Kangchenjunga: A Trekker’s Guide - Himalayas, Nepal

Cover of Kangchenjunga: A Trekker's Guide

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Availability
Published
Cover
Paperback - Laminated
Published
1 Jun 1999
Edition
First
ISBN
9781852842802
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ISBN (10)
1852842806
Size
17.2 x 11.6 x 1.5cm
Weight
220g
Pages
176
No. Maps
8
No. Photos
29
Originally Published
1 Jun 1999

Kangchenjunga: A Trekker's Guide

by Kev Reynolds

A guide to trekking in the Kangchenjunga region of the Himalayas of Nepal. With its five summits, Kangchenjunga is the world's third highest peak. Includes the North Base Camp trek - considered to be the most beautiful walk in the world, Ghunsa to the Simbua Khola valley, southern approaches and trekking to Kangch from Sikkim. More...

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Seasons

March to May and October to November. Monsoon is too wet (and there may well be no view) and Read More... winter is too cold.

Centres

Access is through Kathmandu, then flight to Biratnagar and bus to the roadhead at Basantpur, or Read More... bus the whole way (1-2 days).

Difficulty

Mainly acclimatisation, but trekking here is far from the facilities of the Khumbu and Annapurna Read More... regions and the going is much rougher. At present, Maoists might be a concern.

Must See

Has been described as The Most Beautiful Walk in the World. The views and the Nepali people and Read More... culture. Not the loos.
 
 

At 28,169ft (8586m) Kangchenjunga in far north-eastern Nepal is the world's third highest peak. It's a huge, spectacular mountain with five tops and five glaciers dominating a spur from the main Himalayan axis. The trek to its base via the Nepalese foothills has been described quite simply as The Most Beautiful Walk in the World.

This book is a guide to that trek. It describes the trails, villages and views, gives a potted history of some of the mountains, and adds background interest for anyone planning to visit the area. It's a sparsely populated region with a greater sense of isolation than in the more popular areas of Nepal. The trails are rougher, the facilities more primitive and the routes less well defined, offering a different kind of experience to that of the more mainstream routes and with the undisputed scenic grandeur for which Nepal is famous.

The author describes three possible approach routes and two link routes, with two main destinations, both in spectacular locations.

 
 
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