Detailed Itinerary:

Day 01: Arrival in Kathmandu: 1300m/4265ft (BB)
Arrival in Kathmandu where you will be met and transferred to Hotel, just walking distance to any styles of good restaurants and shops. Our Representative will give you short briefing on hotel facilities and safety. Tonight we only have a short introduction to the area, just what you need to know before the main briefing tomorrow. O/N Hotel in Kathmandu

Day 02: Sightseeing of World Heritage sites:
After breakfast, tour briefing will take place around 9 am and any last minute questions answered. After lunch we explore this medieval capital. We visit Boudhanath, also known as little Tibet. Then we visit Pasupatinath, holy temple of Hindu where cremation takes place by the holy river Bagmati. Later we visit Patan Durbar Square. Evening: welcome dinner hosted by Basanta Adventure. O/N Hotel in Kathmandu.

Day 03: Fly Kathmandu – Paro (Full Board)
Arrive by Druk air BAE 146-100 series, the only national carrier. The flight offers you beautiful mountain and landscape. On arrival and after visa formalities you will be received by representative of Basanta Adventure. Afternoon / evening time at leisure. O/N at Kichu Resort.

Day 04: Paro Sightseeing (Full Board)
Today you’ll visit the ruined fortress of Drugyel dzong which still attracts visitors due to the strategic location of the fort. The fort defended the Paro valley from the Tibetan invasion from the north in the early 17th century. On clear weather Mount Chomolhari 7320 meters can be seen towering over the dzong. Proceed through the beautiful valley to the watch tower or locally known as Ta-Dzong. It was housed into the National museum in the 1960s by the third King Jigme Dorji Wangchuck. The seven floors museum highlights various aspects of Bhutanese culture and history dating back to the 7th century. A short walk downhill to the Rinpung Dzong which serves as the administrative center and school for monks. Walk further down crossing the traditional bridge into Paro Town. Stroll around the market and return to Kichu Resort.

Day 05: Thimpu Sightseeing (Full Board)
Drive to Thimphu will take 2 hours and will be a pleasant one mainly due to the well maintained road through out Bhutan. Upon arrival check into Hotel Druk or River view. PM sightseeing - Visit the Memorial chorten built in the memory of the late King Jigme Dorji Wangchuck, 15 century Changangkha monastery, Motithang mini zoo to see the rare "Takin" national animal of Bhutan and drive further down with good view of the Thimphu valley. Visit the new Drupthob nunnery temple and free time in the market.

Day 06: Sightseeing in Bhutan: 3100m/10168ft (Full Board)
Visit the Painting school, National library, Royal goldsmith workshop and Handicraft centers. PM drives 3 hours to Wangduephodrang crossing the Dochula pass 3100 meters. On fine weather you will see the eastern Himalayan ranges including the highest mountain in Bhutan Mt.Gangar Punsum 7520 meters. The drive from the pass is all the way downhill dropping to the lower and warmer valleys of lobesa. Visit the Wangduephodrang Dzong from outside and the market area. O/N at Wangdi Kichu Resort.

Day 07: Visit to Gangtey Valley: 2800m/9184ft (Full Board)
Day excursion to the Gangtey Gompa Valley at an altitude of 2800 meters. The only Nyingmapa monastery in western Bhutan is located here. This beautiful valley is also home to the rare Black Necked Cranes migrating from the Tibetan plateau to escape the harsh winter. Currently there are 200 to 300 cranes residing in this valley and the Royal Society for Protection of Nature (RSPN) is taking every measure to ensure the safety of the Cranes. While the cranes reside in the winter valley for 4/5 months the village folks are not allowed to make load noises or fish in the river that runs through the valley. Explore the fascinating glacier valley and return to the Resort. O/N at Kichu Resort.

Day 08: Sightseeing in Thimpu (Full Board)
AM drive 45 minutes to Punakha and visit the Punakha Dzong which served as an old capital of Bhutan. This remarkable fortress is built between two rivers and has survived many glacial floods and fire. Every year during the month of February a procession known as the Punakha Serda takes place to commemorate the victory over the Tibetans. Drive 3 hours to Thimphu for lunch and proceed 2 hours to Paro via visiting the oldest building in Bhutan, the Simtokha Dzong. It now serves as a Buddhist university. O/N at Kichu Resort.

Day 09: Day excursion to Taktsang Monastery (Full Board)
Day hike to the view point of Taktsang monastery. Horses can be arranged with an extra payment. The hike which is all the way uphill takes about 2 /3 hours through villages and pine forests. The monastery which clings to a huge granite cliff 800 meters from the Paro valley was devastated by fire in 1998 but the Royal Government has taken immediate steps to restore the monastery to its original structure. It is believed that the great saint Padmasambhava came in the 7th century on a flying tigress and meditated in a cave for 3 months. The demons were subdued who were trying to stop the spread of Buddhism and converted the Paro valley into Buddhism. During the end of the 17 century a monastery was built on the spot where the saint mediated and it is a pilgrimage site for every Bhutanese to visit once in their life time. Stroll back to Resort. O/N at Kyicho Resort.

Day 10: Transfer to airport, fly to Kathmandu (BB)
You will be driven to the airport in time to catch your flight back to Kathmandu. Arrival in Kathmandu where you will be met and transferred to Hotel. O/N Hotel in Kathmandu.

Day 11: Day at leisure (BB)
This pleasant day you may have full day at leisure and either relax at hotel or explore Kathmandu city, shopping etc. O/N Hotel in Kathmandu.

Day 12: Holiday extension or transfer to airport for final departure:
Today either you’ll have your holiday extension for another tour or we will transfer you to airport for final departure flight.

General Information on Tours:

 


Basanta Adventure organizes several of tours through its subsidiary company Pamirs Travel. There are well planned package tours that can be designed as per the interest of the clients.  Please visit for more information: www.pamirstravel.com 

Places of Interest:

Paro - Open Sesame

As you fly into Bhutan you will find that Paro is as apt an introduction to Bhutan as there can be. The place reflects all of Bhutan. Fresh with crisp, clean mountain air Paro is a valley encased by walls of mountains that are dotted with Buddhist Stupa and monasteries. And a river runs through it.

The most prominent structure in the valley is the elegant Rinpung Dzong which, like most dzongs in Bhutan, is built upon an elevated vantage point that overlooks the largest stretch of the valley. The Rinpung Dzong is the monastic and administrative center of the district. Up on a hillock above the dzong rises what was once a watchtower? This, the Ta Dzong, is now the National Museum.

On touchdown in Paro the very airport it will speak of the Bhutanese element that pervades all buildings in Bhutan. But for architectural marvel you must travel some distance upstream where the Taktsang monastery - seriously damaged in a 1998 fire and now under reconstruction - stands on the sheer face of a granite cliff.

The architectural feat represents the strength of religious fervor in Bhutan.

Drugyel Dzong (the Fortress of the Victorious Drokpas), located 18 kilometers from Paro town, is another monument to the Bhutanese spirit. It was from here that Bhutan repeatedly and successfully drove back Tibetan invaders.

However, for all the peace and calm of the valley, Paro is widely regarded as a "rice bowl" valley and is one of the most prosperous settlements in a country that is dominantly agrarian.

Phuentsholing - Commercial Hub

Phuentsholing's importance arises from the fact that it borders India, the country that is the one major trading partner of Bhutan. It is this border that makes the town a lively jumble of Bhutanese and Indian cultures, peoples and products. Little surprise, therefore, that Phuentsholing is not far from the 1020-megawatt Tala hydroelectric power plant, the largest single socio-economic development project ever attempted by Bhutan.

Yet, even with the din of commerce, serenity is but a few minutes drive away. The Amo Chu, a river whose banks are a favored picnic spot, creeps nonchalantly by the town while a gardened monastery sits perched on the hillock of Kharbandi.

Thimpu - The Political Core

Thimpu is one of the smallest capitals yet, almost ironically, also one of the fastest growing urban centers in the world. The population growth rate is over seven percent per year.

No more than a collection of villages and a centralized dzong before it became the capital in 1956; Thimpu is now the largest Bhutanese town and represents the peak of Bhutan's modest economic advancement. Still, it has no lack of religious and cultural character. It was from this valley that the sons of Phajo Drugom Zhipo, the founder of the state religion in Bhutan, spread the Drukpa Kagyu school of Buddhism in Druk Yul; and numerous monasteries and religious centers still adorn its hills. It remains the summer residence of the Je Khenpo, the religious head of the country, and of the Central Monk Body.

It was also in Thimpu that a decisive battle in 1885 allowed the first king, Sir Ugen Wangchuck, to unify Bhutan and later establish a monarchy. The fourth King, His Majesty Jigme Singye Wangchuck, today rules Bhutan from the Golden Throne in Thimpu's Tashichhodzong (the Fortress of the Auspicious Religion).

Life in Thimpu revolves around the town's main street, Norzin Lam, which is split into two levels and comprises a mix of shops, hotels and restaurants. Visitors will find Thimpu has many other places of interest such as the School of Arts and Crafts, the National Institute of Traditional Medicine, the Handicrafts Emporium and the bronze workshop.

As a recent edition of the Himalayan Travel Trade Journal put it, "Thimpu is a capital proud of its past and shows every effort at maintaining its age old traditions. Although open to the outside world, the authorities have succeeded in keeping Western influences at bay, a reason why it captivates visitors."

Punakha - The Former Capital

Situated at a lower elevation than Thimpu and Paro, Punakha's warmer climate makes it one of the most fertile valleys in the kingdom and its vast rice fields stand testimony to that claim.

The township has shifted to a new location a few kilometers downstream from its original site on a river bank opposite the Punakha Dzong. The dzong itself, which housed the first National Assembly (Bhutan's parliament) in 1952, is the winter residence of the Je Khenpo and the Central Monk Body. It is situated on a spur of land a stone throw above the confluence of the Pho Chhu and Mo Chhu rivers. The dzong was built in 1632 by one of Bhutan's most important historical figures, Zhabdrung Ngawang Namgyal, and has played a key role in the civil and religious life of the Bhutanese ever since.

Wangduephodrang - Riding an Elephant

Legend has it that the Zhabdrung was given Divine directions to build a fort on a hill that looked like an elephant. He did, and Wangduephodrang Dzong proved critical in unifying the western, central and southern districts.

The town that neighbors the dzong today is a cluster of small shops that include one or two establishment which serve as lunch-stops for tourists. It is a pretty town whose residents are known to keep it conspicuously clean.

Trongsa - Where the Twain Meet

Trongsa is home to the largest dzong in Bhutan, a dzong that was the seat of the Trongsa Penlop, Gongsar Jigme Namgyal and of his son, King Ugen Wangchuk, and the second King, Jigme Wangchuck.

This ancestral seat of Bhutan's Royal Family sits squat on what was 100 years ago the only route connecting eastern and western Bhutan. It was, to His Majesty the King's ancestors, a pivotal element in the governance of eastern Bhutan.

The original Trongsa Dzong was built by the Zhabdrung in 1648.

Bumthang - The Geographic Core

Arguably unsurpassed in the serene poetry of its landscape Bumthang is a photographer's paradise. This broad valley in central Bhutan, which houses several sacred Buddhist shrines, is split by a clear mountain river that runs by one of the most picturesque towns in the kingdom. Perched high on a hill above the town looms the impressive and appropriately named Jakar Dzong (Fortress of the White Bird) which sports a central tower rising 150 feet high.

Myth and religious legend abound in Bumthang. A host of tales and accounts of the revered eighth century Tibetan mystic, Guru Padma Sambhava, and the great Nyingmapa treasure revealer, Terton Pema Lingpa (1450-1521), are traced to Bumthang and its satellite valleys. The Guru's bodily imprints are still visible at the Jampa Lhakhang (monastery) and the Kurjey Lhakhang, located on a fringe of the Choekhor valley.

Beyond Bumthang lies the equally charming Ura valley, which is the last settlement before the climb up to the country's highest road at Thrumshingla (12,500 feet) and then further down into eastern Bhutan.

Mongar - Room with a View

The difficult drive over winding bends and high cliffs before Mongar makes the town a refreshing stop. The first thing visitors notice is that, unlike most western and central Bhutanese towns, Mongar sits on the side of a hill and not in a valley. Much of eastern Bhutan is the same - the hills are generally steeper and the valleys too narrow for comfort. The people of eastern Bhutan also speak a different dialect and their villages are less nucleated.

As if to emphasize its hilly base the small town of Mongar appears to have sprouted suddenly in one collective heave. The houses, all uniform in size, are relatively taller than elsewhere and rise into a hill slope in one straight line.

Trashigang and Tashiyangtse - An Orient's East

Beyond Mongar and a 90-kilometre stretch of arid landscape is Trashigang, a town tucked into a hillside cavity. Minute as it appears Trashigang is the nerve center of eastern Bhutanese commerce as its roads stretch one way towards the southern border and the other way into two interior districts. Another road follows a separate direction towards the satellite township of Rangjung and then spreads out in fingers to more rural settlements.

Trashigang's 17th century dzong is built on a cliff further out of the town and commands a majestic view of the Dangme Chhu River.

Tashiyangtse grew out of Trashigang and achieved separate district status only recently. Far more sparsely populated than Trashigang, Yangtze is more an administrative center than a town. Like Mongar, its dzong was also constructed in recent times.

The place has developed around Chorten Kora, a Stupa where Guru Padma Sambhava is believed to have foreseen the construction of a special temple and chorten (Stupa). Indeed the chorten is one of the only three in Bhutan built in the style of the Boudhanath Stupa in Kathmandu, Nepal.

Tashiyangtse is known for its skilled wood craftsmen and for the Bomdeling National Park where the endangered Black Necked Cranes (Grus nigricollis) roost each winter.

 

 

 

 

 



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