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RODUNGLA TREK

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Billionaire Singapore found that the top three things that luxury travel segment guests are looking for while on holiday are cultural experiences, food and drink, and experiencing local life and people. Bhutan, one of the least-visited countries in the world and home to a wealth of natural and cultural discoveries made it to the list of five destinations that are trending with Asian travellers for 2023, based on a luxury survey.

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Recent Articles

Accommodation
January 8, 2023
VISA to Bhutan
January 4, 2023
Tour Guides in Bhutan
January 4, 2023
20 Days 19 Nights
Paro
Paro
Max People : unlimited
Tour Highlights
  • October or early November are the ideal months for this trek.
  • Prior to the construction of the road, the Rodung La trail served as the main trading route into eastern Bhutan.
  • The scenery on this walk is varied throughout, and it offers stunning mountain views of the eastern Himalayan range.
  • The path can alternatively be thought of as a continuation of the Snowman trek, which ends in Bumthang.

Arrival Location

Paro International Airport (Google Map

Departure Location

Paro International Airport (Google Map

Price Includes

  • Airport Transfers
  • Stay in hotels as indicated in the itinerary
  • All three meals, tea and coffee
  • Dedicated SUV vehicle with a driver and
  • English Speaking Guide throughout the Trip
  • Short hikes, Packed lunches and snacks wherever required
  • Monumental Fees
  • Bhutan Tourism Development Fee
  • VISA processing Fee

Price Excludes

  • International Air fare
  • Refreshments and bottled drinks and alcohol
  • Tips/gratuities
  • Cost arising out of Flight Cancellation/road blockades/ landslides and events beyond our control
  • Expenses of personal nature and any other expenses not mentioned in the above cost
Itinerary

Day 1Arrive Paro

  • One of the most breathtaking flights offered by Druk Airways in the entire Himalaya is to Bhutan. Each flight is an amazing aeronautical feat and delivers an exhilarating descent into the Kingdom, whether it is from Kolkata or Kathmandu across the foothills of the Himalayas. After completing the necessary immigration and customs processes upon arrival at the Paro airport, our representative will meet you and drive you to the hotel. Take a stroll down the town’s main street in the evening. Spend the night at the Paro hotel.

Day 2Paro

  • Visit Taktsang Monastery (Tiger’s Nest) in the morning. According to legend, Guru Padma Sambhava arrived here riding on the back of a tigress and landed where a monastery would eventually be constructed. The monastery suffered significant fire damage in 1998, but it has since been completely restored to its former splendor.

  • Visit Ta Dzong in the afternoon. Ta Dzong was constructed in the 17th century as a watchtower to protect the valley and Paro Dzong. After being transformed into the National Museum in 1967, this castle is currently home to vintage thangkha paintings, textiles, firearms, and Bhutan’s renowned postal stamps. The remarkable Rinpung Dzong, which translates to “fortress of the heap of jewels” and has a lengthy and intriguing history, is located beneath the Ta Dzong.

  • Halt in a hotel at Paro for the night.

Day 3Paro to Thimphu (55 km,2 hours)

  • Drive to Drugyel Dzong in the morning, the abandoned castle from which Bhutanese repelled multiple incursions by forces from Tibet. Visit Kyichu Lhakhang, one of the Kingdom’s oldest and most revered shrines, as you travel.

  • After that, go to Thimphu while stopping at Simtokha Dzong, the oldest fortification in the kingdom and current home of the School for Buddhist Studies, which was erected in 1627.

  • After visiting Trasichhodzong, a stunning medieval fortress/monastery in the evening, Memorial Chorten, a stupa built in honor of Bhutan’s Third King, is visited.

  • Stop over the night in a hotel in Thimphu.

Day 4Thimphu to Trongsa (200 km, 6 hours)

  • Visit the National Library, the Arts and Crafts School, and the Textile and Folk Heritage Museum in Thimphu in the morning.

  • Next, travel to Trongsa through the Pele La Pass (3,050m) and Dochula Pass (3,050m) (3,300m). In Trongsa, spend the night in the inn.

Day 5Trongsa to Bumthang

  • Early morning excursion to the impressive Trongsa Dzong, the royal family of Bhutan’s ancestral home. Visit Ta Dzong next, which was designed as a watchtower to look over Trongsa Dzong. After that, go to Bumthang and spend the afternoon exploring the Jakar Dzong, which was constructed in the 17th century by Zhabdrung Ngawang Namgyal, the country’s first spiritual and political leader. Visit the Kurjey monastery next, where Guru Padsambhava left his physical stamp during the eighth century. In the following century, the temple was constructed. Visit Jambay Lhakhang later. Spend the night at the Bumthang lodge.

Day 6Bumthang to Ngang Lhakhang

  • The journey starts today. The Chamkhar Chhu (river) is followed by the trek path, which passes by numerous villages and temples, meadows, forests of blue pine, and scrub bamboo. Today is a really easy and enjoyable day. Reach the village camp at a height of 2,900 meters. It takes roughly 6 hours to walk.

Day 7Ngang Lhakhang to Ugyenchholing

  • As you make your way up the trail toward the Phephela pass, you’ll pass through juniper trees and eventually reach the pass at an elevation of 3,340 m. Arriving at Ugyenchholing village after the path descends to Tang valley. At a height of 2,850 meters, camp near the river. 7 to 8 hours of walking.

Day 8Ugyenchholing to Phokpey, 17 km, 6 hours

The trek’s beginning is treacherous and muddy. It turns into a narrow pathway through soggy fields and dwarf bamboo at about 3,000 meters. The trail passes through a field with more dwarf bamboo at about 3,400 meters. A steep, high meadow can be reached by ascending across the meadow and cutting through the woodland. The path leads to a summer meadow that is bordered by trees and covered in little blue alpine flowers.

Day 9Phokpey to Ungaar, 20 km, 8 hours

A further 30 minutes of ascent will bring you to Rodungla (4,100m). The journey to the valley bottom is therefore extremely steep. On the way, there are a few little meadows. Near the campsite, after a little stroll through dwarf bamboo, are pine trees.

Day 10Ungaar to Taskila, 21 km, 8 hours

This road, which rises and falls like a wave, leads to Khaine Lhakhang and Drula hamlet. Built by the Tibetan King Songtsen in the middle of the seventh century to tame demons, it is one of the oldest temples still standing today.

Day 11Taskila to Lhuentse

After lunch, proceed to the Lhuentshe guest house for some leisure.

Day 12Lhuntse to Menji, 16 km, 5 hours

Once you reach Kuri Zam, the hike progressively ascends through villages and paddy fields. The camp is located at 1,850 meters between the settlement of Menji and the Darchu Pang Lhakhang, which is surrounded by a flower garden with marigold, geranium, dahlia, and nasturtium plants.

Day 13Menji to Pemi, 20 km, 7 hours

Continue upward into the steep, humid woodland, which is covered in thick fern and creeper vegetation and is constantly chirped by cicadas. The path is steep and constrained. Reach the camp at Pemi (2,400m) on a narrow ridge top clearing with a view out to a forested gorge and mountains by steadily climbing for two hours to a ridge top meadow, then descending back into the forest.

Day 14Pemi to Taupang, 21 km, 7/8 hours

Continue climbing until you reach Dong la (3,900m), which offers breathtaking mountain vistas. The trail crosses nine passes, known as the “nine sisters of Dong la” on the other side of the pass. Finally, a steep descent through dense evergreen forests on a trail littered with rocks and logs leads to a meadow on top of a ridge. The camp is located at Taupang (2,460m), a woodland clearing with a wooden cowherd’s hut.

Day 15Taupang to Trashi Yangtse, 24 km, 8/9 hours

Today’s trip will pass through areas with enormous ferns, red-berried palms, and sporadic leeches. After a two-hour hike, you arrive at the village of Shukshing, a collection of bamboo homes perched on a hillside and encircled by cornfields, banana trees, and grazing cows. The hike comes to an end at Trashiyangtse Dzong.

Day 16Trashi Yangtse to Trashigang

Early-morning drive to Trashigang. Visit the neighborhood market and Trashigang Dzong. overnight stay in the inn.

Day 17Trashigang to Bumthang (289 km, 10 hours)

Drive back to Bumthang after breakfast, stopping along the way to see the town and dzong of Mongar. Stop in the Bumthang lodge for the night.

Day 18Bumthang to Punakha (205 km, 6 hours)

Drive to Punakha the following morning after seeing Bumthang market. Lunch would be provided along the way at a renowned eatery in Trongsa town.

Take a quick break for tea or coffee on the way to your guesthouse in Punakha after passing Wangdue Phodrang.

Day 19Punakha to Paro (125 km, 4.1/2 hours)

Spend spare time in the morning in Punakha. Drive to Paro for the evening after lunch.

Day 20Paro Depart

Drive to the airport for the subsequent trip after breakfast at the hotel.

Map

Photos
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