Thursday, July 30, 2015

Sagarmatha National Park



The Sagarmāthā National Park is a protected area in the Himalayas of eastern Nepal that is dominated by Mount Everest. It encompasses an area of 1,148 km2 (443 sq mi) in the Solukhumbu District and ranges in elevation from 2,845 m (9,334 ft) to 8,848 m (29,029 ft) at the summit of Mount Everest. In the north, it shares the international border with the Qomolangma National Nature Preserve of Tibet and extends to the Dudh Kosi river in the south. Adjacent to the east is the Makalu Barun National Park.



Sagarmāthā is a Nepali word derived from सगर् sagar meaning "sky" and माथा māthā meaning "head".

The protected area has been identified as an Important Bird Area by BirdLife International and is included in the Sacred Himalayan Landscape.


History                                                                                                                                      

The Sagarmatha National Park was established in 1976. In 1979, it became the country's first national park that was inscribed as a Natural World Heritage Site. In January 2002, a Buffer Zone comprising 275 km2 (106 sq mi) was added.[1] Under the Buffer Zone Management Guidelines the conservation of forests, wildlife and cultural resources received top priority, followed by conservation of other natural resources and development of alternative energy.

Tourism to the area began in the early 1960s. In 2003, about 19,000 tourists arrived. About 3500 Sherpa people live in villages and seasonal settlements situated along the main tourist trails.The park's visitor centre is located at the top of a hill in Namche Bazaar, where a company of the Nepalese Army is stationed for protection of the park. The park's southern entrance is a few hundred metres north of Monzo at 2,835 m (9,301 ft), a one day trek from Lukla.


Landscape                                                                                                                                


Most of the park area is very rugged and steep, and the terrain cut by deep rivers and glaciers. The park contains the upper watershed of the Dudh Kosi river basin and the Gokyo Lakes. Barren land above 5,000 m (16,000 ft) comprises 69% of the park while 28% is grazing land and the remaining 3% is forested. Climatic zones include a forested temperate zone, a subalpine zone above 3,000 m (9,800 ft), and an alpine zone above 4,000 m (13,000 ft) that constitutes the upper limit of vegetation growth. The nival zone starts at 5,000 m (16,000 ft).



Vegetation                                                                                                                                



In the lower forested zone, birch, juniper, blue pines, firs, bamboo and rhododendron grow. Above this zone the vegetation is dwarf-sized or comprises shrubs. As the altitude increases, plant life is restricted to lichens and mosses. Plants cease to grow at about 5,750 m (18,860 ft), because this is the permanent snow line in the Himalayas.



Forests of pine and hemlock cover the lower elevations of the national park. At elevations of around 3,500 m (11,500 ft) and above, forests of silver fir, birch, rhododendron and juniper trees are found.



Fauna                                                                                                                                      




The forests provide habitat to at least 118 species of birds, including Himalayan monal, blood pheasant, red-billed chough, and yellow-billed chough. Sagarmāthā National Park is also home to a number of rare mammal species, including musk deer, snow leopard, Himalayan black bear and red panda. Himalayan thars, langur monkeys, martens and Himalayan wolves are also found in the park.



The temperature and available oxygen decrease with altitude. Therefore, the animals that are found here are adapted to living on less oxygen and cold temperatures. They have thick coats to retain body heat. Some of them have shortened limbs to prevent loss of body heat. The Himalayan bears go into hibernation in caves during the winter when there is no food available.









Source: Google 











Monday, July 27, 2015

Bardiya (Bardia) National Park for Travelers


The Bardiya (Bardia) National Park is a protected area in Nepal that was established in 1988 as Royal Bardia National Park. Covering an area of 968 km2 (374 sq mi) it is the largest and most undisturbed national park in Nepal's Terai, adjoining the eastern bank of the Karnali River and bisected by the Babai River in the Bardiya District. Its northern limits are demarcated by the crest of the Siwalik Hills. The Nepalgunj-Surkhet highway partly forms the southern boundary, but seriously disrupts the protected area. Natural boundaries to human settlements are formed in the west by the Geruwa, a branch of the Karnali River, and in the southeast by the Babai River.

Together with the neighboring Banke National Park, the coherent protected area of 1,437 km2 (555 sq mi) represents the Tiger Conservation Unit (TCU) Bardia-Banke that extends over 2,231 km2 (861 sq mi) of alluvial grasslands and subtropical moist deciduous forests.

Listen to the pronunciation of Bardiya National Park's local name About this sound बर्दिया राष्ट्रिय निकुञ्ज 


History

In 1815, Nepal lost this region to the East India Company through the Sugauli Treaty. For 45 years it was a part of British India and returned to Nepal in 1860 in recognition for supporting the suppression of the Indian Independence movement in 1857. Today, this annexed area is still called Naya Muluk meaning new country. An area of 368 km2 (142 sq mi) was set aside as Royal Hunting Reserve in 1969 and gazetted as Royal Karnali Wildlife Reserve in 1976. In 1982, it was proclaimed as Royal Bardia Wildlife Reserve and extended to include the Babai River Valley in 1984. Finally in 1988, the protected area was gazetted as national park.

The approximately 1500 people who used to live in this valley have been resettled elsewhere. Since farming has ceased in the Babai Valley, the natural regenerated vegetation makes the area a prime habitat for wildlife.



Vegetation





About 70% of the park is covered with forest, with the balance a mixture of grassland, savannah and riverine forest. The flora recorded in the park comprises 839 species of flora, including 173 vascular plant species comprising 140 dicots, 26 monocots, six fern, and one gymnosperm species.



Fauna




A group of gharials and a mugger on a sand bank of the Karnali River
The wide range of vegetation types in forest and grassland provides excellent habitat for 642 faunal species. The Karnali-Babai river system, their small tributaries and myriads of oxbow lakes is habitat for 125 recorded species of fish. A small population of gharial inhabits the rivers. Apart from the mugger crocodiles, 23 reptile and amphibian species have been recorded.






Mammals











The Bardiya National Park is home to at least 53 mammals including rhinoceros, wild elephant, Bengal tiger, swamp deer, and Gangetic dolphin.




Rhinoceros: 
Trans-location of rhinos from Chitwan to Bardia National Park commenced in 1986, with 58 individuals relocated until 2000. From 1994 to 2000, hunters have been unsuccessful at poaching rhinos. In April 2000, there were 67 rhinos in the park, most of them resident in the Babai Valley. In May 2006, a reconnaissance survey was carried out in the Babai River floodplain, which revealed an alarming decline in the rhino population. Poaching was suspected to be the main cause of this decline. Subsequent surveys in 2007 and 2008 have confirmed the complete disappearance of rhinos from Babai Valley. In different habitats of the Karnali floodplain 25 rhinos were recorded based on direct observation and indirect signs of rhino dung and tracks. They were mostly congregated in the floodplain grassland, riverine forest and wetlands. In March 2008, only 22 rhinos were counted, and two of them have been poached since the count.




Elephants:
In 1985, two large elephant bulls were spotted for the first time in the park, and named Raja Gaj and Kanchha. They roamed the park area together and made occasional visits to the females. Raja Gaj stood 11.3 ft (3.4 m) tall at the shoulder and had a massive body weight. His appearance has been compared to that of a mammoth due to his high bi-domed shaped head. His forehead and domes were more prominent than in other Asian bull elephants. In 1993, five elephants were seen entering the park, and one year later another 16 individuals arrived. A population count in summer 1997 revealed 41 resident individuals. In 2002, more than 60 individuals were estimated to reside in the Karnali floodplain and the Babai Valley.




Birds




Peacock displaying his plumes
Current checklists include 407 bird species, among them the Bengal florican, white-rumped vulture, peafowl, and bar-headed geese, which are symbolic of the park. Lesser florican and sarus crane are present; grey-crowned prinia, jungle prinia, pale-footed bush warbler, aberrant bush warbler, striated grassbird, golden-headed cisticola and chestnut-capped babbler occur in the park's grasslands.





Source: Google 

Sunday, July 26, 2015

Dhorpatan Hunting Reserve : A must visit place in Asia




Dhorpatan Hunting Reserve lies in Rukum, Myagdi and Baglung Districts in the Dhaulagiri Himal range in West Nepal. Putha, Churen and Gurja Himal extend over the northern boundary of the reserve. Dhorpatan Hunting Reserve was established in 1983 and was gazetted in 1987. Management objectives of the reserve allow sports hunting and preserve a representative high altitude ecosystem in West Nepal
Details About the Reserve:
  • The reserve extends over an area of 1325 sq. km and is the only hunting reserve in the country to meet the sports hunting needs of Nepalese and foreign hunters of blue sheep and other game animals. The higher elevations remain snow-capped throughout the year. Altitudes vary from 3000 m. to more than 7000 m. The flat meadows above tree line (4000 m), locally known as Patan, is divided into six blocks for hunting management purposes.
  • The reserve is surrounded by villages on all sides except the north. Local people depend on the reserve to meet their requirements for wood, fuelwood, fodder, and pasture. The refugee camp near the reserve headquarters has put more human pressure in the forest. Every year livestock grazing activities begin from February and last until October. More than 80,000 livestock enter the reserve.
  • The majority of people belong to the Mongoloid race, including Magar. Thakali, and Gurung, Amalgamation of different ethnic groups has resulted in a mixed pattern of cultures.
  • Dhorbaraha, a Hindu religious place on the banks or Uttarganga River near Dhorpatan, is in Fagune bloc. Every year on the day of "Janai Purnima" in August, a religious fair is held here which is attended by many local devotees. The magnificent view of Dhaulagiri Himal from Barse. Dogari and Gustung blocs are exceptional. Snag and Sundaha bloc are rich in wild animals.


Vegetation and Wildlife:
  • The reserve is characterized by alpine, sub-alpine and high temperate vegetation. Common plant species include fir, pine, birch, rhododendron, hemlock, oak, juniper and spruce. Pasturelands occupy more than 50% of the total area of the reserve at higher elevations.
  • The reserve is one of the prime habitats for blue sheep, a highly coveted trophy. Other animals found are : leopard, goral, serow, Himalayan tahr, Himalayan black bears, barking deer, wild boar, rhesus macaque, langur and mouse hare.
  • Pheasants and partridge are common and their viable population in the reserve permits controlled hunting.
  • Endangered Animals in the reserve include Musk deer, Wolf, Red panda, Cheer pheasant and Danphe.
  • A hunting license is issued by the Department of National Parks and Wildlife conservation.


Seasons:
  • The monsoon lasts until the beginning of October. Day time temperatures are very low during winter due to strong winds. Higher elevations remain covered by cloud in the morning, later cleared by the wind. Snow may occur even at low elevation until early April, however, it soon melts. The best time to visit the reserve is March-April.





How to Get There:
  • Public bus service is available from Kathmandu to Tansen and Tamgash Gulmi from where the reserve HQ. is a three day walk via Burtibang.
  • Flight service reaches Baglung from Kathmandu and Pokhara. The reserve HQ. can be reached in 4 days walk from Balewa, Baglung.
  • A public bus can be taken to Baglung from Pokhara followed by a 4 day walk via Baglung Beni-Darbang-Lumsum and Jaljala to reach Dhorpatan.
  • A helicopter charter may be available on request from Kathmandu.




Some Important Points:


Local people are allowed to collect limited quantities of fuelwood for their use. Visitors are requested to be self-sufficient with fuel before entering the reserve. Since no medical facilities are available in the reserves, it is suggested that visitors carry a comprehensive first-aid kit including medicines for intestinal disorders. Two hotels/lodges catering simple Nepali foods are located at Chhyantung near Dhorpatan.




Source: Google


How to get fit for travel


Travelling is one of life’s best experiences, expanding your mind and opening up new realms of possibility. It can, however, be tough on your body physically. Lugging heavy suitcases around, catching new modes of transport and dealing with life outside of your comfort zone can not only cause old injuries to flare up but also make you mentally and physically exhausted.

CARDIO EXERCISE

Increasing your physical fitness levels in the build up to your next big adventure can solve this problem. Adding in cardiovascular exercise in the month prior to leaving for your trip can make a world of difference. Cardio exercise is anything which gets your blood pumping and your heart racing. This can include (but is not at all limited to) regular walks, cycling, dancing, or running.
Find something you enjoy and simply get moving. Start with 10 minutes a day if necessary and build it up over time as your fitness levels get better. Remember to include some hills if you know you are going somewhere hilly, it’s no use walking miles on the flat and then arriving somewhere like San Francisco and having to trek up and down hills everywhere.


BUILDING STRENGTH FOR CARRYING BAGS

A bag with a bottle of water and a camera are essentials when you’re travelling but get heavy quickly on a day out exploring, particularly when you are walking everywhere. Rather than ditching the bag and camera, build up the strength in your shoulders, legs and abdominal muscles to help you carry what you need.
The last few weeks before heading off travelling, start walking around with a bag filled with a couple of bottles of water. Start with short distances and less water and build it up as your strength and fitness levels improve. Remember to always be walking, running and moving with tall posture, pull your shoulder blades back, lift your head up and pull your tummy in.
Standing and walking with good posture will activate all of your supporting muscles and help you to breathe better too, with the added bonus of looking much better in photos!
how to get fit for travel

CLIMBING UP TALL BUILDINGS?

Ancient sites, churches, cathedrals and old tall buildings are beautiful to visit and the views are incredible for photography but getting to the top can be tricky. Often there is no alternative but to be prepared for walking up and down hundreds of steep stairs! This requires strength in your quadriceps (front of your thighs) and your gluteals (your bum muscles) and great balance and fitness levels.
A great way to build this strength is to practice stepping up onto a step. Find a step in your house and step up and down with each foot. Try to do this without holding onto the wall or stair rail to help build up balance and coordination. If this feels easy, find a higher step, those with better strength in their legs will be able to step up onto a chair or bench.
It is important work at your own pace and find something that challenges you but doesn’t cause pain during or after the movement. It is highly possible you will feel sore muscles in your legs in the days after your practice your stairs, it is better that these are sore when you are at home than on your holiday!
how to get fit for travel

DEALING WITH SWOLLEN FEET ON FLIGHTS

Are swollen feet an issue for you when you are flying? Does your body feel tight and heavy with bad circulation when you reach your destination?
Flying is tough on the fittest of us, those with poor circulation, extremely tight muscles and poor posture will find their body feeling tired and worse for wear when they arrive.
A skin brush is a fantastic tool for those with poor circulation and can be used before and after flying to stimulate blood and lymphatic flow around the body. With a skin brush, use long, gentle strokes up the legs and feet towards the belly. You can also use the brush on your upper body (not your face), gently brushing up your arms (away from your hands) and down your back and stomach towards your belly. Not only will your skin feeling amazing, skin brushing will also reduce the sluggish, heavy feeling that can come from air travel and help you to get moving straight away.
how to get fit for travel

IT’S WORTH GETTING FIT FOR TRAVEL!

The trick to getting fit for travel is start your physical preparation well in advance. The earlier you get started and the more regularly you get moving, the fitter, stronger you will be.
Regular cardiovascular exercise and skin brushing are also techniques which you can carry on into your normal routine. Cardiovascular fitness has shown to reduce your risk of serious health implications, reduce body fat and improve self confidence while skin brushing boosts blood and lymphatic flow around the body and helps to stimulate skin renewal, great for those whose skin is starting to thin.
Don’t let your physical fitness get in the way of you enjoying your travels around the world. Get fit, strong and active and enjoy the incredible world around us.
. . .
Source : Google 

Tuesday, July 21, 2015

NEPAL : What to taste/ drinks in Nepal for travelers


Nepal – and specifically Kathmandu – is renowned as the budget eating capital of Asia. Sadly, its reputation is based not on Nepali but pseudo-Western food: pizza, chips (fries), “sizzling” steaks and apple pie are the staples of tourist restaurants. Outside the popular areas, the chief complaint from travellers is about the lack of variety, though with a little willingness to experiment, a range of dishes can be found.
Indeed, a vast range of flavours can be found just in daal bhaat, the national dish of rice, lentils, lightly curried vegetables and pickles; though it can also, sometimes, be disappointingly bland. In the Kathmandu Valley, the indigenous Newars have their own unique cuisine of spicy meat and vegetable dishes, while a vast range of Indian curries, breads, snacks and sweets comes into play in the Terai; in the high mountains, the traditional diet consists of noodle soups, potatoes and toasted flour. “Chow-chow” packet noodles, cooked up as a spicy soup snack, are ubiquitous. Vegetarians will feel at home in Nepal, since meat is considered a luxury. Tourist menus invariably include veggie items.
Outside the tourist areas food is very inexpensive, and a simple meal and drink may well set you back less than Rs100. In places like Kathmandu and Pokhara, however, costs can quickly add up: you might pay around Rs250–500 for a main meal at a tourist-oriented restaurant, and even more at a posher place. Note that few restaurants include government taxes (13 percent) and service charges (10 percent) in their menu prices.

WHERE??


Tourist restaurants in Kathmandu, Pokhara and a few other well-visited places show an amazing knack for sensing what travellers want and simulating it with basic ingredients. Some specialize in particular cuisines, but the majority attempt to cover most bases. Outside these tourist hubs, options are more limited, though Terai cities always have a fancy (by Nepali standards) restaurant or two, generally serving a mix of Nepali, Indian and Chinese food.
Local Nepali diners (bhojanalayas or, confusingly enough, “hotels”) are traditionally humble affairs, offering a limited choice of dishes or just daal bhaat. Menus don’t exist, but the food will normally be on display or cooking in full view, so all you have to do is point. Utensils are usually available on request, but if not, try doing as Nepalis do and eat with your right hand – and bear in mind the various social taboos relating to eating. In towns and cities, places to eat tend to be dark, almost conspiratorial places, unmarked and hidden behind curtains. On the highways they’re bustlingly public and spill outdoors in an effort to win business.

Teahouses (chiyapasal) really only sell tea and basic snacks, while the simple taverns (bhatti) of the Kathmandu Valley and the western hills put the emphasis on alcoholic drinks and meaty snacks, but may serve Nepali meals too. Trailside, both chiyapasal and bhatti are typically modest operations run out of family kitchens. Sweet shops (mithaipasal or misthan bhandar) are intended to fill the gap between the traditional mid-morning and early evening meals; besides sweets and tea, they also do South Indian and Nepali savoury snacks.
Street vendors sell fruit, nuts, roasted corn, and various fried specialities. As often as not, food will come to you when you’re travelling – at every bus stop, vendors will clamber aboard or hawk their wares through the window.



Nepali food



Daal bhaat tarkaari (daal means lentil, bhaat rice and tarkaari vegetable), usually just known as daal bhaat, isn’t just the most popular meal in Nepal. For many Nepalis it’s the only meal they ever eat, twice a day, every day of their lives, and they don’t feel they’ve eaten properly without it. Indeed, in much of Nepal, bhaat is a synonym for food and khaanaa (food) is a synonym for rice. The daal bhaat served in restaurants ranges from excellent to derisory – it’s a meal that’s really meant to be eaten at home – so if you spend much time trekking or travelling off the beaten track you’ll probably quickly tire of it. It’s worth looking out for establishments sporting the name Thakali – Nepalis believe this ethnic group (originating in the hills around Annapurna) produces a particularly good daal bhaat, and they are usually right.
That said, a good achhaar (a relish or pickle made with tomato, radish or whatever’s in season) can liven up a daal bhaat tremendously. There are endless subtle variations in the flavours and grades of rice and in the idea of what constitutes a good daal, from the buttery, yellow gunge of raharkodaal to the king of winter lentils, maaskodaal, cooked in an iron pot until it turns from green to black.

Daal bhaat is often served on a gleaming steel platter divided into compartments similar to an Indian thali; add the daal and other condiments to the rice, knead the resulting mixture into mouth-sized balls with the right hand, then push it off the fingers into your mouth with the thumb. One price covers unlimited refills, except in tourist-savvy establishments.
Most Nepalis begin the day with a cup of tea and little else, eating daal bhaat some time in the mid-morning (often around 9am or 10am) and again in the evening, with just a snack of potatoes, makkai (popcorn) or noodles in between. Daal bhaat times in Kathmandu are pushing nearer to lunchtime but, outside the city, it’s worth remembering that if you turn up for khaanaa at noon it’ll either be cold or take hours to cook from scratch.
You’ll usually be able to supplement a plate of daal bhaat with small side dishes of maasu (meat) – chicken, goat or fish. In Indian-influenced Terai towns you can often get roti instead of rice. Sukuti (dried, spiced meat fried in oil) is popular everywhere. You could make a meal out of rice or chiura (beaten, dried rice) and sekuwa (spicy kebabs) or taareko maachhaa (fried fish), common in the Terai. If you’re invited into a peasant home in the high hills you might be served dhedo (a toasted corn, millet or wheat flour dough) instead of rice. Some say dhedo with gundruk, not daal bhaat, is the real national food of Nepal, though it’s only just started to appear on the menu of Thakali restaurants.
Nepali desserts include khir (rice pudding), sikarni (thick, creamy yoghurt with cinnamon, raisins and nuts) and various versions of Indian sweets.



Newari food


Like many aspects of Newari culture, Newari food is all too often regarded as exotic but too weird for outsiders. It’s complex, subtle, delicious and devilishly hard to make. Most specialities are quite spicy, and based around four mainstays: buffalo, rice, pulses and vegetables (especially radish).
The Newars use every part of the buffalo, or “buff”: momocha (meat-filled steamed dumplings – differentiated from Tibetan momos by their purse-like rather than half-moon shape), choyila (buff cubes fried with spices and greens), palula (spicy buff with ginger sauce) and kachila (a paté of minced raw buff, mixed with ginger and mustard oil) are some of the more accessible dishes; others are made from tongue, stomach, lung, blood, bone marrow and so on. Because of caste restrictions, Newars rarely eat boiled rice outside the home. Newari restaurants therefore serve it in the form of baji (chiura in Nepali) – rice that’s been partially cooked and then rolled flat and dried, looking something like rolled oats – or chataamari (a sort of pizza made with rice flour, usually topped with minced buff).
Pulses and beans play a role in several other preparations, notably woh (fried lentil-flour patties, also known as baara), kwati (a soup made with sprouted beans), musyapalu (roasted soya beans and ginger) and bhuti (boiled soya beans with spices and herbs). Various vegetable mixtures are available seasonally, including pancha kol (a curry made with five vegetables) and alu achhaar (boiled potato in a spicy sauce). The best veggie option is alutama, a sour soup made with bamboo shoots and potatoes. Radish turns up in myriad forms of achhaar.


International food

The tourist restaurants of Kathmandu and Pokhara offer tastes of virtually every cuisine under the sun. There’s no denying that this international food is tasty, but the sheer range of choice available to visitors has the unfortunate side effect of isolating many visitors from Nepalese cooking. Many restaurants try to offer a bit of everything, but some are moving upmarket into dedicated cuisines, notably Chinese, French, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Mexican and Thai.


Indian food







Indian food is widely available. The dishes you’re most likely to encounter are from North India: thick, rich curriestandoori dishes, and breads like rotischapatisnaansparathas and puris.
In the Terai you’ll also run across South Indian canteens, which serve a predominantly vegetarian cuisine. The staple dish here is the masala dosa, a rice-flour pancake rolled around curried potatoes, served with sambhar (a savoury daal flavoured with tamarind) and coconut chutney. There is also an incredible array of sweets, including laddu, yellow-and-orange speckled semolina balls; jalebi, orange pretzel-shaped tubes of deep-fried, syrup-soaked treacle; gulab jamun, spongy balls in super-sweet syrup; and ras malai, cream cheese balls in a milky, perfumed syrup.


Tibetan food


Strictly speaking, “Tibetan” refers to nationals of Tibet, but the people of several other highland ethnic groups eat what could be called Tibetan food.
Momo, arguably the most famous and popular of Tibetan dishes, are available throughout upland Nepal. Similar to dim sum, the half-moon-shapes are filled with meat, vegetables and ginger, steamed, and served with hot tomato salsa and a bowl of broth. Fried momo are called kotheShyaphagle, made from the same ingredients, are Tibetan-style pasties. Tibetan cuisine is also full of hearty soups called thukpa or thenthuk, consisting of noodles, meat and vegetables in broth. For a group feast, try the huge gyakok (chicken, pork, prawns, fish, tofu, eggs and vegetables), which gets its name from the brass container it’s served in. In trekking lodges you’ll encounter pitta-like Tibetan or “Gurung” bread.
The average peasant seldom eats any of the above. Potatoes are common in the high country, and Sherpa potatoes – usually eaten boiled in their skins with a dab of salt and chilli paste – are justly famous for their nutty sweetness. Tsampa (toasted barley flour) is another staple, and often, especially for trekkers, mixed with milk or tea to make a porridge paste.


Road food




Common food on the road includes pakora (vegetables dipped in chickpea-flour batter, deep fried), and bean curry served with puris or roti. Another possibility is dahi chiura, a mixture of yoghurt and beaten rice. If you’re in a hurry, you can grab a handful of samosas (curried vegetables in fried pastry triangles), baara (fried lentil patties), or other titbits on a leaf plate. In the hill towns and around Kathmandu, huge aluminium steamers placed by the restaurant door advertise momo. If nothing else, there will always be packet noodles (“chow-chow”).



Other snacks

Imported chocolates are sold in tourist areas, and waxy Indian substitutes can be found in most towns. Biscuits and cheap boiled sweets (confusingly enough, called chocolet in Nepali) are sold everywhere. Cheese, produced from cow, buffalo and occasionally yak milk (nak milk in fact – the yak is the male and the nak the female), comes in several varieties and is sold in tourist areas along trekking routes. Watch out for churpi, a native cheese made from dried buttermilk – it’s so hard as to be inedible.

Fruit

Which fruits are available depends on the season, but there’s usually a good choice imported from India. Lovely mandarin oranges, which ripen throughout the late autumn and winter, grow from the Terai up to around 1200m and are sweetest near the upper end of their range. Autumn and winter also bring papaya in the Terai and lower hills, Asian pearsapples and sugar caneMangoes from the Terai start ripening in May and are available throughout most of the summer, as are lycheeswatermelonspineapples and guavasBananas, harvested year-round at the lower elevations, are sold everywhere.

Drinks:

Non Alcoholic Drinks 



The most popular non-alcoholic drinks in Nepal include:
  • Chay is the local tea that comes with milk. It is also often mixed with ginger or other spices.
  • The Nepalese also enjoy a salty tea known as suja – it contains milk and butter.
  • Lassi is similar to a milkshake, made traditionally from curd or sometimes yoghurt, it is churned and chilled. This drink is not only popular in Nepal but also in many parts of South Asia.



Alcoholic Drinks 




The most popular alcoholic drinks in Nepal include:
  • Raksi is made from rice or millet (a type of grass) and is similar to tequila. This is the cheapest and one of the most popular alcoholic drinks in Nepal. It is often consumed on festival days.
  • Jaand is sometimes referred to as Nepalese beer, but it is closer to a rice wine. It is not as strong as raksi, but most it is usual to dilute it in water.



Table Etiquette in Nepal

There are a few dining rules that visitors to Nepal should be aware of including:
  • It is considered taboo for non-Hindus to enter a Hindu kitchen.
  • It is considered bad manners to touch anyone else’s food in Nepal.
  • The local people use their left hand for cleaning themselves after the toilet so only the right hand is used for eating. It is also bad table etiquette to pass food to someone else using the left hand.
  • It is traditional for the Nepalese to eat two main meals of the day – one at about seven in the morning and one around eight in the evening.
  • In recent years the Nepalese have tended to snack more. They refer to this type of food as kha ja which translated means eat and run.