Sherpa passed away at the age of 72

Ang Rita Sherpa, popularly known as the ‘snow leopard’ in the mountaineering community, has passed away this morning, according to family sources.
Ang Rita Sherpa (Snow Leopard) He was 72. “The legendary climber breathed his last at around 10:40am at his residence in Jorpati,” his neighbor Mingma Sherpa, who is also chairman at Yambu Thamichho Kydug, confirmed. Ang Rita is survived by two sons and a daughter. The reason behind his death is not known yet. Sherpa was awarded a Guinness World Record certificate for making the most number of successful ascents on Mt Everest without using the supplemental oxygen. Sherpa made it to the top of the world for the 10th time in 1996 without using bottled oxygen. Ang Rita reached the summit of Mt Everest eight times via the Southeast Ridge route, according to a record maintained by the Department of Tourism. Ang Rita has received two Guinness World Records for the most climbs of Mt Everest without supplementary oxygen i.e 10 times and the ”His first winter climb of Mt Everest without supplementary oxygen was in 1987.”

Saturday, September 12, 2020

Lonely Planet ranks Nepal’s Everest base camp as 4th best trek in the world

  Lonely Planet ranks Nepal’s Everest base camp as 4th best trek in the world

The trail passes through Sherpa villages, glaciers, and finally to the lap of Mt Everest, the world's highest mountain.

The Everest base camp trek that passes through Sherpa villages, glaciers, and finally to the lap of the world's highest mountain–Mt Everest–has been ranked 4th best treks in the world by Lonely Planet, the leading travel guide book publisher in the world.

‘The 10 best treks in the world’ updated in June 2020 by the guidebook says everybody wants a glimpse of the world’s highest mountain and that’s the reason why the Everest base camp trek has become so popular.

“Reaching a height of 5,545m (18,193ft) at Kala Pattar, this two-three-week trek is extremely popular, thanks to its spectacular scenery but also romanticism; successful trekkers are able to proudly say they've stood at the base of the world's highest mountain,” the guidebook said.

The trail threads between small, characterful mountain villages en route to the famous campground and are trafficked by Sherpa people of the Solu Khumbu.

“The heights reached during this trek are literally dizzying until you acclimatize to the altitude, and the continuous cutting across valleys certainly has its ups and downs. Be warned: prime trekking season brings serious crowds.”

Most of the trek is through the Sagarmatha National Park, a UNESCO World Heritage Site (Sagarmatha is the Nepali name for Everest) and a refuge for musk deer, snow leopard, Himalayan tahr, black bear, and many spectacular types of iridescent pheasant.

Among the top 10 lists of the world's best trek, Everest base camp trek trails behind the GR20 trail that goes through Corsica, France diagonally from North to South; Inca Trail in Peru and Pays Dogon in Mali, one of Africa’s most breathtaking regions.

Other best treks are—the Indian Himalayas in India; Routeburn Track in New Zealand; Overland Track in Australia; the Narrows in the US; the Haute Route in France-Switzerland and Baltoro Glacier & K2 in Pakistan.

The travel guidebook says that these 10 classic treks are amongst the best on the planet; all of them require a sturdy pair of lungs, fit legs, and a good amount of preparation. But the reward is an experience that lasts a lifetime.

According to Lonely Planet, Mount Everest has captivated intrepid men and women since the 1920s. The exploits of legends such as George Mallory, Sir Edmund Hillary, and Tenzing Norgay Sherpa put the mighty mountain on the map; thousands have followed, making huge sacrifices – many with their lives – in their own attempts to the summit.

But today, the trek to Everest base camp has become an achievable goal for people from all walks of life who want a glimpse of the world’s highest peak. In 2018, more than 56,000 people trekked in the Everest region.

Wednesday, September 2, 2020

With no clear plan from the government, Nepal may remain closed for tourists until 2020-end

 With no clear plan from the government, Nepal may remain closed for tourists until 2020-end

With the festival season approaching and a large number of Nepalis, including migrant workers expected to return home, government officials said it will be difficult to manage tourists.

With the coronavirus spikes showing no sign of abating anytime soon, Nepal is likely to remain shut for foreign tourists until the end of this year.

But as the country is bracing for a major festival season, there is a high chance of people’s movement, not just within the country but also internationally.

Officials at the Tourism Ministry say given the festive season, which will mean Nepalis in hordes will be arriving, it will be difficult to manage foreign tourists in light of the rising number of Covid-19 cases.

“We expect Nepalis, including migrant workers, to return home soon,” said an official at the ministry, who did not wish to be named. “The situation is that the country is experiencing a rapid spread of the virus.”

According to him, sooner or later, an announcement is likely.

After five months, Nepal opened its skies for international flights starting Tuesday, allowing limited regular passenger and chartered flights. Only Nepalis and diplomats and employees of development partners are allowed to fly into Nepal for now.

The government’s move to continue with restrictions on foreign holidaymakers even after resuming international flights has renewed worries of travel trade entrepreneurs.

In a statement on Sunday, the Nepal Association Tour Operators called on the government to quickly come up with a plan to save the 1.05 million jobs which are in danger of being lost, some permanently, in the tourism industry.

The association said that tourism-related businesses have been operating on negative cash flow since late March and this is not a situation that can be sustained for long.

“Most indicators are that tourism’s road to recovery will be long and drawn out with traveller numbers reaching 2019 levels only in 2024,” said the association. “Travel industry sector companies cannot be expected to sustain themselves for such a long time without active support from the government.”

As of Tuesday, Nepal has reported 40,529 coronavirus cases and 239 deaths. As many as 1,069 new cases were reported across the country on Tuesday, with a record 481 in Kathmandu Valley. Tuesday’s death toll was 11.

Even though the government decided to lift the lockdown on July 21, the health and foreign affairs ministries were not positive about opening the country for foreign tourists, according to Tourism Ministry officials.

“During Covid-19 Crisis Management Centre meetings, the Foreign Affairs Ministry reiterates that it cannot afford to issue on-arrival visas for foreigners at this time of crisis. Health Ministry officials, too, support this view saying that it’s not an appropriate time to host tourists,” a tourism ministry official said on condition of anonymity because he is not allowed to speak to the media.

At a time when the pandemic has upended daily life across the globe, travel and tourism industries worldwide are struggling, and the situation is no different in Nepal, say industry insiders

However, they have been calling on the government to at least come up with some work plan for the road to recovery.

“Most of the countries are clear regarding the timetable to open up for tourists, and that assures the travel trade industry to be well prepared,” said Ashok Pokhrel, president of Nepal Association Tour Operators, the umbrella organisation representing tour operators. “But in our case, decisions have been made without enough thought.”

The Indonesian island of Bali recently announced that it will not open to foreign tourists this year due to coronavirus concerns.

Similarly, Thailand has announced restricting tourists to many major sights in the country until 2021. However, last week, Thailand announced it hopes to allow limited numbers of international travellers to visit certain parts of the country from October through a programme called ‘Safe and Sealed’.

China had last week announced a temporary ban on all foreign visitors, even if they have visas or residence permits. The northern neighbour is also limiting each Chinese and foreign airline to one flight per week.

“We know how weak our health infrastructure system is. In this scenario, we cannot assure our foreign clients to come but the least the government can do is come up with a precise plan,” said Pokhrel. “And amid this, the government comes up with revised decisions every week, adding to our confusion.”

On July 20, the government said that international and domestic flights will resume from August 17, and asked the travel and tourism industry to take bookings for the autumn tourism season accordingly.

A month later, on August 21, the government decided to resume chartered and regular passenger flights from September 1.

However, only Nepalis and diplomats and employees of development partners would be allowed to fly into Nepal, with restrictions on foreign tourists until further notice, the Cabinet decided.

Then on Sunday, the government decided not to open domestic flights until September 16.

Meanwhile, Tourism Ministry Joint Secretary Buddhi Sagar Lamichhane said they have revised the list of chartered and regular flights scheduled to slightly increase the flight frequencies after criticism from Nepali missions abroad, saying that that would delay the rescue of stranded Nepali workers.

On August 10, the government had capped the daily arrivals at 500 individuals, which prompted airlines to jack up airfares due to limited availability of seats. The Cabinet meeting on Sunday decided to increase this to 800 individuals.

“Flights have been increased keeping in mind particularly foreign companies sending Nepali workers to Nepal at their own expenses,” said Lamichanne. “Such companies have to request Nepal beforehand to operate the flights required to repatriate Nepali migrant workers.”

Travel and tourism operators say they are hoping that the government will come up with something, given how the economy has taken a beating.

The tourism sector contributes around 8 per cent to the economy and provides jobs to around a million of people.

A study entitled Rapid Assessment of the Social and Economic Impacts of Covid-19, commissioned by the UN Development Programme in Nepal and conducted by the Institute for Integrated Development Studies, said with international travel restrictions and fall in discretionary disposable incomes worldwide, tourism receipts in Nepal are projected to fall by 60 per cent in 2020, resulting in a loss of foreign currency earnings worth $400 million.

Similarly, Nepal’s central bank’s survey shows that the four-month-long lockdown imposed by the government has forced the hotel and restaurant industry, which saw almost zero visitors since the lockdown, to lay off 40 per cent of employees. According to the survey, hotels and restaurants cut employees’ salaries by 36.4 per cent.

Arrivals during the months of April, May, June and July numbered 13, 30, 100 and 195 individuals respectively, almost all of the diplomatic personnel. Nepal welcomed more than 70,000 visitors during each of these four months last year.

The tourism industry has never seen such a catastrophe since the first foreign sightseers began arriving in the 1950s after Nepal opened its doors to the world establishing direct air links with several Indian cities.

Tourism entrepreneurs say things weren't this bad even during the Maoist insurgency from 1996 to 2006 and the aftermath of the 2015 earthquakes.

The virus has dealt a knockout blow, and the once-booming tourism sector is unlikely to get back on its feet any time soon, travel trade entrepreneurs say.

Pokhrel, the tour operator, said that the government should say clearly how long the country would have to restrict the foreign tourists.

“The announcement, at least, will clear doubt that the tourism industry will open or not.”

Saturday, August 29, 2020

India to Honor Mountaineer Who Faked Everest Summit?

India to Honor Mountaineer Who Faked Everest Summit?

Here’s an interesting story brought to my attention courtesy of the Adventure Mountain blog. The site, which is run by longtime adventure sports journalists Stephen Nestler, says that on Sunday, India will hand out its annual National Sports Awards for 2020. Among those being honored is a young man by the name of Narender Singh Yadav, who claims to have climbed Mt. Everest back in 2016 at the age of 21. That would make him the youngest Indian summiteer ever, granting him celebrity status and great opportunities I his home country. The problem is, it seems that Singh Yadav never reached the top at all and even went so far as to photoshop his alleged summit photo.

According to the Indian mountaineer—who says he has climbed five of the Seven Summits—he reached the highest point on the planet on the morning of May 2o, 2016. But, his expedition Sherpa was none other than Lhakpa Sherpa, who adamantly denies that Singh Yadav summited with him that day. In fact, there are reports that he never reached higher than The Balcony on the South Col route, which would put him at roughly 8400 meters (27,559 ft). It takes a big effort to reach that point on the mountain, but it also well below the summit.

If that wasn’t enough, several other Sherpas—including Nims Purja—say that they assisted Singh Yadav on the decent, providing him with emergency oxygen bottles to help him reach Camp 4. Despite the fact that a number of people have spoken out about this, Singh Yadav’s claims have largely gone unchallenged back home, thanks to what Lhakpa Sherpa calls “dirty politics.”

As further proof of the Indian’s false claims, Nepalese newspaper Ekantipur recently took a look at Singh Yadav’s summit photo. What they found was something akin to one of those “spot the things that are wrong” puzzles. The obvious highlights were the fact that the young man was wearing a climate helmet on the summit, fake shadows pointing in the wrong direction, and an oxygen mask that doesn’t have a tube attached, amongst other issues. Clearly the photo was forged, casting further doubts on the young man’s summit claims. Check it out above to have a good laugh.

Despite all of this evidence however, Singh Yadav is still set to receive his award from the Indian government. The irony of it is, that award is called the “Tenzing Norgay National Adventure Adventure Award,” obviously named after the Sherpa who was the first to climb Everest alongside Sir Edmund Hillary in 1953. As you can imagine, that hasn’t sat well with Nepali climbers. Whether or not that really matters remains to be seen.