Settle at Kyanjin Gompa
Base for two or three nights instead of one. Acclimatise unhurried, walk a glacier moraine one morning, do nothing the next, and let the high valley reveal its weather and its quiet.
The closest Himalaya to Kathmandu, where Tamang villages, working monasteries and glacier viewpoints crowd a single valley still rebuilding, with grace, after 2015.
Langtang is the Himalaya you can almost touch from Kathmandu. A single day's drive north to Syabrubesi, then the trail folds upward through rhododendron forest and along a glacial river, the peaks closing in slowly until Langtang Lirung (7,227 m) fills the head of the valley. No airport, no shortcut — just a road, a river, and a valley that rewards you for staying inside it.
This is Tamang country: stone houses, mani walls worn smooth by passing hands, prayer flags strung between yak pastures, and monasteries that still keep the calendar of the seasons. At Kyanjin Gompa (3,870 m) you can buy hard yak cheese from a dairy the Swiss helped found in the 1950s. Slow travel here means lingering — over butter tea, over a second night to acclimatise.
Langtang carries its grief openly and without melodrama. In 2015 an earthquake-triggered avalanche buried the old Langtang village; the valley has rebuilt itself, teahouse by teahouse, on ground its people chose to return to. To walk here now is to witness resilience as ordinary daily life — so we go gently, and spend locally.
Base for two or three nights instead of one. Acclimatise unhurried, walk a glacier moraine one morning, do nothing the next, and let the high valley reveal its weather and its quiet.
A lower, gentler loop from Syabrubesi through villages like Gatlang and Tatopani — hot springs, home kitchens, and Tamang culture lived rather than performed, far from the main flow.
At the Kyanjin dairy, taste hard yak cheese made the way the Swiss introduced it in the 1950s, and learn how a herding economy and a high-altitude craft hold this community together.
Kyanjin Ri (~4,770 m) or the longer Tserko Ri are non-technical acclimatised day climbs — chosen by readiness, not ego — for a sweep across the Langtang range to Tibet.
Tell us your dates and how you like to travel — we'll shape a slow journey through this region around you.
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