Annapurna Base Camp Trek
The Annapurna Base Camp provides amazing access to spectacular horizons of snowy peaks so high that people at the first sight wonder and look twice be ... View Details
Annapurna Great View Point Trek
This Trek is often referred as the Sunrise Trek. The main highlight of this trek is the 45 minutes of walk from Ghorepani, early in the morning which ... View Details
Tsum valley Trek
Tsum Valley is a newly explored trekking region as well as a famous pilgrimage site for the Buddhist. Tsum comes from the Tibetan word "Tsombo" which ... View Details
Richard and Kate
21.03.2012
We booked to go to Langtang, gosaikund and helambul with Adventure mission Nepal Treks & Expedition,because 6 years ago we had had the good fortune to have Raj as our guide in the Annapurnas; we wanted to be sure that we got the same level of great service, care and value for money this time rou ... Read MoreBhutan is one of Asia's smallest nations, nearly lost between the extensive borders of the two great nations of China and India . Only 46,500 square kilometers in extent, the kingdom straddles the 27 th parallel north latitude, and stretches from 88°45' to 92°10' east longitude a mere 150 km in its longest dimension. Sikkim and West Bengal lie on Bhutan 's western border, Tibet to the north and northwest, Arunachal Pradesh to the east, and Bengal Duars and Assam to the south. Bhutan is a land of Jungle-clad hills, Impressive River gorges and high mountains. No section of the country is without diversity. The southern strip, paralleling to the border with West Bengal and Assam is a jumble of forested hills heavily dissected by rushing watercourses with wide shingle banks.
The ridges of the southern hills generally trend north-south, and northward they give way to higher ridges oriented in a similar fashion. Between these mountains, many of whose summit exceeds 4000 m, lie broad flood plain valleys, the home of Bhutan 's largest towns and much of the country's population. The major concentration cluster around the sites of traditional fortress-monasteries known as Dzongs. Most of these are situated along major river courses, and inhabit the mid-mountain zone nearly equidistant from the northern and southern borders. From west to east the most important are in: Ha, Paro, Thimphu , Punakha, Wangdue Phodrang, Trongsa, Shongkar and Trashigang.
For centuries Bhutan 's isolated location and it's self-reliant national character kept the Kingdom outside the path of economic development in South Asia . Although this seclusion prevented Bhutan from fully benefiting from many of the medical, technical, and scientific advances of the day, it also shielded the country from many of the detrimental side effects of poorly planned or haphazard development. As a result, while most of the Himalayan region has seen its natural resource base severely compromised through deforestation, soil degradation, erosion and pollution, Bhutan's national patrimony of extensive and varied forests, limited yet fertile and productive farmland, and pristine water and air remains largely intact.







