The turquoise water of Phoksundo Lake in Dolpo, ringed by forested slopes beneath a snow-capped Himalayan peak, Nepal
Destination · The Far Corners

Remote Nepal

Beyond the trail map lie Dolpo's turquoise lakes, Limi's Tibetan villages and Kanchenjunga's wild east — places that still ask to be reached slowly, on foot.

Best SeasonMay–Oct
AltitudeUp to ~5,000 m
RegionDolpo · Humla · Far West
Getting ThereFly to Juphal or Jumla
Ideal Stay14–24 days
PermitsRestricted-area permits
The Region

Beyond the trail map, on purpose.

Some corners of Nepal were never on the way to anywhere. Dolpo sits behind the main Himalaya in a high desert rain-shadow, where Phoksundo Lake glows an impossible turquoise above the village of Ringmo, and trails climb to Shey Gompa and the Bon settlement of Dho Tarap. Far to the west, Rara — the country's largest lake — holds still inside its pine-forested park. Northwest, Humla and the Limi Valley press right against the Tibetan border.

These places are hard to reach on purpose. You fly to a Terai airstrip at Nepalgunj, then onward to a mountain runway at Juphal, Jumla or Simikot, and from there everything is walked. Roads thin out or vanish; villages keep their own rhythm, their own dialects, their festivals and gompas largely as they have been for centuries. Restricted-area permits and a licensed guide are required, and the regions see only a few hundred trekkers a year.

We travel here the slow way: fewer valleys, longer stays, days that follow the light and the herders rather than a kilometre count. You linger over butter tea in a Dolpo kitchen, walk a kora at Crystal Mountain, share a Limi village's evening prayers. The reward for the effort of getting in is a Nepal that is still wholly itself, and a solitude increasingly rare anywhere on earth.

Travel Slow

How to travel here slowly.

01

Settle by Phoksundo

Base in Ringmo for several days, walking the turquoise shoreline, visiting the Bon gompa and letting the high desert light change the lake hour by hour.

02

Days in Dho Tarap

Stay long enough in the Tarap Valley to share meals, watch the barley harvest and sit through a monastery ritual rather than passing through in an afternoon.

03

Walk village to village in Limi

In Humla's Limi Valley, move slowly between Halji, Til and Jang — three ancient Tibetan settlements — on foot and on local time near the Tibetan border.

04

Linger at Rara Lake

Camp a few unhurried nights inside Rara National Park, circling the lake on foot, birdwatching the pine forest and watching the water shift from steel to deep blue.

Don't miss

  • Phoksundo Lake's turquoise water above Ringmo, with Shey Gompa and Crystal Mountain's pilgrim kora deeper in Dolpo
  • Dho Tarap, one of the highest year-round settlements on earth, with intact Bon and Tibetan-Buddhist life
  • Rara Lake, Nepal's largest, ringed by pine forest and 200-plus bird species
  • Humla's Limi Valley and its ancient border villages of Halji, Til and Jang
  • Kanchenjunga in the wild east, the world's third-highest peak, seeing only a few hundred trekkers a year

Know before you go

  • Restricted-area permits are mandatory for Dolpo, Humla and Kanchenjunga — you cannot trek solo; a licensed guide and registered group are required.
  • Access is a journey: Kathmandu to Nepalgunj, then a small-plane flight to Juphal, Jumla or Simikot, after which everything is on foot.
  • Dolpo sits in a rain-shadow, so the monsoon months can be a viable, drier window there; Rara and the far west are loveliest May–June and Sep–Oct.
  • These are remote, high regions with passes near 5,000 m — acclimatise slowly and expect basic teahouse or camping logistics.
  • Cultural intactness is the draw and the responsibility: ask before photographing, walk clockwise around chortens, and support village-run lodges.
Travel With Us

Ready to go truly remote?

Tell us your dates and how you like to travel — we'll shape a slow journey through this region around you.

Plan a Journey Here