Nepal - The Aftermath - One year on

Suzanne Partridge on 27 June 2018
Namaste! A couple of years ago I went back to one of my favourite countries – Nepal – to see first-hand how the country was doing after the devastating earthquake in April 2015.

The main thing to project to everyone is Nepal is back in business! The trekking routes have been quieter this season, but all the trails have been inspected by outside experts and found to be unaffected apart from the Langtang area which was in the epicentre of the earthquake. I would encourage clients to visit Nepal now. My trip started by flying to Kathmandu via Delhi with Jet Airways. We were lucky enough to be upgraded to business class which was superb as it was a night flight. Very comfy flat beds – so good that I missed all the excellent meals whilst in a deep slumber and before we knew it – we were in the airport collecting our bags and getting our first sight of chaotic Kathmandu. Intrepid Travel were our kind hosts on this educational tour for travel consultants and they had a fantastic location for their hotel – Kathmandu Guest House – right in the heart of the city’s famous Thamel district. The garden was particularly good to relax in after the journey and a welcome serene space away from the hustle and bustle of the streets outside. I was enthralled to learn this famous guest house was the starting point for many mountaineers in the past – including the UK’s very own Chris Bonington. Thamel was as industrious as ever with people trying to sell their wares (50p woollen hats anyone) and with the same magical bookshops I remember visiting in my youth as well all the cafes and restaurants offering excellent coffee, lassi yoghurt drinks and Tibetan/Chinese dumplings. Oh, and great slabs of carrot cake for all those would be hikers! I was in heaven.

The next morning heralded a tour around Kathmandu. The name means City of Wooden Temples – all intricately carved by master craftsmen in their day. Some of the tourist sights are naturally being re-built after the earthquake and some of them will be ready for the next trekking season in the autumn. Other sights, for example many of the damaged monuments in Durbar Square, will be carefully re-constructed brick by brick and may take many more years to re-construct but there is still plenty to see that survived the tremors. I was pleased to find that the main sights still had the same atmosphere especially in Boudhanath, a revered Buddhist pilgrimage site, where the monks were still turning their prayer wheels and chanting whilst walking clockwise round the biggest stupa in the world with its myriad of fluttering prayer flags. The next day we had an early start for our flight to Pokhara and we had glorious views of the mighty Himalayas peeking through the clouds. Quite magical. Our guide Satya named every single peak he could see on the plane and told us how high each one was. We then drove on the new road to Milanchowk where we started our short trek to Hyanjakot. The stunning scenery of verdant stepped hillsides and our meetings with friendly locals will be with us for a long time to come. One of the locals we met claimed to be over 90 years old, but he was so fit from all that daily hill-walking albeit with a good stout stick.

The traditional villages we passed through were in the Annapurna foothills and on a good day you have panoramic views of Machapuchare – the Fish Tail Mountain – from certain hilltops. This particular mountain is sacred to the locals and no one is allowed to climb this peak. We lodged in a very ethnic homestay and the locals put on a splendid Nepalese evening of music and dance. Just what the doctor ordered after all that walking and most of us still all had the energy to join in with the festivities after a couple of cool beers.

In the morning we sampled a traditional Nepalese breakfast and said our farewells to the family who hosted us before heading down the hillside through forested tracks on a different path to our bus. We then spent the rest of the day in Pokhara which is in a glorious location with the mountains surrounding the huge Phewa lake. I was determined to make the most of my time here and encouraged my buddies to sample the fantastic work of the ‘Seeing Hands’ team whom are all blind but have been trained by a UK charity to practice amazing massage on our weary limbs.

Finally, we took our leave and travelled south alongside the Dudh Kosi river to Chitwan National Park in the lowlands of Nepal. Here we had a lovely comfortable chalet in the grounds of Hotel Royal Park.

Another early start meant we got to see the best of the wildlife on our jeep safari. The guides were superb in their ability to spot kingfishers, hooded vultures, eagles, elephants, water buffalo, spotted deer, grey langur monkeys, wild boar and a sloth bear amongst others.

The park also boasts leopards and the elusive Royal Bengal Tigers. We did see tracks that a tiger had made an hour before we got there. The excitement of numerous endangered one horn rhinos was so great that I got to get a selfie with my face and his cheeks from the safety of the vehicle!

After lunch we spent a couple of hours floating down the Rapti river in a dugout wooden canoe to see and spot the myriad birdlife, huge mugger crocodiles and unique long nosed gharial crocodiles which only eat fish (apparently). One of the mugger crocs just lay like a statue on the bank with its jaw open (to keep itself cool) as we passed quietly by trying not to make a sound. We rounded off our Chitwan experience with a night of Nepali songs and dancing with a rather good impersonation of a peacock thrown in.

Our incredible guide Satya who led our Nepal trip with Intrepid wrote to us afterwards and said how we had helped some of the Nepali people who had been directly affected by the earthquake, losing their families in some cases and their homes in others. It was great to feel we had made a small difference to their livelihoods. Small group tourism is an excellent way to raise the standard of living as many more Nepali people are benefited by this type of ‘grass-roots’ travel where local guides are employed, and visitors stay in locally-owned guest-houses. The warmth of this country is so infectious, and it is indeed one of my favourites. I will be back!