Long voyage en Inde, courte préparation
by Myj
This discussion is in French, the community’s main language.
Original post
Bonjour
Je pars très prochainement en inde, étant expert de la dernière minute j'ai quelque petit problème.
Lundi ou mardi ma demande de visa 1 an sera déposé, j'ignore la durée exacte de mon voyage mais je veux pas être pressé.
Pas de trajet prévu, préfère vivre au jour le jour mais voila j'ai appris qu'on ne peut rester dans le pays plus de 90 jours de suite et qu'il faut passé 2 mois hors du territoire pour revenir.
Je m'attendais pas à ça, donc avec le visa 1 an on fait au mieu 8 mois en inde en un an.
Au début je voulais absolument commencer par le nord (? ...je sais pas) et aux files des discussions lues ici je me suis plutôt orienté vers le sud pour commencé, n'avais pas pensé qu'il pouvait faire froid en inde. :p
Pour l'instan je compte atterrire à chennai
Il faut donc visité un/des pays frontalité, budget limité temps illimité, vaut mieu évité l'avion.
Le probleme c'est les 2 mois, il faut un visa pour rester plus d'un mois dans un pays donc si je veut pas m'embeté avec ça (qui serait l'ideal) il faut en visiter plusieurs avant de pouvoir revenir en inde.
Ce qui etait un voyage en inde devien un voyage de l'asie du sud, c'est pas l'idée de départ mais pourquoi pas.
alors ou aller?
Je sais pas encore, se sera par une chaude période pour aller au nord, si je n'ai pas d'idée d'ici là, sans doute traversé le Myanmar et rendre visite à un ami en Thaïlande.
La question c'est avec quoi partir, adepte des grandes marche avec mon sac de voyage, vaut mieu qu'il soit léger.
lors de mon précédent voyage (6 ou7 mois Thaïlande/laos) j'étais chargé inutilement et le sac à un système air zone au dos qui fait que le poids du sac est bien en arreiere, pas confortable, je crois qu'il va être changé.
J'ai des vues sur le lowepro fastpack 350 un peu trop petit mais j'ai pas encore trouve plus gros dans le genre.
Je n'avais pas de sac de couchage, que ce soit dans les trains ou dans des petits coins du lao et Thaïlande, il y avait toujours des draps propres et je dors souvent au moins chere, l'indispensable sac de couchage est-il toujours d'actualité en inde?
cette fois-ci je pars avec un poids de 3.5 kg de base, reflex et mini Pc portable, j'ai conscience de la gene et ça m'embête un peu mais bon, donc pour compensé j'aimerais le minimum vital à côté.
je m'étais fait une petite liste qui a été raccourci quand j'ai réalisé qu'il faudra que mon sac passe en cabine, pas de couteau, coupe ongle, pelle chinoise etc. : p.
Mini-trousse de toilette, une petite serviette, mini-trousse de secours(je sais pas quoi y mettre, ça ne me sert jamais), petite lampe, une boussole, le lonely, une paire de chaussures (m'embête grandement (faut nettoyé les chaussettes) ça prend de la place vu que je suis toujours en tong) et peu voire pas de vêtement vu que je ferai quelque achat sur place, après je vois plus quoi prendre, vous voyez un gros manque?
j'hésite un peu sur un petit système Gps ce qui me faciliterait la tache en évitant tout plein de carte mais je dois mal chercher car tous ceux qui me plaisent c'est pour l'Europe.
des connaisseurs?
oups petit pavé je m'arrete la :p
conseil et remarque feront plaisir
merci d'avoir lue🙂
Salut,
Tu dis qu'on ne peut pas rester + de 90 jours de suite ? Ayant été trois fois en Inde, le visas à toujours été de 6 mois donc le double de ce que tu dis. A moins qu'il y ai eu des modifs de durée ? Ou as tu trouvé cette info ?
Pour l'inde franchement oubli le sac de couchage, à chaque fois j'ai pris un sac à viande et la moustiquaire. En montagne il fait froid (si tu y vas) mais il y a des couvertures, sinon ailleurs il fait assez chaud comme ça.
Pour l'inde franchement oubli le sac de couchage, à chaque fois j'ai pris un sac à viande et la moustiquaire. En montagne il fait froid (si tu y vas) mais il y a des couvertures, sinon ailleurs il fait assez chaud comme ça.
Stéphane:
http://photos.nazgul.fr
Bonjour Jean-Yves,
Pour les pays frontière, tu passes sans problème au Népal , mais tu devras prendre un visa à la frontière . Prends en compte qu'il y fait froid en décembre, janvier et février (15 à 20 degrés la journée dans la vallée de Kathmandou mais fort froid la nuit; dans les montagnes, il fait encore plus froid) . Je garderais donc le Népal pour la période de mars à octobre ...la deuxième moitié de ton voyage .
Quant au Myanmar, aie, à moins que la loi ne soit changée depuis peu, il faut y entrer par avion et en principe quitter le pays par le même aéroport . Là aussi il te faut un visa .
Je crois que prendre un vol low cost pour la Thailande pourrait être une bonne solution . Là tu reçois un mois gratuit en arrivant à l'aéroport . Tu peux aussi prendre un visa de deux mois avant d'y partir (30 euros) si tu comptes rester deux mois en Thailande . Sinon, chaque fois que tu rentres par voie terrestre en Thailande, tu peux rester 15 jours sans payer de visa . Il y a aussi des vols low cost vers la Malaisie ( là, tu peux rester 3 mois sans visa, et quand tu le souhaites, monter en train en Thailande)
Pour le Pakistan et le Bangladesh , les deux autres voisins de l'Inde du nord, je ne connais pas les conditions actuelles.
Tu peux aussi profiter des deux mois de sortie obligatoire pour travailler en Australie . Pour cela tu dois demander un Working Holiday Visa avant ton départ . Tu as alors un an pour entrer en Australie et y travailler . Je ne connais plus tous les détails, mais tu les trouveras sur le site de l'ambassade d'Australie .
Fais bon voyage
Moushika
Pour les pays frontière, tu passes sans problème au Népal , mais tu devras prendre un visa à la frontière . Prends en compte qu'il y fait froid en décembre, janvier et février (15 à 20 degrés la journée dans la vallée de Kathmandou mais fort froid la nuit; dans les montagnes, il fait encore plus froid) . Je garderais donc le Népal pour la période de mars à octobre ...la deuxième moitié de ton voyage .
Quant au Myanmar, aie, à moins que la loi ne soit changée depuis peu, il faut y entrer par avion et en principe quitter le pays par le même aéroport . Là aussi il te faut un visa .
Je crois que prendre un vol low cost pour la Thailande pourrait être une bonne solution . Là tu reçois un mois gratuit en arrivant à l'aéroport . Tu peux aussi prendre un visa de deux mois avant d'y partir (30 euros) si tu comptes rester deux mois en Thailande . Sinon, chaque fois que tu rentres par voie terrestre en Thailande, tu peux rester 15 jours sans payer de visa . Il y a aussi des vols low cost vers la Malaisie ( là, tu peux rester 3 mois sans visa, et quand tu le souhaites, monter en train en Thailande)
Pour le Pakistan et le Bangladesh , les deux autres voisins de l'Inde du nord, je ne connais pas les conditions actuelles.
Tu peux aussi profiter des deux mois de sortie obligatoire pour travailler en Australie . Pour cela tu dois demander un Working Holiday Visa avant ton départ . Tu as alors un an pour entrer en Australie et y travailler . Je ne connais plus tous les détails, mais tu les trouveras sur le site de l'ambassade d'Australie .
Fais bon voyage
Moushika
"La vie est un voyage qui se vit au présent ou jamais ...."
OUI, pour le visa "tourist" on peut en effet rester 6 mois, c'est pourquoi je consellerais à Myj de demander plutot celui-la, en attendant 2 mois pour refaire un nouveau visa pour 6 mois et pouvoir retourner en Inde, s'il veut passer le plus de temps possible là-bas. Mais pour le visa d'un an il faut effectivement au bout de 90 jours attendre deux mois avant d'y retourner pour 3 mois, et ainsi de suite. C'est débile mais faut faire avec ou autrement...😉🙂
je me posait la question des 90jours pour le visa 6 mois...me sera peut étre plus adapté, du coup ça m'embete de m'étre prit la tete sur la lettre de motivation :p
je pensais que sac à viande était un surnom du sac de couchage, j'ai googlelisé, vraiment sympas et de se que j'ai vu les modéle en soie sont conseillé, faut il mieu l'acheter en inde?
Le myanmar, j'ai entendue tellement de chose que je sait plus quoi y penser, c'est pourquoi y aller m'interessait, j'avait pas imaginé qu'on puisse y entré et sortire que par avion. :(
le vol low cost inde thailande sera le plan de secour je pense.
Je n'y avait pas du tout pensai a la malaisie et ignoré l'absence de visa. merci de l'info :)
Ca me donne trés envie, je vien de voir qu'on peut s'y rendre en bateaux depuis l'inde ou le bengladesh, si c'est pas beaucoup plus chere que l'avion se sera mon option.
L'idée de l'australie est interressante, ca fait plusieurs années que ca me tente, se sera peut étre l'occasion de voir se beau pays et de travaillé, une jolie facon de prolongé mon voyage, à voir.
merci pour vos réponse :)
Salut Myj,
Si tu pars maintenant, mieux vaut commencer par le sud de l'Inde (novembre à février) et garder le nord à partir de février-mars, puis l'Himalaya dès fin avril, début mai. Le Laddakh dès fin juin.
Pour renouveler ton visa, en plus du Népal, il y a aussi: - le Sri Lanka. Sauf erreur, il y a des bateaux depuis Chennai si tu ne veux pas prendre l'avion. (visa) - le Bangladesh en effet, avec accès par voie de terre à proximité de Calcutta, (visa) - le Pakistan, mais un peu galère. - Le Bhoutan, mais hors de prix.
Sinon, en effet, il n'y a pas d'accès par voie de terre sur la Birmanie, ni depuis l'Inde, ni depuis le Bangladesh (ni depuis la Thaïlande).
Pour le matos. Côté sac à dos, j'ai voyagé vingt ans avec un Deuter de 30 litres et je ne lui ai rien épargné: excellent, robuste, passe en cabine et j'arrive à 10-11kg chargé. Je viens de prendre un 40 litres (Futura PRo 40 EL): nickel aussi jusque là, mais un poil gros pour le prendre en cabine. Ils ont des trucs intéressants dans la gamme Futura.
Pour le sac à viande, mieux vaut l'acheter ici en Europe. Il sera plus fin et plus léger que si tu l'achète sur place. Mais si tu vas au Népal ou dans l'Himalaya indien entre octobre et mars, je te conseille de prendre un sac de couchage. Deuter (encore, sorry...) a un Trek Light 200 super petit une fois plié (26 cm de long, 12 de diamètre), léger (650 g) et pas cher, qui ne prend pas de place dans le sac à dos. Il est pas super chaud (>10 °C), mais avec les couvertures des guesthouses ou un sac à viande, ça suffit amplement. Sinon, il y aussi la possibilité de coupler le sac à viande (plus chaud, plus petit et moins lourd en soie) avec un sac en polaire. Chez Mammut, il y en a des pas mal, notamment dans la gamme Ajungilak, bien qu'ils soient plus volumineux que le Trek Light 200 (!).
Pour les godasses, mieux vaut en avoir si tu vas en montagne. Les tongs ne suffisent pas, bien qu'en été des sandales genre Teva peuvent faire l'affaire. Cela dit, j'attire ton attention sur le fait que je me suis déjà fait rouler sur les pieds à plusieurs reprises en inde (voitures, rickshaw, ...) et que j'ai été bien content d'avoir des bonnes grolles ces jours-là...
Et pour les fringues, en effet, tu trouveras tout ce qu'il faut sur place. Pour le GPS, je prendrais plutôt une bonne carte (comme le India Road Atlas): ça n'attise pas les convoitises, ça tombe pas en panne et les batteries ne se déchargent pas... ;) Prends un bon cadenas (à numéros) avec toi.
Pour le reste du matos (notamment pharmacie, etc.), tu trouveras plus d'infos et des conseils sur mon site.
Un bon voyage ! :)
Pour renouveler ton visa, en plus du Népal, il y a aussi: - le Sri Lanka. Sauf erreur, il y a des bateaux depuis Chennai si tu ne veux pas prendre l'avion. (visa) - le Bangladesh en effet, avec accès par voie de terre à proximité de Calcutta, (visa) - le Pakistan, mais un peu galère. - Le Bhoutan, mais hors de prix.
Sinon, en effet, il n'y a pas d'accès par voie de terre sur la Birmanie, ni depuis l'Inde, ni depuis le Bangladesh (ni depuis la Thaïlande).
Pour le matos. Côté sac à dos, j'ai voyagé vingt ans avec un Deuter de 30 litres et je ne lui ai rien épargné: excellent, robuste, passe en cabine et j'arrive à 10-11kg chargé. Je viens de prendre un 40 litres (Futura PRo 40 EL): nickel aussi jusque là, mais un poil gros pour le prendre en cabine. Ils ont des trucs intéressants dans la gamme Futura.
Pour le sac à viande, mieux vaut l'acheter ici en Europe. Il sera plus fin et plus léger que si tu l'achète sur place. Mais si tu vas au Népal ou dans l'Himalaya indien entre octobre et mars, je te conseille de prendre un sac de couchage. Deuter (encore, sorry...) a un Trek Light 200 super petit une fois plié (26 cm de long, 12 de diamètre), léger (650 g) et pas cher, qui ne prend pas de place dans le sac à dos. Il est pas super chaud (>10 °C), mais avec les couvertures des guesthouses ou un sac à viande, ça suffit amplement. Sinon, il y aussi la possibilité de coupler le sac à viande (plus chaud, plus petit et moins lourd en soie) avec un sac en polaire. Chez Mammut, il y en a des pas mal, notamment dans la gamme Ajungilak, bien qu'ils soient plus volumineux que le Trek Light 200 (!).
Pour les godasses, mieux vaut en avoir si tu vas en montagne. Les tongs ne suffisent pas, bien qu'en été des sandales genre Teva peuvent faire l'affaire. Cela dit, j'attire ton attention sur le fait que je me suis déjà fait rouler sur les pieds à plusieurs reprises en inde (voitures, rickshaw, ...) et que j'ai été bien content d'avoir des bonnes grolles ces jours-là...
Et pour les fringues, en effet, tu trouveras tout ce qu'il faut sur place. Pour le GPS, je prendrais plutôt une bonne carte (comme le India Road Atlas): ça n'attise pas les convoitises, ça tombe pas en panne et les batteries ne se déchargent pas... ;) Prends un bon cadenas (à numéros) avec toi.
Pour le reste du matos (notamment pharmacie, etc.), tu trouveras plus d'infos et des conseils sur mon site.
Un bon voyage ! :)
shiva108
Infos et conseils de voyages (Inde & Asie): www.ontheroad-again.com
sur Facebook...
"En voyage, l'essentiel n'est pas la destination, mais le chemin parcouru pour y parvenir."
sympa ton site :)
oui c'est sur pour le sud, besoin d'un peu chaleur pour commencé, c'est pas que l'été parisien ma frustré mais...:p
je part dans 1 semaine ou 2 max.
demain je dépose ma demande de visa 6 mois, au final se sera plus pratique.
Côté sac à dos le probleme c'est de transporté un reflex+2 objectifs+ netbook bien protéger et l'idéale est d'avoir un accès rapide au reflex. Au début je pensait prendre une petite valise genre pelicancase a mettre dans le sac de rendo mais encombrent, pas pratique et sa pése 1kg d'ou mon orientation style lowpro. je vais me balader dans paris en début de semaine pour voir car sur internet me rend pas compte de la taille des sac et les sac à viande. Je suis a peut pret sur d'évité le froid les 3 premier mois donc j'eviterai le sac de couchage au debut.
L'idée du gps vien du télèphone car j'hesite a m'en prendre un, le mien est mort et contrairement a se que je pensait c'est pratique en voyage, quand on fait des rencontres.
j'ai découvert cette gamme dite "blindé" ca me plait, ex: http://www.samsung.com/be_fr/consumer/mobile-phone/mobile-phone/mobile-archive/GT-B2710IKABSE http://www.mobiletoutterrain.com/present_extremplus.php
j'hesitais pour le premier (prix raisonnable) En thailande/laos j'ai fini avec pas mal de carte et un atlas route, ca pese un peu et sa prend de la place, c'est sur que c'est plus agréable a lire. Une carte d'ensemble est indispensable je pense, pour le détail le gps sur portable me parait sufisant. J'y connait rien en gps et télèphone (pas mon truc) mais l'idée me plais^^
Oui les tong ça peut fair mal🏴☠️, je suis du genre maladroit en plus... je déguste, en moto et grosse rando surtout, se coup ci je serai plus attentionné et je conduirai pas(on va pas à l'encontre d'une malédiction:p). Ca m'a rappelé certain souvenir... oui...indispensable une bonne paire quand meme.
merci :)
Côté sac à dos le probleme c'est de transporté un reflex+2 objectifs+ netbook bien protéger et l'idéale est d'avoir un accès rapide au reflex. Au début je pensait prendre une petite valise genre pelicancase a mettre dans le sac de rendo mais encombrent, pas pratique et sa pése 1kg d'ou mon orientation style lowpro. je vais me balader dans paris en début de semaine pour voir car sur internet me rend pas compte de la taille des sac et les sac à viande. Je suis a peut pret sur d'évité le froid les 3 premier mois donc j'eviterai le sac de couchage au debut.
L'idée du gps vien du télèphone car j'hesite a m'en prendre un, le mien est mort et contrairement a se que je pensait c'est pratique en voyage, quand on fait des rencontres.
j'ai découvert cette gamme dite "blindé" ca me plait, ex: http://www.samsung.com/be_fr/consumer/mobile-phone/mobile-phone/mobile-archive/GT-B2710IKABSE http://www.mobiletoutterrain.com/present_extremplus.php
j'hesitais pour le premier (prix raisonnable) En thailande/laos j'ai fini avec pas mal de carte et un atlas route, ca pese un peu et sa prend de la place, c'est sur que c'est plus agréable a lire. Une carte d'ensemble est indispensable je pense, pour le détail le gps sur portable me parait sufisant. J'y connait rien en gps et télèphone (pas mon truc) mais l'idée me plais^^
Oui les tong ça peut fair mal🏴☠️, je suis du genre maladroit en plus... je déguste, en moto et grosse rando surtout, se coup ci je serai plus attentionné et je conduirai pas(on va pas à l'encontre d'une malédiction:p). Ca m'a rappelé certain souvenir... oui...indispensable une bonne paire quand meme.
merci :)
Intéressants, les téléphones... tu as une idée de la gamme de prix ?
L'habitude se perd un peu avec les e-mail, mais n'oublie pas que pour les trucs que tu n'utilises qu'à certaines périodes (sac de couchage & Co), tu peux te les faire envoyer en poste restante par de la famille ou des amis quand tu en as besoin. Histoire de ne pas les trimbaler inutilement...
L'habitude se perd un peu avec les e-mail, mais n'oublie pas que pour les trucs que tu n'utilises qu'à certaines périodes (sac de couchage & Co), tu peux te les faire envoyer en poste restante par de la famille ou des amis quand tu en as besoin. Histoire de ne pas les trimbaler inutilement...
shiva108
Infos et conseils de voyages (Inde & Asie): www.ontheroad-again.com
sur Facebook...
"En voyage, l'essentiel n'est pas la destination, mais le chemin parcouru pour y parvenir."
😛Bjr Myj!!
Il y a 1an j'étais à peu près ds ta situation...j'avais prévu 6 mois d'Inde!!
Ne pas trop prévoir mais un peu qd m^me...je comprends bien la situation un peu angoissante de l'inconnu...
En plus moi je suis une fille!!
Au final av cette histoire de visa et d'autres raisons, rencontres, lieux préférés...j'ai bien commencé mon voyage en Inde, Delhi puis pour moi c'était le nord ensuite..Rishikesh, Manali, la spiti valley!!trop bon qd on aime la montagne et la marche!!
Ensuite se posait dc la question du visa, j'ai dc choisi le Népal, pour un tps, sans connaître mais plutôt en me fiant aux échos de mes rencontres!!
Ce ne fût sans regrets!!Gros cp de coeur pour ce beau pays Népalais!!!j'y suis alors restée 3mois!
Très bon accueil, belles rencontres et magnifiques paysages!!!
Bon, pour une personne du soleil comme moi, malgré cette belle satisfaction de pouvoir me déplacer à pieds, bus, stop, la plupart du tps, le climat commencait à me geler l'esprit j'ai dc choisit de repasser par l'Inde un moment à Varanasi mais si je n'allais pas ds le sud le climat restait frais!!comme les transports indiens restent Galère..à part si tu prends l'avion!!je n'ai fais q le train et ne me voyais dc pas descendre ainsi jusque ds le sud alors je suis partis 1 mois en thaïlande en plus ne fallait pas payer de visa si on ne reste seulement 1mois!!
Voilà, j'y ai retrouvé le soleil et un bel accueil pour le reste bcp moins dépaysant qd on arrive de l'inde et du Népal...
Je crois que ton voyage sera unique parce qu'il sera ton voyage!!
Alors certes prévoir peu rassurer mais au final on se rend compte svt qu'au fil des rencontres, des discussions les choses peuvent changer alors fais comme tu as dis prévois seulement cette histoire de visa qui est effectivement en vigueur!!le nord est top en tout cas si tu aimes la rando comme moi!!
Du coup, allège ton sac au max il est vrai moi j'avais du 10km sur le dos, je crois et pour les randos j'essayais moins alors si je pouvais je laissais qques affaires ds ma guest house, pour qques jours!!c possible svt si tu sens bien les lieux!!
Pour ce qui est des savates, je suis d'accord av toi q la vie est bien plus agréable av seulement même si à la réunion je me le permet ts les jrs je me suis vite aperçu au début du voyage, q mes chaussures de marche n'allaient plus trop me quitter!!!trop confortable et puis question hygiène je trouve ça mieux...mais à toi de découvrir l'Inde...
En tout cas je te souhaite toutes ces belles découvertes q procure le voyage...je t'envie!!
à bientôt sur la route!😛
pour les prix ca va de 60e a 400e selon le modele, pour les ex le premier(samsung) tourne autour de 100e et le second 300e
Au debut je pensait commencé au népal et descendre en inde mais mon voyage a prit presque 2 mois de retard, maintenant fais trop froid pour moi la bas.
oui je fait se visa (panne de reveil se matin...:s), le sac et c'est partis :).
Vu que je vais prendre le visa 6 mois au final, l'histoire de visa sera moin compliqué qu'au départ, je suis passer de ou aller à ou ne pas aller ^^?
Je comptais surtout fair l'inde et népal, maintenant le chemin bangladesh puis bateau jusqu'en malaisie remonté en thai me fait bien envie mais bon, peut pas tous faire. J'arrete de penser à ça car se sera pas avant plusieurs mois, et puis sa se passe jamais comme je le prévoie donc a quoi bon prévoire? :p
Le principale c'est d'avoir le choix et maintenant je l'ai :) (dans la limite du budget bien sur)
merci
Au debut je pensait commencé au népal et descendre en inde mais mon voyage a prit presque 2 mois de retard, maintenant fais trop froid pour moi la bas.
oui je fait se visa (panne de reveil se matin...:s), le sac et c'est partis :).
Vu que je vais prendre le visa 6 mois au final, l'histoire de visa sera moin compliqué qu'au départ, je suis passer de ou aller à ou ne pas aller ^^?
Je comptais surtout fair l'inde et népal, maintenant le chemin bangladesh puis bateau jusqu'en malaisie remonté en thai me fait bien envie mais bon, peut pas tous faire. J'arrete de penser à ça car se sera pas avant plusieurs mois, et puis sa se passe jamais comme je le prévoie donc a quoi bon prévoire? :p
Le principale c'est d'avoir le choix et maintenant je l'ai :) (dans la limite du budget bien sur)
merci
Bonjour,
Pour info je pars jeudi en Inde et mon visa (qui date du 12 sep) est valable 6 mois. Je te confirme c'est toujours pareil.
Pour ma part j'ai une question : ai-je assez de 1000 roupies pour prendre un taxi prepaid à l'aéroport de Bombay pour Colaba à 1h du mat' Merci
Muriel
Pour info je pars jeudi en Inde et mon visa (qui date du 12 sep) est valable 6 mois. Je te confirme c'est toujours pareil.
Pour ma part j'ai une question : ai-je assez de 1000 roupies pour prendre un taxi prepaid à l'aéroport de Bombay pour Colaba à 1h du mat' Merci
Muriel
Oui, ça devrait jouer. De tête, il semble que c'est dans les max. 500 Rs. Le mieux est de demander à ton hôtel de t'envoyer un taxi.
shiva108
Infos et conseils de voyages (Inde & Asie): www.ontheroad-again.com
sur Facebook...
"En voyage, l'essentiel n'est pas la destination, mais le chemin parcouru pour y parvenir."
Merci pour l'info. En fait nous partons à 3 copines. 2 arriveront l'après midi et moi la nuit. Nous avons déjà envoyé un mail à l'hotel mais nous n'avons jamais eu de réponse. Peut être que mes amies l'après midi sur place pourront m'avoir une navette. J'ai pu avoir 1000 roupies de dépannage pour m'éviter de tirer de l'argent à l'aéroport en arrivant.
Les réponses par e-mail en Inde sont souvent assez aléatoires, mieux vaut téléphoner.
shiva108
Infos et conseils de voyages (Inde & Asie): www.ontheroad-again.com
sur Facebook...
"En voyage, l'essentiel n'est pas la destination, mais le chemin parcouru pour y parvenir."
Merci je ne savais pas. Je pensais qu'ils étaient des ténors en informatique et me voyais déjà avec la wifi dans tous les guests houses et lieux publics :))
C'est mon 3ème séjour en Inde mais les autres fois je n'avais pas d'IPad pour communiquer et je ne m'en étais pas souciée.
Pour le taxi mes amies verront sur place et comme tu m'as dit que j'aurais assez de 1000 roupies je ne m'inquiète pas, je prendrai un taxi prepaid.
Il y a des ténors en informatique en Inde, c'est clair, mais pas le "petit peuple" qui bosse dans les guesthouses. Mais je crois que le problème est plus linguistique qu'informatique. Ils parlent un peu anglais, le lise parfois, mais ont souvent des difficultés à l'écrire. Et on ne peut exclure une certaine nonchalance tout indienne...
Le wifi, c'est pas encore ça, bien que ça vienne gentiment... mais il y a pléthore de cybercafés.
Le wifi, c'est pas encore ça, bien que ça vienne gentiment... mais il y a pléthore de cybercafés.
shiva108
Infos et conseils de voyages (Inde & Asie): www.ontheroad-again.com
sur Facebook...
"En voyage, l'essentiel n'est pas la destination, mais le chemin parcouru pour y parvenir."
Merci pour ces renseignements. Le site ontheroad-again mentionné en bas de ton post est super intéressant.
bonjour de l'inde :)
je suis parti un peu plus tard au final, je suis arrivé à monbey le 29.
A la base je devai atterire à chennai mais j'ai eu un petit probleme sur la route, j'ai donc atterie à Monbey.
J'ai étè agréablement surpris, je m'attendait à une grosse masse de gen et des odeur forte et une ville sale (les préjugé quoi).
J'ai trouvé la ville propre et pas si oppressant, apres je suis resté dans le centre et non dans la peripherie.
J'ai bien aimé l'ambiance pour une grosse ville et j'adore l'architecture des anciens batiments.
Apres quelque jours et de belle rencontre je suis desendu à Agonda dans la region de Goa, un petit village à coter de palolem, tres calme, belle plage et tres peu de touriste(surtout comparé à palolem).
La je m'apprete à aller dans la region de karnataka et j'hésite à me posé un peu, pour une bonne remise en forme en essayent un ashrame ou simplement des cour de yoga ou autre(j'ai cru comprendre qu'il font du tai chi aussi?)et continué ma route.
J'avoue ne pas y connaitre grand chose, c'est dans l'idée de me relaxer, m'assouplir et voire se que ça donne, je suis motivé à m'y mettre tres serieusement mais j'ai pas envie de fair un truc de tourist hors de prix.
Au minimum une semaine et au grand maximum un mois
auriez vous des conseil ou de bonne adresse dans karnataka?
j'aimerai éviter les grosse ville comme Mysor
merci à vous :)
ps: pour l'instan l'inde : j'adore :)
edit: le fait que j'ai actuellement un niveau d'anglai plutot mauvais est il vraiment génant?
auriez vous des conseil ou de bonne adresse dans karnataka?
j'aimerai éviter les grosse ville comme Mysor
merci à vous :)
ps: pour l'instan l'inde : j'adore :)
edit: le fait que j'ai actuellement un niveau d'anglai plutot mauvais est il vraiment génant?
Bonjour,
A 2 semaines près on se voyait :))
Pour info je suis allée à Mysore et franchement tu as raison de vouloir zapper car c'est franchement nul. Un palace des plus kitch. On n'a pas aimé du tout. Si tu veux te reposer va à Hampi. Pour moi c'est le top. Les paysages sont magnifiques et tu trouveras le repos. Tu peux te louer un vélo ou une moto pour te balader. Les guests houses sont pas chères et franchement ça vaut le coup. Il y a aussi de magnifiques temples.
Ensuite tu peux aller à Cochin c'est sympa aussi.
Bonne route Amicalement Muriel
Bonne route Amicalement Muriel
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Bonjour,
Après un faux départ en mars 2026 dû à l'annulation de mes vols Qatar, je reprogramme un voyage au Kerala en novembre. Pour mars, j'avais réservé et payé le trek de 2 jours/une nuit : Tiger trail dans le parc Periyar. Puis j'ai lu des avis horribles sur le parc. Sur VF, les avis sont anciens, et ne parlent pas du Tiger Trail. Aussi, avant de réserver à nouveau (j'ai le temps), quelqu'un l'a-t-il fait récemment et peut partager son expérience et ressenti. Je parle bien du Tiger Trail, pas des activités jeep/bateau du parc en lui-même, qui semblent plus relever du parc d'attractions. Merci
Après un faux départ en mars 2026 dû à l'annulation de mes vols Qatar, je reprogramme un voyage au Kerala en novembre. Pour mars, j'avais réservé et payé le trek de 2 jours/une nuit : Tiger trail dans le parc Periyar. Puis j'ai lu des avis horribles sur le parc. Sur VF, les avis sont anciens, et ne parlent pas du Tiger Trail. Aussi, avant de réserver à nouveau (j'ai le temps), quelqu'un l'a-t-il fait récemment et peut partager son expérience et ressenti. Je parle bien du Tiger Trail, pas des activités jeep/bateau du parc en lui-même, qui semblent plus relever du parc d'attractions. Merci
Bonjour à toutes et tous
Je vais faire un séjour en Assam et j'aimerais savoir quel type d'adaptateur électrique il faut c'est à dite M ou D ou les deux ?
Merci
Hello,
I’m heading to Sri Lanka for 3 weeks in July with my two 11-year-old kids, and I’m wondering about how to organize the trip. We’re used to traveling on the go, staying 1 to 2 or 3 nights per place depending on how we feel.
Do you recommend planning the itinerary and booking accommodations in advance to save time once we’re there? Or is it pretty easy to organize everything as we go without any issues?
Same question for activities: Should we book safaris and tours ahead of time, or can we arrange them easily on the spot? Is there a risk of not getting a spot, for example, to visit a park since we’ll be there in July?
We’ll be using local transport (train, VTC via PickMe, tuk-tuk) to get from one place to another.
In short: Are there any must-book things we should reserve now? So far, I only have the flight tickets!
Thanks in advance for your help! 😊
I’m heading to Sri Lanka for 3 weeks in July with my two 11-year-old kids, and I’m wondering about how to organize the trip. We’re used to traveling on the go, staying 1 to 2 or 3 nights per place depending on how we feel.
Do you recommend planning the itinerary and booking accommodations in advance to save time once we’re there? Or is it pretty easy to organize everything as we go without any issues?
Same question for activities: Should we book safaris and tours ahead of time, or can we arrange them easily on the spot? Is there a risk of not getting a spot, for example, to visit a park since we’ll be there in July?
We’ll be using local transport (train, VTC via PickMe, tuk-tuk) to get from one place to another.
In short: Are there any must-book things we should reserve now? So far, I only have the flight tickets!
Thanks in advance for your help! 😊
Hi there, I think you're on the right track—you plan the itinerary and book the rooms in advance, and that’s it.
Not only do you save time, but you also know where you’ll be staying each night. Choosing well on Booking (or elsewhere) is actually a pleasure!
For safaris, given the number of jeeps with drivers available, it’s unlikely you’ll be turned away... the real issue is more about the concentration of jeeps around the animals.
I travel like you do—train, bus, tuk-tuk, and sometimes taxi. Ride-hailing apps like PickMe and other VTCs are mostly in big cities.
For the mountain train, due to severe flooding, service was interrupted on the line between Kandy and Ella. Check ahead, because reservations for this train are very complicated, if not impossible.
For the Colombo/Kandy train, you reserve your seats by buying the ticket before boarding. In the south, no need to book in advance for trains.
In Sri Lanka, there’s always a solution for getting around—just ask your hosts. They have trusted contacts at their fingertips. But still, compare prices—😏 smart move!
I stick to booking my nights and keep pre-planned activities to a minimum.
For reservations you can’t skip, it’s the beach stays you’ll want to secure.
Hi there,
I’m trying to find out if it’s still possible to travel from Mumbai to Goa by ferry or any other sea route. My search results aren’t very clear, and if it *is* possible, I can’t figure out where to book... If anyone has any info, I’d really appreciate it—thanks in advance!
Have a great day,
Virginie
I’m trying to find out if it’s still possible to travel from Mumbai to Goa by ferry or any other sea route. My search results aren’t very clear, and if it *is* possible, I can’t figure out where to book... If anyone has any info, I’d really appreciate it—thanks in advance!
Have a great day,
Virginie
It seems there’s a ferry from Nagapattinam to Jaffna in India. Has anyone here taken this ferry before? My main question is how to get to Nagapattinam—by train, bus? And from which town further south, of course.
Thanks, friends!
Gaston
Gaston
Hi there.
We’re spending a month in Sri Lanka in March, and we’ll have one week left after leaving Polonnaruwa.
We’re torn between spending it in the Jaffna region or on the east coast between Batticaloa and Trincomalee.
We’re divers, so the east coast appeals to us for snorkeling, beaches, and lagoons—but it seems like late March might not be the best time for that coast. What do you think?
As for Jaffna, the culture of the region, its more authentic feel since it’s less touristy, and the offshore islands all appeal to us too—but it seems far from the rest of the country and harder to access.
We have to choose because we won’t be able to visit both sides, and I’d love to hear your thoughts.
Thanks, Marie
Hi there,
We just got back from a 2-week trip to Sri Lanka as a couple, and while planning the trip, we found plenty of info on the itinerary, places to see, and transportation, but much fewer clear reports on the actual budget to expect once there. Yet, that was an important point for us because we like to plan ahead a little before traveling.
So, we took the time to break down our complete budget after the trip. In our case, we spent around **930 € per person** for 2 weeks, being careful without depriving ourselves, mixing guesthouses, more comfortable hotels, quite a few activities, and even a private driver for part of the stay.
What we found interesting when crunching the numbers is that in Sri Lanka, it’s not necessarily meals or short trips that blow the budget, but rather flights, certain accommodations, cultural activities, and all those little expenses we sometimes forget, like tips.
If this can help other travelers get a better idea, we’ve put everything together on our blog with our experience, a detailed breakdown of expenses, and practical info on money while there, withdrawals, and tipping:
https://aventures-sans-mesaventure.com/budget-sri-lanka-pour-un-voyage-de-2-semaines/
Happy travels and enjoy your adventure! !
Happy travels and enjoy your adventure! !
Hi everyone,
We’re a group of 5 heading to the Everest Base Camp trek in early April. We won’t have a porter or guide—we’re used to hiking independently and have already done the Langtang trek and the Annapurna Circuit (back in 2003!).
I’d love to know if it’s necessary to book lodges in advance or if we’ll easily find availability during this busy season. Also, will we find lodges all along the route between the main stopover villages, or only in those villages? I remember there were plenty everywhere on the Annapurna Circuit. We want to stay as flexible as possible.
Thanks for your feedback!
We’re a group of 5 heading to the Everest Base Camp trek in early April. We won’t have a porter or guide—we’re used to hiking independently and have already done the Langtang trek and the Annapurna Circuit (back in 2003!).
I’d love to know if it’s necessary to book lodges in advance or if we’ll easily find availability during this busy season. Also, will we find lodges all along the route between the main stopover villages, or only in those villages? I remember there were plenty everywhere on the Annapurna Circuit. We want to stay as flexible as possible.
Thanks for your feedback!
Hi there,
We’re heading to India in March 2026 and had planned to visit the parts of the Meenakshi Temple that are open to non-Hindus. However, the temple is currently undergoing major renovations—with all the towers covered in scaffolding—which might really take away from the experience and our stop in Madurai.
After some frustrating and vague online searches, and before we reshuffle our itinerary, I’d love to know—if possible—the most accurate expected completion date for the renovation work.
Thanks in advance.
We’re heading to India in March 2026 and had planned to visit the parts of the Meenakshi Temple that are open to non-Hindus. However, the temple is currently undergoing major renovations—with all the towers covered in scaffolding—which might really take away from the experience and our stop in Madurai.
After some frustrating and vague online searches, and before we reshuffle our itinerary, I’d love to know—if possible—the most accurate expected completion date for the renovation work.
Thanks in advance.
Hi there,
We’re planning a trip to Nepal and would love to do a helicopter tour to Everest with Namche Heli Service. Has anyone here used this agency? I can’t seem to find any reviews online. Thanks in advance!
Kloki
We’re planning a trip to Nepal and would love to do a helicopter tour to Everest with Namche Heli Service. Has anyone here used this agency? I can’t seem to find any reviews online. Thanks in advance!
Kloki
Hey fellow travelers,
I’m spending two weeks studying Hindi in the mornings in Delhi, in the Hauz Khas neighborhood. What spots should I check out in this area? Any cafés to chill at? How do I get to other parts of Delhi? By rickshaw? Is it easy to negotiate the price upfront?
Thanks in advance. 😊 Marlène
I’m spending two weeks studying Hindi in the mornings in Delhi, in the Hauz Khas neighborhood. What spots should I check out in this area? Any cafés to chill at? How do I get to other parts of Delhi? By rickshaw? Is it easy to negotiate the price upfront?
Thanks in advance. 😊 Marlène
Hi,
I’m leaving this Saturday for Northern India from 15/02 to 27/02. I’m planning to visit New Delhi, Agra, Chand Baori, Jaipur, Ranthambore, Bundi, Udaipur, and Jodhpur.
What’s the best way to get around? I was thinking of doing everything by train. Maybe taking the bus for some stretches?
As for renting a car with a driver, it seems expensive, so I’ve pretty much ruled that out. Unless someone’s got space for the same dates?
Thanks for your insights!
What’s the best way to get around? I was thinking of doing everything by train. Maybe taking the bus for some stretches?
As for renting a car with a driver, it seems expensive, so I’ve pretty much ruled that out. Unless someone’s got space for the same dates?
Thanks for your insights!
Hi everyone,
We’re heading out in March for this trek. We’re used to hiking and long-distance treks, but this’ll be our first time in Nepal.
QUESTION: People from Nepal are telling us it’s MANDATORY to have guides! Is this true, or is it just agencies trying to get work for their staff?
The Lonely Planet says: "In April 2023, the government announced that every trekker would need to hire the services of a porter or a licensed guide to obtain the TIMS permit. The law isn’t enforced, and by 2025, there were no longer any obligations for teahouse treks."
What do you think? What’s your experience? Thanks for your feedback.
We’re heading out in March for this trek. We’re used to hiking and long-distance treks, but this’ll be our first time in Nepal.
QUESTION: People from Nepal are telling us it’s MANDATORY to have guides! Is this true, or is it just agencies trying to get work for their staff?
The Lonely Planet says: "In April 2023, the government announced that every trekker would need to hire the services of a porter or a licensed guide to obtain the TIMS permit. The law isn’t enforced, and by 2025, there were no longer any obligations for teahouse treks."
What do you think? What’s your experience? Thanks for your feedback.
Hi,
I’d like to arrive in India at New Delhi Airport with some cash. I was wondering if the exchange rates at the airport are any good or if it’s best to avoid them (and exchange in the city instead?).
Thanks for your help.
Thanks for your help.
NAMASTE NEPAL! PRACTICAL INFO AND EXPERIENCE FEEDBACK
Stay from March 25 to April 16, 2025
· Flight tickets Air India (via Delhi) (via Skyscanner) = 1130 € per person · Planned budget (and respected without too many restrictions and while buying a few small gifts) = 2000 € for the stay for two. Buses, taxis, and entrance fees to various sites represent a budget to consider. Meals are cheap. Drinks like beer/Coke, however, are not cheap and cost the equivalent of a meal. · Exchange rate of the rupee during our stay = 0.0064 € (the exchange rate is almost identical everywhere, including at the airport). · At the airport, purchase of two SIM cards (phone) = 1000 NPR x 2 for 28 days. · Kathmandu: we had booked the hotel upon arrival: Kathmandu Boutique Hotel (+977 015 357 446 – email: booking@kathmanduboutiquehotel.com), very well located in a quiet alley off the street, south of Thamel, a 10-minute walk from Durbar Square. A hotel like Nepal knows how to do, where tall people will have to duck. Night + breakfast = 18 € for two. Very warm welcome, great location, excellent value for money. · Bhaktapur: we had also booked a hotel for the end of our stay because the chance of the year 2025 made the Nepali New Year and Bisket Jatra particularly festive in Bhaktapur: Manju Baha Hotel School (+977 976 7234014 – email: manjubahahotel@gmail.com) located in an old monastery. "A social enterprise transforming an old monastery into a charming hotel, offering professional hospitality training to underprivileged Nepali youth." Night + breakfast = 32 € for two. Beautifully decorated room. Very warm welcome. Don’t miss the Changunarayan site (near Bhaktapur), it’s amazing. And if you’re lucky enough to be in Bhaktapur in mid-April for 3 days, there’s the Bisket Jatra festivities (Newari festival), joyful, noisy, fun, and wild… · Pokhara (hotel recommended by the Kathmandu hotel): Hotel Green Tara, Lakeside, 10th street, set back, quiet (Tel. +977 61 462698 – email: greentara_67@hotmail.com) · Trek permit (Lower Mustang, no need for an agency or guide, permits checked at Ghasa and Jomsom) = 2000 NPR per person (2 ID photos) · Bus Kathmandu/Pokhara and return = 2000 NPR per person · Bus Pokhara/Jomsom, 2 one-way tickets = 2800 NPR. · Taxi: negotiation with a driver we recommend, Vicky (+977 984 075 599). You explain what you want, negotiate the price, and he waits for you during the visit. Very charming, we used him several times. For example: departure from our hotel at 10 AM -> Boudhanath/Pashupatinath/Patan return at 5 PM to the hotel = 6500 NPR – Swayambhunath (round trip) = 1200 NPR · Site prices: https://ntb.gov.np/plan-your-trip/before-you-come/heritage-site-entry-fees o Visitor Pass for Kathmandu Durbar Square (for the duration of the stay, show your visa) = 1000 NPR per person (1 ID photo) o Bhaktapur Durbar Square (old town) = 1800 NPR per person o Patan = 1000 NPR per person o Swayambhu Stupa = 200 NPR per person o Boudha Stupa = 200 NPR per person o Pashupatinath Temple = 1000 NPR per person (interesting to take a guide) o Changunarayan Temple (6 km north of Bhaktapur) = 400 NPR per person o Mountain Museum in Pokhara = 750 NPR per person · E-cigarettes: e-cigarettes are banned in India and confiscated whether they’re in carry-on or checked luggage. On the way there, we had kept them in our carry-on, they were confiscated in Delhi. On the way back, learning from our previous experience, we put them in our checked luggage. Someone came to get us to take them out of our bags and confiscate them… You can find e-cigarettes and products in Kathmandu.
* * *
I’m 74 years old. I went to Nepal in 1982, 1983, and the last time in 1986. I wanted to introduce this beautiful and endearing country to my husband, and it was… now or never. So we decided it was now.
I knew the trek starting from Pokhara: Naudanda/Birethanti/Ghorepani/Tatopani/Kalopani. There was no way I was going to do that trek, especially the 1000-meter staircase to reach Ghorepani… You have to stay humble with age.
Back then, the road didn’t exist. I didn’t consider, with the construction of this road (NH48) along the western bank of the Kali Gandaki, doing a trek along a windy and dusty road. Was there an alternative hiking trail on the eastern bank? No one answered my question on VoyageForum, so I did my research online. And I found this site: "Andrées de Ruiter and Prem Rai - Trekking the Annapurna Circuit, including the new NATT trails that avoid the road - A guide to one of the most beautiful trekking regions in Nepal and the world (2011) - NATT = New Annapurna Trekking Trail".
Phew! A solution was emerging. This circuit from 2011 wasn’t fully marked. The idea was to go from Jomsom to Tatopani, so we needed to make sure the path was well-marked all the way, which we did, and the path exists, marked in red and white!
So, with the walking times information, we built our 8-day circuit:
· Jomsom/Thinigaon · Thinigaon/Chimang · Chimang/Saura · Saura/Kokhetanti · Rest day or, if in good shape: loop to Sekong Lake · Kokhetanti/Jhipra Deurali · Jhipra Deurali/Kopchepani · Kopchepani/Tatopani
It’s a senior trek, after all. So the walking times noted on the sites indicated 3 hours or even 4 hours for the two longest stages. That pace suited us fine.
On March 29, we left Kathmandu (1400m), after visiting the must-see sites, by bus to Pokhara: 200 km and 8.5 hours on a chaotic road under construction. I had a memory of Pokhara where it was the first city where you could see the Himalayan range, especially Machhapuchhare. But the pollution is such, the dust raised by traffic and construction, that no horizon is visible except the first hills around Pokhara.
We stayed 24 hours in Pokhara (820m), and on March 31, we left our luggage at the hotel and set off with our lightest backpacks: change of clothes, toiletries, first aid kit, anti-chafing cream, water bottle, sleeping bag liner, and light shoes for the stages.
We took the bus to Jomsom: 160 km/7.5 hours including stops for bathroom breaks, tea, and lunch. The road is nothing but a chaos of potholes, landslides, construction, dust, rebuilding, and mudslides. In Ghasa, the bus stops, and we’re told we’re at a checkpoint and that the two foreigners in the bus, my husband and I, need to have our permits checked, which takes a few minutes. The driving is rock-and-roll, surprising, and courteous. The drivers have their codes, and on these improbable roads, they’re virtuosos.
We could have chosen the plane, but several reasons dissuaded us: if there’s too much wind, the planes don’t take off; personally, I wasn’t reassured about landing in Jomsom, and this transport has a cost.
We arrived around 2 PM in Jomsom (2720m), and despite the early wake-up, the nearly 8 hours on the bus, and the altitude, we decided to head straight to Thinigaon (2840m). At the Jomsom checkpoint, they told us it was a 30-minute walk. Great! Except we took an hour and a half on an uphill road, bent over to fight a strong wind. But the Himalayan range is there! The Dhaulagiri, the Nilgiri, the Annapurnas as a reward.
In Thinigaon, we found a room at the "Nilgiri View Hotel" run by a didi (big sister in Nepali). From the lodge’s roof, she proudly showed us the different peaks surrounding the village and told us, worried, that it hadn’t snowed here for 3 years. She said there are very few tourists, that the season is rather in September/October/November. It seems there’s not a soul in this village, yet mules pass through the narrow street paved with large flat stones, their bells ringing. We dine at 6 PM and go to bed… Room = 1200 NPR and dinner, breakfast, and drinks = 2560 NPR.
On April 1, we set off at 9 AM, not for Chimang as planned but for Marpha! The didi from the Thinigaon lodge had said it was a 3-hour walk. The first part of this stage is attractive, the mountains are magnificent and imposing, the landscape is superb, there’s no one around, a feeling of being "alone in the world." We follow Dhumbra Tal, this small green lake. The path is a rocky track that climbs steeply. Then, around a hill, we start the big descent that joins the Kali Gandaki. We face the wind head-on, and the violent gusts take our breath away, throw us off balance, and envelop us in dust. We see the road on the other side of the Kali Gandaki. We arrive in the village of Chhairo at 2 PM, completely exhausted and with blistered feet, after 5 hours of walking instead of the planned 3.5 hours.
We’re welcomed by the village nurse, who tells us there’s a lodge in the village. Chhairo is a Tibetan village, a 20-minute walk from Marpha (according to the locals, multiply by 2 or even 3 for us…). We’re going to revise our trek plan and, first of all, spend the night in Chhairo.
The lodge is quite pleasant, and Karma, the hostess, is very friendly. She asks about our plans and suggests we stay in Chhairo the next day, from where we can visit Marpha and also Chimang, a 1-hour walk away, in light mode, meaning without backpacks. She invites us to participate in a village ceremony the next evening.
We immediately accept the proposal, as our feet need rest and the welcome is so warm… Dinner and bed!
We reworked our trek plan, which was too ambitious for our untrained bodies and, let’s face it… no longer in our first youth. In the initial plan, we thought there wouldn’t be too much elevation gain following the Kali Gandaki, but checking the map, we realize there might be significant elevation changes between Sauru and Sirkung. So we plan:
· Tomorrow: visit Marpha (2670m) and Chimang (2744m) · April 3: bus from Chhairo (2700m) to Kalopani (2530m) and continue on foot to Ghasa (2010m) · April 4: Ghasa/Pairataplo (1940m) · April 5: Pairatapla/Gadpar (1580m) · April 6: Gadpar/Narchyang (1510m) · April 7: Narchyang/Tatopani (1190m) · April 8: return to Pokhara.
Normally, it’s all downhill…
April 2, a rest day then… We set off in the morning to explore Marpha. We have to take a temporary bridge because the suspension bridge is closed due to road construction. We join the road and arrive in Marpha, a village famous for its apple orchards, brandy, cider, and apple juice production. This village is magnificent with its stone houses and monastery clinging to the hillside. The road construction spared it. There are people, but very few Western tourists.
We have lunch in Marpha and go back through Chhairo to take the path to Chimang. We cross a fragrant pine forest and find the rocky path; the landscape is splendid. We walk quietly, passing peaceful buffaloes and cows, and arrive at the foot of a stone staircase… 275 steps (which we counted on the way back) leading us to the village of Chimang. Chimang is an isolated Newari village that seems a bit desolate. Despite the slopes, there are crops on every little bit of land. Thankfully, we changed our initial program because there’s no lodge in this village, contrary to what we saw on a map… We wander through the village, which seems very deserted, have coffee in a house from another world, and then head back to Chhairo.
A rest day? = 5 hours of walking!!
Dinner and village ceremony. From what we understand, this ceremony is in honor of the Dalai Lama. Men, women, and children in traditional costumes gather twice a month; they dance, make, and offer small sweet cakes with Tibetan tea (made from tea, yak butter—often rancid—water, and salt). Surprising for first-timers…
Around 10 PM, we leave the ceremony; tomorrow morning, we need to be on the roadside by 7 AM to catch the bus to Kalopani…
This village of Chhairo is very pleasant and welcoming, no tourists, just two motorcyclists who arrived in the evening, one of whom participated in the ceremony and discreetly poured his Tibetan tea outside.
Lodge: "Norsang Tibetan Guesthouse and Restaurant". Total bill for 2 nights, 2 dinners, 2 breakfasts, and drinks = 8000 NPR.
April 3: bus from Chhairo to Kalopani, about 1.5 hours for the 20 km (200 NPR per person). We descend on the right bank of the Kali Gandaki. We find the red and white markings to resume the trek toward Ghasa. We’re in a fragrant pine forest, the Dhaulagiri on one side and the Annapurnas on the other, magnificent, and the path is pleasant and easy. We get a bit lost in this forest, always looking for the markings. Near Lete, two trekkers pass us, and we meet them again a little further on with two very young children, to whom we give the 2 hard-boiled eggs I didn’t eat this morning. They accepted them without hesitation.
We arrive in a village and ask for directions to Ghasa. The young girls point the way. But we come across a forest being logged, trees cut in all directions. We turn back and ask for confirmation. They confirm… But the two young girls catch up with us and clear the way. We have to step over, go around, and cross the felled trees, with no indication at all. Through this pick-up sticks of felled trees, the girls lead us to the top of a stone staircase, indicating that was the path. It’s the only place where we saw rhododendrons in bloom.
We descend the staircase. At the bottom, to the left, there’s a bridge to go toward Choyo, and to the right, a path to Ghasa. We take the right path and join the road. We should normally find the red and white markings, but we don’t… So we continue on the western bank road of the Kali Gandaki.
A little before the village of Misi, we see fumaroles on the opposite bank that seem to come from the ground. We don’t understand. We stopped to eat in the village of Misi (noodle soup = 600 NPR), but it’s hard to communicate with the elderly people running the guesthouse.
We continued on the road, not finding the marked path parallel to the road. Landslides, both on the left and right banks, seem to have taken over the marked routes. It’s a place where the Kali Gandaki gorge narrows, and on the opposite bank, the mountain smokes more and more, and we now hear the crackling of fire. Across from us, the mountain is burning… Our initial plan had us passing on that burning bank right now…
We arrive in Ghasa at 3:30 PM, a 6.5-hour stage but with a 1-hour stop at noon. We’re at the "Florida Guesthouse and Restaurant." From our room, we see the mountain smoking on the other side of the river, and at night, we see the flames. In this village, posters show Himalayan eagles and vultures that seem to be protected species. Indeed, we saw (and heard) 3 eagles circling today.
April 4 – Today, heading to Pairothapla or Kopchepani depending on our feet, accommodation options, and simply our desires.
No more smoke on the mountain this morning. It’s chilly, 7:45 AM, the sky is clear, just a smell of smoke outside.
Price of the lodge = 1000 NPR for the night + 3580 NPR for meals.
We cross Ghasa, which stretches over more than a kilometer. We have a drink at the last guesthouse in the village, and the didi, when she learns our destination, tells us to be careful because the villages we’re going to aren’t safe. Should we distribute our rupees in different pockets? Nah, we kept going.
At the exit of Ghasa, we find the red and white markings and take the suspension bridge to cross the boiling waters of the Kali Gandaki. The passage is impressive because the river is tumultuous. Lots of climbs and even more descents. We’re back on the eastern bank. It’s hot! On the narrow path, we meet a group of buffaloes. Who has the right of way? We decide to stick as close as possible to the rock wall and move forward calmly. The buffaloes look at us, chewing placidly, with no intention of jumping on us. Phew!
After a 5-hour stage (including stops), we arrive in Pairothapla, with hot feet and firm thighs, and decide we won’t go any further. It’s a good thing because there’s a lodge, the most basic so far, but with a great welcome. We have a meal and a short nap. The buffaloes we met on the way belong to this house. They come to drink at the fountain by the path.
Our host, very pleasant, doesn’t know what to do to please us and is very attentive. He wants to chat. He has two children, a 4-year-old girl and a 7-year-old boy. Where do they go to school? Do they go? He tells us that the fires in the mountain are caused by people, but for what reason? We won’t find out, but it’s illegal. From here, we can still see smoke rising in the distance. The wife is a bit less friendly. Corn kernels dry on a woven straw mat on the ground, and the mom sorts them.
From where we are, we overlook the valley and see the road under construction winding along the mountainside on the other bank.
Dinner on the terrace of the house overlooking the path, windbreaker and fleece on: dal bhat chicken for me and chicken curry for my husband: "organic" products, at least local production. There are small vegetable gardens everywhere with all sorts of vegetables.
April 5 – While we’re having breakfast on the terrace of our lodge, 5 porters, straps on their foreheads, heavily loaded, pass by on the path. A few minutes later, a group of 9 people appears. It must be said that since the beginning of our journey, we’ve met very few hikers. Two backpackers in Chhairo, the two hikers near Lete, two female hikers passed us before Pairothapla, a solo female hiker passed us…
The lodge in Pairothapla is called "Bimala Lodge & Thakali Kitchen" – Price for night + 4 meals + 2 breakfasts = 3000 NPR.
The descent toward the Kali Gandaki involves climbs whose steps we didn’t count. Clearly, the landslides on the mountain cause changes to the official ACAP trek marked in red and white, and the marking updates can’t keep up with the pace of these landslides. It’s almost always by chance that we find the markings. Fortunately, we can follow the power line that guides us somewhat.
Drink stop in Kopchepani, the legs are fine, but the feet don’t like being tightly enclosed. A group of trekkers with porters passes on the path. We met buffaloes that we kindly let pass; the path was wide enough, but it was a staircase going up, and we didn’t want to take any risks.
Across, a view of the magnificent Rupse Waterfall on the other bank of the Kali Gandaki, at the bottom, lots of vehicles and people.
Arrival in Gadpar after crossing a rather unwelcoming small village and cultivated gardens between dry stone walls, each better built than the last.
First lodge spotted, first lodge adopted to answer the call of our feet, and a very warm welcome from the owner. Since we hadn’t eaten at noon, we had Tibetan bread/jam. 6-hour stage including 1 hour of stops. Night + dinner + breakfast + drinks = 5060 NPR
April 6 – Today, heading to Narchyang.
For several days, we’ve seen banana trees with their bunches of fruit and even a prickly pear with large fruits ripening.
This stage is quite peaceful and pleasant. We take a suspension bridge to cross a tributary of the Kali Gandaki. While we’re resting for a moment before crossing the bridge, a couple of porters, a man and a woman, arrive and start across the bridge with their wood load in a basket held by a strap on their forehead, making them bend. We set off too… lighter than them.
On the other side of the bridge… a stone staircase, and it climbs steeply. The porter couple didn’t take this staircase; they went right on the path.
At the top of the staircase, we arrive in Narchyang after a 4-hour stage. A magnificent waterfall overlooks the village. We get lost in this fairly large village looking for a lodge. After wandering around for a while, we ask for directions, and an 84-year-old man takes us through the whole village and accompanies us to a very nice lodge run by a woman.
We chat with our hostess, who asks where we’re from and where we’re going. We explain that we want to reach Tatopani the next day and then return to Pokhara. She tells us there are 4x4s going directly to Pokhara and that it would probably be easier than taking a bus that might be full in Tatopani. After a quick consultation, we decide to return to Pokhara the next day by 4x4. She finds us a 4x4 with 2 seats left, departure at 8 AM – 5 hours on the road and 1500 NPR per person. A charming didi who does everything to be pleasant and helpful.
Narchyang community lodge = night + snacks + dinner + breakfast = 3000 NPR.
There you go, our trek ends tomorrow. Many necessary changes and adaptations to our initial trek, but no regrets, it was superb and a great experience that, for my part, I won’t be able to repeat. Always this encounter with the endearing, welcoming, curious, and very kind Nepali people. It was now or never, and we did it!
* * *
In conclusion, 3 full weeks in Nepal is a duration that allows visiting Kathmandu, Patan, and Bhaktapur, enjoying the various sites, and soaking in the atmosphere and urban Nepali life.
The trek, even revised and corrected, allowed us to get close to the impressive Annapurna and Dhaulagiri peaks. One or two acclimatization days might be necessary to get the body in tune with this magical and extraordinary land.
Stay from March 25 to April 16, 2025
· Flight tickets Air India (via Delhi) (via Skyscanner) = 1130 € per person · Planned budget (and respected without too many restrictions and while buying a few small gifts) = 2000 € for the stay for two. Buses, taxis, and entrance fees to various sites represent a budget to consider. Meals are cheap. Drinks like beer/Coke, however, are not cheap and cost the equivalent of a meal. · Exchange rate of the rupee during our stay = 0.0064 € (the exchange rate is almost identical everywhere, including at the airport). · At the airport, purchase of two SIM cards (phone) = 1000 NPR x 2 for 28 days. · Kathmandu: we had booked the hotel upon arrival: Kathmandu Boutique Hotel (+977 015 357 446 – email: booking@kathmanduboutiquehotel.com), very well located in a quiet alley off the street, south of Thamel, a 10-minute walk from Durbar Square. A hotel like Nepal knows how to do, where tall people will have to duck. Night + breakfast = 18 € for two. Very warm welcome, great location, excellent value for money. · Bhaktapur: we had also booked a hotel for the end of our stay because the chance of the year 2025 made the Nepali New Year and Bisket Jatra particularly festive in Bhaktapur: Manju Baha Hotel School (+977 976 7234014 – email: manjubahahotel@gmail.com) located in an old monastery. "A social enterprise transforming an old monastery into a charming hotel, offering professional hospitality training to underprivileged Nepali youth." Night + breakfast = 32 € for two. Beautifully decorated room. Very warm welcome. Don’t miss the Changunarayan site (near Bhaktapur), it’s amazing. And if you’re lucky enough to be in Bhaktapur in mid-April for 3 days, there’s the Bisket Jatra festivities (Newari festival), joyful, noisy, fun, and wild… · Pokhara (hotel recommended by the Kathmandu hotel): Hotel Green Tara, Lakeside, 10th street, set back, quiet (Tel. +977 61 462698 – email: greentara_67@hotmail.com) · Trek permit (Lower Mustang, no need for an agency or guide, permits checked at Ghasa and Jomsom) = 2000 NPR per person (2 ID photos) · Bus Kathmandu/Pokhara and return = 2000 NPR per person · Bus Pokhara/Jomsom, 2 one-way tickets = 2800 NPR. · Taxi: negotiation with a driver we recommend, Vicky (+977 984 075 599). You explain what you want, negotiate the price, and he waits for you during the visit. Very charming, we used him several times. For example: departure from our hotel at 10 AM -> Boudhanath/Pashupatinath/Patan return at 5 PM to the hotel = 6500 NPR – Swayambhunath (round trip) = 1200 NPR · Site prices: https://ntb.gov.np/plan-your-trip/before-you-come/heritage-site-entry-fees o Visitor Pass for Kathmandu Durbar Square (for the duration of the stay, show your visa) = 1000 NPR per person (1 ID photo) o Bhaktapur Durbar Square (old town) = 1800 NPR per person o Patan = 1000 NPR per person o Swayambhu Stupa = 200 NPR per person o Boudha Stupa = 200 NPR per person o Pashupatinath Temple = 1000 NPR per person (interesting to take a guide) o Changunarayan Temple (6 km north of Bhaktapur) = 400 NPR per person o Mountain Museum in Pokhara = 750 NPR per person · E-cigarettes: e-cigarettes are banned in India and confiscated whether they’re in carry-on or checked luggage. On the way there, we had kept them in our carry-on, they were confiscated in Delhi. On the way back, learning from our previous experience, we put them in our checked luggage. Someone came to get us to take them out of our bags and confiscate them… You can find e-cigarettes and products in Kathmandu.
* * *
I’m 74 years old. I went to Nepal in 1982, 1983, and the last time in 1986. I wanted to introduce this beautiful and endearing country to my husband, and it was… now or never. So we decided it was now.
I knew the trek starting from Pokhara: Naudanda/Birethanti/Ghorepani/Tatopani/Kalopani. There was no way I was going to do that trek, especially the 1000-meter staircase to reach Ghorepani… You have to stay humble with age.
Back then, the road didn’t exist. I didn’t consider, with the construction of this road (NH48) along the western bank of the Kali Gandaki, doing a trek along a windy and dusty road. Was there an alternative hiking trail on the eastern bank? No one answered my question on VoyageForum, so I did my research online. And I found this site: "Andrées de Ruiter and Prem Rai - Trekking the Annapurna Circuit, including the new NATT trails that avoid the road - A guide to one of the most beautiful trekking regions in Nepal and the world (2011) - NATT = New Annapurna Trekking Trail".
Phew! A solution was emerging. This circuit from 2011 wasn’t fully marked. The idea was to go from Jomsom to Tatopani, so we needed to make sure the path was well-marked all the way, which we did, and the path exists, marked in red and white!
So, with the walking times information, we built our 8-day circuit:
· Jomsom/Thinigaon · Thinigaon/Chimang · Chimang/Saura · Saura/Kokhetanti · Rest day or, if in good shape: loop to Sekong Lake · Kokhetanti/Jhipra Deurali · Jhipra Deurali/Kopchepani · Kopchepani/Tatopani
It’s a senior trek, after all. So the walking times noted on the sites indicated 3 hours or even 4 hours for the two longest stages. That pace suited us fine.
On March 29, we left Kathmandu (1400m), after visiting the must-see sites, by bus to Pokhara: 200 km and 8.5 hours on a chaotic road under construction. I had a memory of Pokhara where it was the first city where you could see the Himalayan range, especially Machhapuchhare. But the pollution is such, the dust raised by traffic and construction, that no horizon is visible except the first hills around Pokhara.
We stayed 24 hours in Pokhara (820m), and on March 31, we left our luggage at the hotel and set off with our lightest backpacks: change of clothes, toiletries, first aid kit, anti-chafing cream, water bottle, sleeping bag liner, and light shoes for the stages.
We took the bus to Jomsom: 160 km/7.5 hours including stops for bathroom breaks, tea, and lunch. The road is nothing but a chaos of potholes, landslides, construction, dust, rebuilding, and mudslides. In Ghasa, the bus stops, and we’re told we’re at a checkpoint and that the two foreigners in the bus, my husband and I, need to have our permits checked, which takes a few minutes. The driving is rock-and-roll, surprising, and courteous. The drivers have their codes, and on these improbable roads, they’re virtuosos.
We could have chosen the plane, but several reasons dissuaded us: if there’s too much wind, the planes don’t take off; personally, I wasn’t reassured about landing in Jomsom, and this transport has a cost.
We arrived around 2 PM in Jomsom (2720m), and despite the early wake-up, the nearly 8 hours on the bus, and the altitude, we decided to head straight to Thinigaon (2840m). At the Jomsom checkpoint, they told us it was a 30-minute walk. Great! Except we took an hour and a half on an uphill road, bent over to fight a strong wind. But the Himalayan range is there! The Dhaulagiri, the Nilgiri, the Annapurnas as a reward.
In Thinigaon, we found a room at the "Nilgiri View Hotel" run by a didi (big sister in Nepali). From the lodge’s roof, she proudly showed us the different peaks surrounding the village and told us, worried, that it hadn’t snowed here for 3 years. She said there are very few tourists, that the season is rather in September/October/November. It seems there’s not a soul in this village, yet mules pass through the narrow street paved with large flat stones, their bells ringing. We dine at 6 PM and go to bed… Room = 1200 NPR and dinner, breakfast, and drinks = 2560 NPR.
On April 1, we set off at 9 AM, not for Chimang as planned but for Marpha! The didi from the Thinigaon lodge had said it was a 3-hour walk. The first part of this stage is attractive, the mountains are magnificent and imposing, the landscape is superb, there’s no one around, a feeling of being "alone in the world." We follow Dhumbra Tal, this small green lake. The path is a rocky track that climbs steeply. Then, around a hill, we start the big descent that joins the Kali Gandaki. We face the wind head-on, and the violent gusts take our breath away, throw us off balance, and envelop us in dust. We see the road on the other side of the Kali Gandaki. We arrive in the village of Chhairo at 2 PM, completely exhausted and with blistered feet, after 5 hours of walking instead of the planned 3.5 hours.
We’re welcomed by the village nurse, who tells us there’s a lodge in the village. Chhairo is a Tibetan village, a 20-minute walk from Marpha (according to the locals, multiply by 2 or even 3 for us…). We’re going to revise our trek plan and, first of all, spend the night in Chhairo.
The lodge is quite pleasant, and Karma, the hostess, is very friendly. She asks about our plans and suggests we stay in Chhairo the next day, from where we can visit Marpha and also Chimang, a 1-hour walk away, in light mode, meaning without backpacks. She invites us to participate in a village ceremony the next evening.
We immediately accept the proposal, as our feet need rest and the welcome is so warm… Dinner and bed!
We reworked our trek plan, which was too ambitious for our untrained bodies and, let’s face it… no longer in our first youth. In the initial plan, we thought there wouldn’t be too much elevation gain following the Kali Gandaki, but checking the map, we realize there might be significant elevation changes between Sauru and Sirkung. So we plan:
· Tomorrow: visit Marpha (2670m) and Chimang (2744m) · April 3: bus from Chhairo (2700m) to Kalopani (2530m) and continue on foot to Ghasa (2010m) · April 4: Ghasa/Pairataplo (1940m) · April 5: Pairatapla/Gadpar (1580m) · April 6: Gadpar/Narchyang (1510m) · April 7: Narchyang/Tatopani (1190m) · April 8: return to Pokhara.
Normally, it’s all downhill…
April 2, a rest day then… We set off in the morning to explore Marpha. We have to take a temporary bridge because the suspension bridge is closed due to road construction. We join the road and arrive in Marpha, a village famous for its apple orchards, brandy, cider, and apple juice production. This village is magnificent with its stone houses and monastery clinging to the hillside. The road construction spared it. There are people, but very few Western tourists.
We have lunch in Marpha and go back through Chhairo to take the path to Chimang. We cross a fragrant pine forest and find the rocky path; the landscape is splendid. We walk quietly, passing peaceful buffaloes and cows, and arrive at the foot of a stone staircase… 275 steps (which we counted on the way back) leading us to the village of Chimang. Chimang is an isolated Newari village that seems a bit desolate. Despite the slopes, there are crops on every little bit of land. Thankfully, we changed our initial program because there’s no lodge in this village, contrary to what we saw on a map… We wander through the village, which seems very deserted, have coffee in a house from another world, and then head back to Chhairo.
A rest day? = 5 hours of walking!!
Dinner and village ceremony. From what we understand, this ceremony is in honor of the Dalai Lama. Men, women, and children in traditional costumes gather twice a month; they dance, make, and offer small sweet cakes with Tibetan tea (made from tea, yak butter—often rancid—water, and salt). Surprising for first-timers…
Around 10 PM, we leave the ceremony; tomorrow morning, we need to be on the roadside by 7 AM to catch the bus to Kalopani…
This village of Chhairo is very pleasant and welcoming, no tourists, just two motorcyclists who arrived in the evening, one of whom participated in the ceremony and discreetly poured his Tibetan tea outside.
Lodge: "Norsang Tibetan Guesthouse and Restaurant". Total bill for 2 nights, 2 dinners, 2 breakfasts, and drinks = 8000 NPR.
April 3: bus from Chhairo to Kalopani, about 1.5 hours for the 20 km (200 NPR per person). We descend on the right bank of the Kali Gandaki. We find the red and white markings to resume the trek toward Ghasa. We’re in a fragrant pine forest, the Dhaulagiri on one side and the Annapurnas on the other, magnificent, and the path is pleasant and easy. We get a bit lost in this forest, always looking for the markings. Near Lete, two trekkers pass us, and we meet them again a little further on with two very young children, to whom we give the 2 hard-boiled eggs I didn’t eat this morning. They accepted them without hesitation.
We arrive in a village and ask for directions to Ghasa. The young girls point the way. But we come across a forest being logged, trees cut in all directions. We turn back and ask for confirmation. They confirm… But the two young girls catch up with us and clear the way. We have to step over, go around, and cross the felled trees, with no indication at all. Through this pick-up sticks of felled trees, the girls lead us to the top of a stone staircase, indicating that was the path. It’s the only place where we saw rhododendrons in bloom.
We descend the staircase. At the bottom, to the left, there’s a bridge to go toward Choyo, and to the right, a path to Ghasa. We take the right path and join the road. We should normally find the red and white markings, but we don’t… So we continue on the western bank road of the Kali Gandaki.
A little before the village of Misi, we see fumaroles on the opposite bank that seem to come from the ground. We don’t understand. We stopped to eat in the village of Misi (noodle soup = 600 NPR), but it’s hard to communicate with the elderly people running the guesthouse.
We continued on the road, not finding the marked path parallel to the road. Landslides, both on the left and right banks, seem to have taken over the marked routes. It’s a place where the Kali Gandaki gorge narrows, and on the opposite bank, the mountain smokes more and more, and we now hear the crackling of fire. Across from us, the mountain is burning… Our initial plan had us passing on that burning bank right now…
We arrive in Ghasa at 3:30 PM, a 6.5-hour stage but with a 1-hour stop at noon. We’re at the "Florida Guesthouse and Restaurant." From our room, we see the mountain smoking on the other side of the river, and at night, we see the flames. In this village, posters show Himalayan eagles and vultures that seem to be protected species. Indeed, we saw (and heard) 3 eagles circling today.
April 4 – Today, heading to Pairothapla or Kopchepani depending on our feet, accommodation options, and simply our desires.
No more smoke on the mountain this morning. It’s chilly, 7:45 AM, the sky is clear, just a smell of smoke outside.
Price of the lodge = 1000 NPR for the night + 3580 NPR for meals.
We cross Ghasa, which stretches over more than a kilometer. We have a drink at the last guesthouse in the village, and the didi, when she learns our destination, tells us to be careful because the villages we’re going to aren’t safe. Should we distribute our rupees in different pockets? Nah, we kept going.
At the exit of Ghasa, we find the red and white markings and take the suspension bridge to cross the boiling waters of the Kali Gandaki. The passage is impressive because the river is tumultuous. Lots of climbs and even more descents. We’re back on the eastern bank. It’s hot! On the narrow path, we meet a group of buffaloes. Who has the right of way? We decide to stick as close as possible to the rock wall and move forward calmly. The buffaloes look at us, chewing placidly, with no intention of jumping on us. Phew!
After a 5-hour stage (including stops), we arrive in Pairothapla, with hot feet and firm thighs, and decide we won’t go any further. It’s a good thing because there’s a lodge, the most basic so far, but with a great welcome. We have a meal and a short nap. The buffaloes we met on the way belong to this house. They come to drink at the fountain by the path.
Our host, very pleasant, doesn’t know what to do to please us and is very attentive. He wants to chat. He has two children, a 4-year-old girl and a 7-year-old boy. Where do they go to school? Do they go? He tells us that the fires in the mountain are caused by people, but for what reason? We won’t find out, but it’s illegal. From here, we can still see smoke rising in the distance. The wife is a bit less friendly. Corn kernels dry on a woven straw mat on the ground, and the mom sorts them.
From where we are, we overlook the valley and see the road under construction winding along the mountainside on the other bank.
Dinner on the terrace of the house overlooking the path, windbreaker and fleece on: dal bhat chicken for me and chicken curry for my husband: "organic" products, at least local production. There are small vegetable gardens everywhere with all sorts of vegetables.
April 5 – While we’re having breakfast on the terrace of our lodge, 5 porters, straps on their foreheads, heavily loaded, pass by on the path. A few minutes later, a group of 9 people appears. It must be said that since the beginning of our journey, we’ve met very few hikers. Two backpackers in Chhairo, the two hikers near Lete, two female hikers passed us before Pairothapla, a solo female hiker passed us…
The lodge in Pairothapla is called "Bimala Lodge & Thakali Kitchen" – Price for night + 4 meals + 2 breakfasts = 3000 NPR.
The descent toward the Kali Gandaki involves climbs whose steps we didn’t count. Clearly, the landslides on the mountain cause changes to the official ACAP trek marked in red and white, and the marking updates can’t keep up with the pace of these landslides. It’s almost always by chance that we find the markings. Fortunately, we can follow the power line that guides us somewhat.
Drink stop in Kopchepani, the legs are fine, but the feet don’t like being tightly enclosed. A group of trekkers with porters passes on the path. We met buffaloes that we kindly let pass; the path was wide enough, but it was a staircase going up, and we didn’t want to take any risks.
Across, a view of the magnificent Rupse Waterfall on the other bank of the Kali Gandaki, at the bottom, lots of vehicles and people.
Arrival in Gadpar after crossing a rather unwelcoming small village and cultivated gardens between dry stone walls, each better built than the last.
First lodge spotted, first lodge adopted to answer the call of our feet, and a very warm welcome from the owner. Since we hadn’t eaten at noon, we had Tibetan bread/jam. 6-hour stage including 1 hour of stops. Night + dinner + breakfast + drinks = 5060 NPR
April 6 – Today, heading to Narchyang.
For several days, we’ve seen banana trees with their bunches of fruit and even a prickly pear with large fruits ripening.
This stage is quite peaceful and pleasant. We take a suspension bridge to cross a tributary of the Kali Gandaki. While we’re resting for a moment before crossing the bridge, a couple of porters, a man and a woman, arrive and start across the bridge with their wood load in a basket held by a strap on their forehead, making them bend. We set off too… lighter than them.
On the other side of the bridge… a stone staircase, and it climbs steeply. The porter couple didn’t take this staircase; they went right on the path.
At the top of the staircase, we arrive in Narchyang after a 4-hour stage. A magnificent waterfall overlooks the village. We get lost in this fairly large village looking for a lodge. After wandering around for a while, we ask for directions, and an 84-year-old man takes us through the whole village and accompanies us to a very nice lodge run by a woman.
We chat with our hostess, who asks where we’re from and where we’re going. We explain that we want to reach Tatopani the next day and then return to Pokhara. She tells us there are 4x4s going directly to Pokhara and that it would probably be easier than taking a bus that might be full in Tatopani. After a quick consultation, we decide to return to Pokhara the next day by 4x4. She finds us a 4x4 with 2 seats left, departure at 8 AM – 5 hours on the road and 1500 NPR per person. A charming didi who does everything to be pleasant and helpful.
Narchyang community lodge = night + snacks + dinner + breakfast = 3000 NPR.
There you go, our trek ends tomorrow. Many necessary changes and adaptations to our initial trek, but no regrets, it was superb and a great experience that, for my part, I won’t be able to repeat. Always this encounter with the endearing, welcoming, curious, and very kind Nepali people. It was now or never, and we did it!
* * *
In conclusion, 3 full weeks in Nepal is a duration that allows visiting Kathmandu, Patan, and Bhaktapur, enjoying the various sites, and soaking in the atmosphere and urban Nepali life.
The trek, even revised and corrected, allowed us to get close to the impressive Annapurna and Dhaulagiri peaks. One or two acclimatization days might be necessary to get the body in tune with this magical and extraordinary land.
Hi there,
My partner and I are heading to Nepal for 15 days in March—she’s a schoolteacher. We’ll be trekking to Everest Base Camp and then doing the loop via the Gokyo Lakes.
We’d love to set up a fundraiser to donate to a school in Namche, along with visiting the school. It’s something that really matters to us. But it’s been tough to get in touch with a school—any ideas on how to go about this? Thanks!
My partner and I are heading to Nepal for 15 days in March—she’s a schoolteacher. We’ll be trekking to Everest Base Camp and then doing the loop via the Gokyo Lakes.
We’d love to set up a fundraiser to donate to a school in Namche, along with visiting the school. It’s something that really matters to us. But it’s been tough to get in touch with a school—any ideas on how to go about this? Thanks!
Hello my fellow globetrotters, could anyone tell me how to find the French colonial cemetery in Pondicherry? It seems tricky to locate.
Thanks so much for your help! Take care, pace yourselves, and travel far.
Cheers, Régine
Thanks so much for your help! Take care, pace yourselves, and travel far.
Cheers, Régine
I'm looking for a small, not-too-touristy restaurant in Fort Kochi. Do you know one not too far from Jacob Road?
Thanks
Bonjour,
Nous nous apprêtons ma femme et moi pour ce circuit du 27 mars au 8 avril.
J'aimerai savoir si quelqu'un est déjà parti avec l'agence Salaun Holidays? combien de personnes en moyenne par groupe ? combien en liquidités ?
Nous avons des doutes sur les vêtements à prendre.....+ draps et taies ?
Et si vous avez des petits tuyaux pour ne pas être trop ennuyé par les mendiants et démarcheurs.
Vos remarques seront toujours bonnes à prendre.
Merci à l'avance.
Bonjour,
je voudrais faire un voyage au Rajasthan et la vallée du Gange: c'est la première fois que je ferais un voyage lointain et pense le faire avec l'agence BTtours à partir de la Belgique (ou Salaün en France). Quelqu'un a-t-il déjà voyagé avec cette agence et peut-il me donner son avis? Je pensais partir vers le mois de novembre, mais certains me disent que, même là, il ferait relativement froid (8°C) est-ce possible?
D'autre part, quelle est le meilleur moyen pour se procurer de l'argent? Peut-on entrer en Inde avec de l'argent liquide sur soi?
Merci pour les réponses.
bonjour à tous,
Je prépare un voyage en Inde du Nord (Rajasthan, vallée du Gange avec Varanasi (Benares)).
Mon agence de voyage me propose deux TO, Asia avec le circuit "Saris et Saddhus" et Salaun avec le circuit "l'inde du nord et la vallée du Gange". J'ai déjà voyagé au Sri Lanka et en Inde du Sud avec Asia. Les voyages se sont très bien passés.
Je ne connais pas Salaun Holidays. Leur circuit semble plus complet avec une journée de détente (16 jours sur place) . Voyage avec Air France.
Est ce qu'un de membre de ce forum a fait le circuit "l'inde du Nord et la vallée du Gange" avec Salaun? Puis je avoir votre avis sur le TO Salaun Holidays?
Merci beaucoup
Je prépare un voyage en Inde du Nord (Rajasthan, vallée du Gange avec Varanasi (Benares)).
Mon agence de voyage me propose deux TO, Asia avec le circuit "Saris et Saddhus" et Salaun avec le circuit "l'inde du nord et la vallée du Gange". J'ai déjà voyagé au Sri Lanka et en Inde du Sud avec Asia. Les voyages se sont très bien passés.
Je ne connais pas Salaun Holidays. Leur circuit semble plus complet avec une journée de détente (16 jours sur place) . Voyage avec Air France.
Est ce qu'un de membre de ce forum a fait le circuit "l'inde du Nord et la vallée du Gange" avec Salaun? Puis je avoir votre avis sur le TO Salaun Holidays?
Merci beaucoup
Hi there.
We’re heading to India at the end of December for a month.
I planned an itinerary: Delhi, Nawalgarh, Sikar, Jodhpur, Udaipur, Chittaurgarh, Bundi, Jaipur, Bharatpur, and back to Delhi.
Our driver told us it’s not possible because there are no roads.
He’s suggesting the usual tourist circuit, which we don’t want to do.
What do you think of my route?
Any tips?
Thanks, community!
Hello,
We’re a group of 4 looking for a driver and car for our stay in Kerala from November 22 to December 12, 2025. We’ve already planned an itinerary starting from Cochin.
We’ve traveled with a driver before during our trip to Rajasthan.
Thanks for your replies!
Yves
Hi everyone,
we’re heading to Tamil Nadu and Kerala at the start of the year for 30 days. We did Rajasthan 12 years ago, but things change fast.
I’ve read that to get a SIM card, you have to buy it at a shop and then go to the operator to get a number; you’d also need an Indian mobile number. Has anyone here had recent experience with this?
For buses and trains, do you need to book them well in advance?
Any tips are welcome—thanks in advance!
Happy holidays to all,
Philippe
Hi everyone! 🙂
My partner (who’s a teacher—hence the summer holidays) and I are heading to Eastern India for 23 days in July. This is my 5th trip to India, but her first.
We fly into Delhi on July 7th and leave from Delhi on the 23rd (since our flight to Kolkata arrived late at night, and I wanted to show Agra and Varanasi to my partner).
We love getting off the beaten track and meeting people, so we’ll mostly be taking the train.
Here’s what we’re planning:
- **DELHI**: 1 night on the way (short because the plane is supposed to land at 01:55), then we take the train at 13:00 - **GWALIOR**: 3 nights, including a day trip to **AGRA** by train to see the Taj Mahal and the Red Fort (I find Agra too touristy to stay overnight). Otherwise, in Gwalior, the Fort, the temples, the Man Mandir Palace, and the Jai Vilas Palace if we have time. - **ORCHHA**: 2 nights... *maybe skip this to spend more time in VARANASI?* - **VARANASI**: overnight train + 3 nights, the Ghats, temples... maybe a day trip to **SARNATH**. - **KOLKATA**: overnight train + 3 nights. Maybe a countryside excursion to the ashram in Channa. *- Here we’re hesitating over 2 nights: either 2 nights in **SHANTINIKETAN** with a visit to **CHANNA** on the way, or a 2-day excursion to the **SUNDARBAN** nature park. But is it worth it in July during the monsoon?* - **PURI**: overnight train + 4 nights. *We’re planning to do everything from Puri, as it seems nicer than staying in BHUBANESWAR. What do you think?* Visit **KONARK** and **CHILIKA LAKE**. *Is it worth visiting Chilika Lake this season? Another question: can you swim in Puri, or is it too dangerous (waves)?* - Train to **BHUBANESWAR**, then a flight from BHUBANESWAR to **DELHI**, - 2 nights in **DELHI**, visiting Jama Masjid, and *either Humayun’s Tomb, Safdarjung’s Tomb, or Qutb Minar.*
Back to Paris. Total: 23 nights.
What do you think of these choices? What about the options we’re still unsure about *(in bold/italics)*? Thanks so much! 🙂
We fly into Delhi on July 7th and leave from Delhi on the 23rd (since our flight to Kolkata arrived late at night, and I wanted to show Agra and Varanasi to my partner).
We love getting off the beaten track and meeting people, so we’ll mostly be taking the train.
Here’s what we’re planning:
- **DELHI**: 1 night on the way (short because the plane is supposed to land at 01:55), then we take the train at 13:00 - **GWALIOR**: 3 nights, including a day trip to **AGRA** by train to see the Taj Mahal and the Red Fort (I find Agra too touristy to stay overnight). Otherwise, in Gwalior, the Fort, the temples, the Man Mandir Palace, and the Jai Vilas Palace if we have time. - **ORCHHA**: 2 nights... *maybe skip this to spend more time in VARANASI?* - **VARANASI**: overnight train + 3 nights, the Ghats, temples... maybe a day trip to **SARNATH**. - **KOLKATA**: overnight train + 3 nights. Maybe a countryside excursion to the ashram in Channa. *- Here we’re hesitating over 2 nights: either 2 nights in **SHANTINIKETAN** with a visit to **CHANNA** on the way, or a 2-day excursion to the **SUNDARBAN** nature park. But is it worth it in July during the monsoon?* - **PURI**: overnight train + 4 nights. *We’re planning to do everything from Puri, as it seems nicer than staying in BHUBANESWAR. What do you think?* Visit **KONARK** and **CHILIKA LAKE**. *Is it worth visiting Chilika Lake this season? Another question: can you swim in Puri, or is it too dangerous (waves)?* - Train to **BHUBANESWAR**, then a flight from BHUBANESWAR to **DELHI**, - 2 nights in **DELHI**, visiting Jama Masjid, and *either Humayun’s Tomb, Safdarjung’s Tomb, or Qutb Minar.*
Back to Paris. Total: 23 nights.
What do you think of these choices? What about the options we’re still unsure about *(in bold/italics)*? Thanks so much! 🙂
hi everyone, I’m putting together an itinerary for Sri Lanka in September 2026, so I’m focusing on the east side of the island because of the monsoon on the west coast:
Day 1 Kandy: botanical garden, fruit and vegetable market, traditional dance show
Day 2 Kandy-Ella train
Day 3-4 Kumana NP or Lunugamvehera Block 6+5
Day 5-6 Komari / Pottuvi lagoon safari
Day 7 head up the east coast along the beaches to reach Wasgamuwa NP
Day 8 Wasgamuwa NP early morning safari, then Polonnaruwa (temple and palace)
Day 9-10 Sigiriya Lion’s Rock and Dambulla, cave temple
Day 11-12 Wilpattu NP early morning safari, then late afternoon
Day 13-14 Kalpitiya, snorkeling and chilling
Day 15 return to Colombo
Thanks for sharing your thoughts on whether this route is doable—we’ll be traveling with a driver-guide.
Feel free to mention any great tips or good homestay experiences you’ve had, since we prefer those.
Hi everyone, Kerala experts (especially Marien!)
In January, I’m planning another trip to Kerala. We’ll arrive in Kochi and travel up the coast by train to Gokarna.
So I’m reaching out to ask if it’s worth stopping for a few days in any of the following spots (not all, of course—just one or two that are really worth it...). From what I’ve seen, few Western tourists stop along this coast, given how little info there is about it:
Mahe, Thalassery, Taliparamba, Nileshwar, Bekal, Kasaragod
I’m not mentioning Kannur because we’ve already been there, specifically Thottada Beach, and we’re familiar with the southern destinations (Trivandrum, Kovalam, etc.).
Thanks for your replies!
Anne
Hello,
My husband and I usually spend a month in January/February in southern India. We end our trip in Gokarna and fly back from Vasco de Gama Airport in Dabolim. So, it might make sense to spend a few days in a nice, quiet spot in southern Goa. Do you have any recommendations?
Thanks
Hi there,
I’d like to head to Upper Dolpo in September/October 2026.
Does anyone know the current state of the roads in the area?
Specifically for getting from Saldang to Dho Tarap.
Also, what do you think about the weather between September 20th and October 20th?
Any tips would be much appreciated.
I’ve already checked out the info on Martinpierre’s site—it’s super detailed about the region, but the details are a bit outdated.
Thanks in advance for your advice.
Thierry





