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Mustang Trekking
Mustang is a remote, semi-independent Tibetan kingdom within
the territory of Nepal (just north of the Annapurna Region
on the Tibetan border), and one of the last bastions of undisturbed
Tibetan culture in the world. Buddhist monasteries and nunneries
are built into forbidding cliffs and mountain ledges, and
the starkly beautiful, windy, arid Tibetan plateau is unbroken
for many hours of trekking or riding on, horseback. The trek
enters upper Mustang at Kagbeni, a quaint medieval town nestled
in apple orchards and encircled by snow mountains. It eventually
reaches the ancient capitol of Lo Manthang, a walled city
built of whitewashed mud bricks and teeming with Buddhist
prayer wheels and stupas, seeming to arise from the earth
itself. There are very few guesthouses and restaurants in
the region; so camping is required and most necessities must
be carried in. Entirely closed to visitors until the early
1990s, upper Mustang treks are still restricted by a set of
rules for cultural conservation and require a minimum $700
permit fee for a ten-day trek. (Treks are typically ten days
but can be longer.) The high winds, altitude and cold add
to the challenge of this trek. It is not recommended to do
in the winter months and can be strenuous for some people
even in the warmer months.
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