It’s impossible to encapsulate the essence of Nepal in a single blog entry. However, with that been said, I’ll give it a go. Pour yourself a cup of tea, sit back and enjoy the ride.
The adventure began on the 19th February, the very day my visa expired. The time had flown by - I remember returning from Cambodia with a one year Ed-visa like it was yesterday. After a 20min stroll to Chiang Mai airport I changed 50,000THB to $1500 and boarded a 3hr flight to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
On the plane I got talking to Areerak, a hotel owner from Chiang Khong on her way to Sri Lanka. I mention this because I've seldom met Thai female solo travellers and it was my last chance to speak the lingo for the next 36 days.
Malaysia
Going through Malay immigration I started feeling a pain in my right leg and lower back. Sciatica! Where the lower spine compresses the sciatic nerve radiating pain through the back and leg. After only 10mins of walking the pain was excruciating which didn’t bode well for a trekking holiday!
The main reason for going to KL was to apply for a non-b visa at the Thai Embassy. I arrived Friday morning with a rainforest of paper and met Kiwi Graeme who appeared to have two rainforests of paper. Turns out he'd just married a Thai lass and was applying for a non-o visa. We met the following Monday for a coffee and were relieved to collect our passports replete with visas despite being 220RM ($75) lighter in the pocket.
I always enjoy Malaysia but KL (like most big cities) will not win any beauty awards. I stayed in the excellent Oasis GH - the same place I stayed when I unsuccessfully applied for a Chinese Zvisa in Feb 2009. This was a pivotal time as I ended up binning China in favour of Thailand and have remained here ever since.



Nepal
"Never Ending Peace And Love" is how a local lad summed up his country on the arduous bus trip from Kathmandhu to Pokhara. On reflection, an apt acronym.
It began with a 4hr flight from KL to Kathmandu. However, we pointlessly circled the city for an age making it closer to 6hrs. As soon as you step off the plane you can't fail to notice the contrast between KL's futuristic airport and Kathmandu's cattle shed where I saw a boy walking a goat with a string lead. In the ensuing chaos we managed to obtain a 30day visa on arrival for $40.

Kathmandu
The mere name Kathmandu evokes visions of the exotic - where the Himalayas, Buddhism and Hinduism fuse against a backdrop of poverty and chaos. Riding through the Nepalese capital of over two million souls you can't help but be shocked by the piles of rubble, poverty, dust and trash in Nepal's fastest growing conurbation.

It was wet and cold and I was still in Thai attire so I bought a jacket ($25), fleece ($10), boots ($45) and hat ($1.50) from the dozens of trekking shops in bustling Thamel. Most of the gear is fake but at those prices nobody was complaining. I sent a postcard to Fatha but realised I'd forgotten to write ENGLAND on the address just after I'd shoved it into the postbox. I wonder if it'll make it?
Medical
A tough old lady massaged my sciatic spine ($20/hr) but I was writhing in agony by the end. The next day was spent limping around looking for a local doctor but they were all closed (Saturday – the Hindu day off). I ended up in a dodgy pharmacy applying magic oil to my back in a small room behind a secret Harry Potter door that was part of the shelving. The $6 anesthetic oil burned like hell and smelt like mustard but the locals swear by it.
I tried my luck at the CIWEC clinic opposite the British Embassy but baulked at the $95 price tag to talk to a doctor. Two tough looking Nepalese soldiers ordered me (at gun point) to delete the photos I’d taken of the Union Jack fluttering at the Embassy's prison-like gates. I detest governments and their monopoly on the use of force.
Pokhara


Abnormal

1. The flag of Nepal is the world's only non-quadrilateral national flag.
2. Nepal is the world's only independent country that is 45 minutes ahead of or 15 minutes behind a standard time zone (GMT+5.45).
Sarangkot

We hired a motorbike and rode 8km and 1592m up Sarangkot Hill for views of the Pokhara Valley and the Himalayan peaks.

We stayed at the Center Inn Lake for $8/night ($4 each). The young lad on reception is studying physics in college so we worked on some kinematic problems together. He says this is the first time a guest has ever helped him. I’m not surprised – he still owes me a beer.




Motorbike


I hired a nearly new (only 5000km) Indian-built Pulsar 180cc ($11/day), filled it with petrol (8L $9) and rode it 80km west to Baglung with glorious views of the Himalayas.





Holi Day


After a week in Pokhara my back was much better and we were finally ready to start trekking. But first we needed our TIMS and ACAP. “What the hell are TIMS and ACAP?” I hear you ask. Well, they’re the Trekking Information Management System and Annapurna Conservation Area Permit. You need both to proceed, they costs $20 each and the Nepalese government nets another $40 on top of the $40 visa fee. Multiply these figures by the millions of tourists passing through and, voila, you have a ludicrously transparent money-making farce. None of the funds raised are funding infrastructure projects I can tell you. There isn't a pavement in the whole country. More likely a few nice Mercs in the capital. I detest governments and their monopoly on expensive red tape. End rant.

I saw a few parabolic solar kettles here. My students are always moaning that we never use maths in the real world. Well how about this? An excellent use of quadratics (y=x^2/4d where d is the focal length). Beautiful.
Trekking





This panoramic shot from Poon Hill is from my phone camera!! You can see Dhaulagiri to the left, the 7th highest mountain in the world at 8,167m (26,795ft in old money). The Annapurna massif is to the right.






Another random shot of Fishtail with its twin summits resembling the tail of a fish - supposedly.

This little lass followed me for most of a brutal 1000m descent from Kot Danda to Jinhu. She only wore flipflops yet displayed superior speed and agility on the tortuous trail. This was the best smile she could manage - I got the feeling she hadn't smiled much in her life.





At 8091m Annapurna I is the world's 10th highest mountain. Since the first ascent in 1950 it's only been climbed by 130 people and 53 have died trying making it the most deadly. For every 10 that try, 4 die!
Even though I'm at the 4130m Base Camp (takes days to get here) - the peak is still 8km away (horizontally) and 4km further up. It still felt like I could touch the glaciers running down the gullies.


In the room at ABC there was snow half way up the window with icicles for decoration. During the night I went to the toilet only to find the water frozen! I marveled at the starry night sky - millions of diamonds glittering on black velvet. The Milky Way was clearly visible - the best star gazing since Mongolia! I didn’t sleep a wink because of the altitude and subzero temperatures. A tad cooler than Thailand!


Forget any romantic notions you might have about being alone in the wilderness. Annapurna is spectacularly beautiful but it’s this very beauty that draws trekkers from all over the globe. Around 130,000 tourists visited the ACA in 2014. I’m glad I came in low season but it was still crowded on the trails at times. A bit different to Scotland’s West Highland Way – that’s for sure.
Here's a summary of the 110km trek:
Day
|
Where
|
Time
|
Notes
|
1
|
Nayapul - Ulleri
|
6hrs
|
Very slow. Steep
ascent to Ulleri.
|
2
|
Ulleri – Ban Thanti
|
9hrs
|
Via Poon Hill.
|
3
|
Ban Thanti - Jhinu
|
7hrs
|
Via Kot Danda – a
nasty 1000m descent to Jhinu. Excellent hot springs.
|
4
|
Jinhu - Dovan
|
7hrs
|
An easy day – lots
of up and down initially.
|
5
|
Dovan - ABC
|
7hrs
|
Tough going in the
snow after Deurali
|
6
|
ABC – Chomrong
|
8hrs
|
Crazy distance day
|
7
|
Chomrong - Kande
|
8hrs
|
Final night at
Australian Camp. Strange to hear traffic again.
|
110km in 7 days doesn’t sound much but the steep inclines sap your energy. Hardly any of it’s flat. Additionally, the thinner oxygen at higher altitudes leaves you gasping for breath. I ran a sub-two-hour half-marathon in December but this trek felt more of an achievement. Most people take 11-14 days.
There are no roads in the ACA and it was blissful not hearing an engine (or horn). I also enjoyed a week 'offline' - rare in today's world. Returning to Pokhara was a bit of a shock. The hustle and bustle left me disorientated.

If you ever eat chicken in the Himalayas spare a thought for the blokes that carry it up.

What a superb finale!
I even made an 8min video and stuck it on youtube to commemorate the event.

Nepal is a small
nation sandwiched between the Asian giants of China and India. However, in one
day you can travel from Arctic Annapurna on the Tibetan Plateau to Tropical Lumbini
on the Indo-Gangetic Plain and the Indian border. A journey of less than 200km.
The Buddha
was born in Lumbini (with a B) and this is where Bangkok’s Lumpini Park (with a P) gets its name! I paid 200NPR and entered with a group of Burmese
pilgrims.
It's a meditative place where you can't help contemplating a man born 2578 years ago. His legacy continues to influence large swathes of humanity. The Thai calendar begins 2558 years ago when the Buddha became enlightened around the age of 20.


A spiritual experience like this is difficult to describe. Suffice to say I'm pleased I made the effort.
Buses
Buses
Nepal's road network, like its electricity supply, is woeful! I travelled a total of 675km in 27hrs. That's about the same distance as Newcastle to Plymouth. 675km in 27hrs is an average speed of 25km/h. To put that into perspective, Usain Bolt runs at 36km/h. 25km/h is only 15mph in old money.
Where
|
Distance
|
Time
|
Price
|
Katmandhu - Pokhara
|
200km
|
8hrs
|
$7
|
Pokhara – Lumbini
|
190km
|
8hrs
|
$8
|
Lumbini - Katmandhu
|
285km
|
11hrs
|
$12
|
Total
|
675km
|
27hrs
|
$27
|
For the last trip I splashed out on a VIP tourist bus after the bone-shaker from Pokhara to Lumbini. I was the only 'tourist', it broke down, the AC didn't work, the advertised WIFI was non-existent and it dropped us off on the outskirts of Katmandhu. Every single bus in Nepal has TOURIST and WIFI emblazoned on them - but it's all BS - not one single bus is exclusively for tourists and none of them have WIFI.
Poverty
Nepal has never won an Olympic medal. It ranks 177th out of 195 countries on the CIA's GDP/capita chart. Only African countries are lower. Even Cambodia is 24 places ahead in 153rd. This makes Nepal the poorest country I have visited.
This probably explains the dreadful roads, the lack of electricity, the piles of rubble, the litter and the begging. I'd be lying if I said Nepal wasn't a shithole. Remote areas are OK but urban areas are minging - very Third World.
Arriving in KL after 28 days in Nepal felt like I'd time-travelled 1000 years into the future. There were 377 people on the flight from Katmandhu - most of them Nepali immigrant labour. I couldn't help but wonder what they made of KL's modern infrastructure - it must have blown their minds.
However, I really enjoyed myself there. Perhaps I've been away from the developed world for too long? I wish Nepal and its people the best of luck in the future. They're fantastic hosts but they have a long way to go.
Budget
Item
|
Cost
|
Return Flights
CNX KUL KTM
|
$580
|
Visas
Thai ($75)
Nepal ($40)
|
$115
|
Clothes
Boots ($45)
Jacket ($25)
Fleece ($10)
Hat ($2)
|
$92
|
Permits
ACAP ($20)
TIMS ($20)
|
$40
|
Motorbike
Rent ($11)
Petrol ($9)
Part ($16)
|
$36
|
36 nights room, food
and misc.
|
$737
|
Total
|
$1600
|
A 5 week trip of a lifetime for $1600, £1070 or 52,000THB. Not bad. I left Chiang Mai with $1500 spending money and returned with $500. Enough for a night at the shop, a MaeHongSon loop, a well-deserved massage and anything else that might spring to mind.
Conclusion
After flying 9,940km, bussing 675km and trekking 110km; after 36 nights and $1600 I find myself back in Chiang Mai. It's the first time I've ever felt homesick. I've missed the food, the lingo, the weather, the pool, the 24/7 electricity, the motorbike, drinking at the shop, my friends and sunset jogs at the park. It was a fantastic adventure but it's good to be back.
Lingo
I didn't pick much up but Nepali uses the exotic Devanagari script like India.
तपाईंलाई कस्तो छ = Tapai lai costa ka = How are you
धन्यवाद = Dan ya vat = Thank you
Sounds like quite the adventure Stephen! Must have been quite something to motorcycle off on your own and I think you're pretty courageous to do that in a place you don't know. Would you do it all again? Can't tell if you enjoyed the overall experience or not...
ReplyDeleteGreat photos! If I have any tip it would be to make them bigger on the site cause they're really great.
Frank (bbqboy)