Search Books
Coast to Coast Path, 4th: B… Café Theology

Nepal Trekking & the Great Himalaya Trail

Author Robin Boustead
Publisher Trailblazer Publications
Category Paperback
📄 Viewing lite version Full site ›
🌎 Shop on Amazon — choose country
9.18 USD
🛒 Buy New on Amazon 🇺🇸 🏷 Buy Used — $9.18

✓ In stock

Share:
Book Details
ISBN / ASIN1905864310
ISBN-139781905864317
AvailabilityIn stock
Sales Rank437
CategoryPaperback
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

Route and planning guide to the best trekking in Nepal – This guide includes the most popular routes as well as the newest trekking areas for true trailblazers. Extensive planning sections to help visitors choose a trek. Also includes the new Great Himalaya Trail.

The three main trekking regions, Everest, Annapurna and Langtang attract tens of thousands of trekkers every year. Facilities have never been better and easily rival those found in Europe. Trails are well maintained and safe, and the locals will welcome you with genuine friendliness that will make your heart melt.

            The other two-thirds of Nepal’s mountain terrain is normally considered ‘off-the-beaten-track’. From the lush rhododendron forests of the east to the dense woodlands of the west there is wilderness and remote communities that have remained relatively untouched. In 2002, the Nepali government reconciled all border disputes with its northern neighbor China. This de-militarized seven border areas and for the first time in over fifty years tourists were allowed to explore them. All of these areas offer unique trekking opportunities, as many resemble the now popular regions as they were thirty or more years ago. They also tend to be next to the major trekking routes so it’s possible to design itineraries combining old and new routes thus making your holiday a more ‘complete’ Nepali experience.

One of the great trekking ‘holy grails’ has been a potential route, through the remotest peaks of the entire Himalaya, which joins all the major trekking regions. The author is the first to person to survey, plot and describe such a route, which is called the Great Himalaya Trail (GHT). The Nepal section of the GHT would take about 160 days of continuous walking so it is broken into sections for convenience.

Please Try to Remember the First of Octember
View
The Bear Scouts
View
Pyramid
View
Love is Walking Hand in Hand
View
Dr. Karyn's Guide To The Teen Years
View
For Whom the Bell Tolls
View
Cricket World Cup Pocket Annual 1999
View
Rainbow Warrior
View
The Alpine Flowers of Britain and Europe
View