An adventure in Nepal
We would not consider ourselves to be
adventurous people. At home, we are not naturally inclined to participate in
adrenalin inducing activities. Booked through a third party in India, we did
not really know what our tour in Nepal encompassed and went quite blindly into
it all. But read our story about our visit to Nepal below, and you be the judge of whether this
could be considered an adventure.
Our tour company, Himalayan Social Journey, had it all in
hand and made all the arrangements for us to have nine great days in Nepal. The
briefing on the planned activities definitely surprised us, and against our
natural instinct, we decided to trust their judgment and participate in the
suggested activities.
Our second day in Kathmandu started with an
early morning flight on a small 30-seater plane. It was a majestic one-hour
scenic flight over Mt. Everest and the range surrounding it. The US$200 price
per person was not in our original budget, but considering we were in Nepal,
seeing Everest was just something we could not miss.
Views of the Himalayas from our scenic flight to Mt. Everest |
On the third day, on the way to Chitwan
National Park, we stopped to do some white water rafting on the Trishuli River. It is
luckily quite warm in Nepal in May, so even though the water splashing all over
you with each rapid is cold, the sun quickly warms you up.
View of the Trishuli River when we stopped for lunch after a busy morning of rafting |
The following day we were up early again to
take a canoe ride for bird watching in croc infested waters. The crocs are all
around you and with all ten of us weighing the long wooden boat down, we were
all a little nervous of tumbling over and becoming breakfast.
Next, we took a guided walk in the jungle
in the hope that we would spot some game, including a tiger. We heard later
that another group on the same walk as us that day were charged by a wild boar
and the guide was injured. Our wild boar spotting was of one running in the
opposite direction - he must have known not to mess with Africans.
A group of travellers from Namibia and South Africa taking a jungle walk with our two guides |
We also saw a rhino taking a lazy swim. At
first, we would not believe our guide that it was a rhino until we were only a
few meters away - from a distance, it just looked like a log in the lake.
Unfortunately, we never saw any tigers, but that is a great legitimate reason
to return one day.
The whole afternoon was used for a guided
game drive. As we started, the first rains they have had in nine months, came
pouring down. The thunderstorm continued for the next two hours leaving us
thoroughly drenched while perched on the top of the open vehicle. When the sun
eventually came out, the thick layers of dust had been washed off, and the rays
lit up a beautiful bright green forest that made it all worthwhile.
Our Rhino spotting in Chitwan National Park after the sun came out on our game drive |
However, after all these activities nothing
got our adrenalin going like the bus trip along on the national highway. You
can't prepare yourself mentally for the narrow roads undergoing construction on a mountain pass.
The nail-biting traffic negotiations ended up being the most terrifying
activity of our Nepalese adventure.
Sounds amazing, what an experience. Never been to Nepal, but I must say that I don't miss driving on rural roads at break neck speeds... Scary!
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ReplyDeleteDankie vir die lekker opsomming van ons trip saam! 'n Mens beleef sommer alles wees oor.
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