Getting To Nepal
There are few direct flights to Nepal, which means most travellers
from Europe, North America and Australia have to change aircraft
and/or airline en route. International airlines used to come and try it ... and then they stopped servicing Nepal. Nepal's only international airport is
Kathmandu's Tribhuvan Airport. If you want to see the mountains
as you fly into Kathmandu from Europe, make sure you sit on the
left-hand side of the plane; coming from the USA it would be the
right-hand side. The departure tax for international flights is
appr. US$ 24, or US$15 to destinations on the Indian subcontinent.
The classic overland routes between Nepal and India are still
popular. Buses are usually the quickest, cheapest and easiest
form of transport between Nepal and India. There are three main
crossing points: Sunauli-Bhairawa, Birganj-Raxaul Bazaar and Kakarbhitta-Siliguri.
The Sunauli border crossing is the best one from Varanasi, the
Birganj crossing is the easiest from Kolkata, and Kakarbhitta
is the obvious choice from Darjeeling. A trickle of travellers
enter Nepal at the Mahendrenagar-Banbassa border crossing in the
extreme west of Nepal, which is handy for travellers coming overland
from Delhi who do not want to visit Varanasi. The crossing between
Nepal and Tibet via Kodari is open to organised groups but not
to individual travellers heading north. Be prepared with alternative
plans if you're thinking about using this route, because landslides
regularly make it impassable during the monsoon.
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Traveling in Nepal
Nepal Airlines and a raft of private companies offer domestic
air services, but flights are relatively expensive and often delayed
or cancelled due to inopportune weather. Airlines only accept
payment in hard currency from visitors. Kathmandu's domestic airport
is right next to the international airport.
Public buses are the main form of transportation and are incredibly
cheap, incredibly uncomfortable and tediously slow. Buses ply
almost every paved road (not that there are many), as well as
some of the unpaved ones, and some visitors come back with horror
stories about 'almost' plunging into a ravine. There are several
services between Kathmandu and Pokhara aimed specifically at tourists
like the Greenline bus service. If the affinity to chickens and
goats as travelling companions is not deeply ingrained tourists
will prefer them. There are no trains and no car rental in Nepal.
Cars with drivers can be hired.
Local transport in the Kathmandu Valley and around Pokhara includes
metered and unmetered taxis, buses, tempos (three-wheeled buses),
auto-rickshaws, bicycle rickshaws and bicycles.
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