Stone-roofed Gurung houses of Ghandruk village clustered on a forested hillside in the Annapurna region, Nepal
Destination · Gandaki

Annapurna

A region to settle into, not rush through — Gurung villages, rhododendron forests and slow mountain mornings beneath Machhapuchhre's sacred fishtail summit.

Best SeasonMar–May · Oct–Nov
AltitudeUp to 4,130 m
RegionGandaki
Getting ThereFrom Pokhara
Ideal Stay7–14 days
PermitsACAP
The Region

A sanctuary of villages, forest and snow.

The Annapurna region rises north of Pokhara into one of the Himalaya's most layered landscapes — terraced hillsides, oak and rhododendron forest, stone-roofed villages, and a ring of giants including the unclimbed, sacred Machhapuchhre, the Fishtail. It is protected as the Annapurna Conservation Area, Nepal's largest.

Most travellers treat this as a checklist sprint to Annapurna Base Camp at 4,130 metres. We don't. The reward of Annapurna is in slowing down: a few unhurried days in Ghandruk, a Gurung village whose oldest houses are as old as the settlement itself, where meals are homemade and the porch faces the snows.

Spring brings the rhododendron bloom — whole hillsides of red and pink — while autumn offers the sharpest mountain views of the year. Either way the rhythm is the same: cool mountain mornings when the peaks catch first light, long lunches with families who have farmed these slopes for generations, and afternoons that belong to you.

Travel Slow

How to travel here slowly.

01

Stay in Ghandruk

Base yourself for several nights in a Gurung village homestay — stone houses, home-cooked dal bhat, and the Annapurna massif framed from the courtyard. Let the village set the pace.

02

Walk the forest, not the clock

Trace oak and rhododendron trails between hamlets like Landruk, Kimche and Tadapani. Short days, long pauses, tea where you find it — the forest is the destination, not the gap between viewpoints.

03

Mountain mornings

Rise before dawn for the light on Machhapuchhre and Annapurna South from a ridge or village rooftop — Poon Hill's famous sunrise, or a quieter perch with no one else on it.

04

Sit with the people

Share kitchens and stories with Gurung and Magar hosts whose families have worked these terraces for centuries. The culture, not just the scenery, is what stays with you.

Don't miss

  • Ghandruk — historic Gurung village (~1,940 m) with Fishtail and Annapurna South from the doorstep
  • Machhapuchhre / the Fishtail — the sacred, unclimbed peak that anchors the Annapurna Sanctuary
  • Annapurna Base Camp (4,130 m) — the high amphitheatre of peaks, reached slowly and on your own terms
  • Poon Hill sunrise — a sea of cloud and a wall of snow lighting up at first light
  • Spring rhododendron forests — hillsides in red bloom from March to May

Know before you go

  • An ACAP permit is required and easily arranged in Pokhara; TIMS is no longer mandatory for the Annapurna Base Camp route.
  • Best windows are spring (Mar–May, for blooms and warmth) and autumn (Oct–Nov, for the clearest views); monsoon brings rain and leeches.
  • Access is from Pokhara — a short drive reaches trailheads at Nayapul, Kimche or the road head near Ghandruk.
  • Higher days reach 4,130 m at Annapurna Base Camp; acclimatise gradually and keep the itinerary unhurried.
  • Lodges and homestays are simple and locally run — pack layers for cold mountain mornings, and carry some cash.
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