Acclimatise, never rush
We build rest days into every high route and walk high, sleep low. The altitude sets the pace — honouring it is what keeps the whole journey safe and genuinely enjoyable.
Multi-day walks at the pace of the land — acclimatising properly, sleeping in villages, and stopping when something is worth stopping for.
On a Pangolin trek the mountain sets the timetable, not a spreadsheet. We build in the acclimatisation days the body actually needs, walk high and sleep low, and treat the route as a string of villages to live in rather than stages to clear.
That means tea-house classics walked slowly and quiet corners that barely make the map — the Nar Phu gompas, the Mustang wind, an afternoon spent watching a yak train rather than racing it. You arrive somewhere changed, not just photographed.
We build rest days into every high route and walk high, sleep low. The altitude sets the pace — honouring it is what keeps the whole journey safe and genuinely enjoyable.
We linger in settlements rather than ticking off stages, lodging with families so that market days, kitchens and monastery routines shape your hours.
Light packs, short days where it matters, and time to actually look. The best moments are rarely the pass — they are the tea stop, the light, the conversation on the way.
Spring brings rhododendron and warmth; autumn brings the clearest air. We plan around the season and the weather, not around fixed dates.
Tell us your dates and how far off the map you want to be — we will shape a trek around your pace.
Plan a Journey Like This