| Nepal
Village Tourism
Village
tourism, a recent innovation, is successfully demonstrated
at Sirubari in Syangja a half day s distance from Pokhara.
It is a three hour walk from the road-head just 30 kilometers
from Pokhara. A management committee takes responsibility
for visitors, their welcome, accommodation, sightseeing
and guiding. The village consists of 60 households of
which many are offering guest accommodation. It is a
very neat and clean village, the accommodation is simple,
but comfortable, with good bedding, as well as clean
toilet facilities. Meals of daily fresh food are eaten
with the family, and each evening there is entertainment
provided by the community, which is usually Gurung dancing
and singing.
There is a Buddhist monastery/Gompa
in the core of the village; it has a vibrant Gurung
culture, and they are a mixture of Buddhist, Hindu or
Shaman. The region abounds with flora and fauna, with
two hills nearby providing stunning views of Nepal s
western Himalayas. Trails and steps are formed and paved,
and many shrines and pilgrimage sites dot the landscape.
The season is September to June, and while staying there
visitors can visit cottage industries such as traditional
handicrafts and paper making; and a plant nursery covering
380 hectares of flora, including one million trees and
plants. There are two small lakes nearby and bird watching
and wildlife observation are possible. Sirubari won
the PATA Gold Award 2001 in the Heritage & Culture
- Heritage Category.
In the Gorkha District
of Nepal a community tourist program is in its third
year of operation. The area is full of natural beauty,
panoramic views, green mid-hill trekking, unspoilt jungle
areas, lakes, caves, waterfalls and flora (medicinal,
scented and edible plants).
Accessible from Kathmandu
and Pokhara, there is a one day walk to the model tourism
village . Village treks can be undertaken while experiencing
village and rural life, as well as visiting the majestic
hill-top palace of Gorkha Bazar. Accommodation is in
individual guestrooms with host families, or in between
villages, in tents. During trekking meals are provided
by professional teams, and in the villages visitors
can try a delicious, hygienically prepared Nepali Daalbhaat
consisting of locally produced rice, lentils and garden
fresh organically grown vegetables. The guestrooms are
simple, but clean and cosy, with latrines available
and a water tap close by. (Electricity, hot showers
and separate bathrooms are not available so far).
In the mid-west of Nepal
in the Shyangja District, another model tourism village
project is underway. This is an agricultural and animal
husbandry based community with no other income source;
the intention is to carry out infrastructure development,
heritage conservation and renovation, plus training
and development of the villagers in the region. Located
to the north east is Dahare Deurali, a famous religious
site, and a beautiful location for viewing Himalayan
peaks like Annapurna, Dhaulagiri and Machhapuchhare.
It is at an altitude of 3,900 feet with a population
of more than 6,500 people in the village and surrounding
area. |
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