Ed Douglas 

Walking the Great Himalayan Trail

Travellers can now walk the entire length of Nepal on the Great Himalayan Trail. Ed Douglas's images capture both remote districts and well-trodden peaks
  
  


Great Himalayan Trail: Snow-capped peaks in south Annapurna
Annapurna South, 7219 metres high, in the ACA. Two thirds of trekkers in Nepal head here
Photograph: Ed Douglas
Photograph: guardian.co.uk
Great Himalayan Trail: Ploughing the fields in the Annapurna region
A farmer ploughing rice paddies in the Annapurna region. The trek takes in eco-systems from sub-tropical jungle to fragile high-altitude environments
Photograph: Ed Douglas
Photograph: guardian.co.uk
Great Himalayan Trail: A temple along the trail
Religious chortens in the western Nepali district of Mugu. Last summer only a dozen or so trekkers visited this area
Photograph: Ed Douglas
Photograph: guardian.co.uk
Great Himalayan Trail: Mount Everest
Everest, known to Tibetans as Chomolungma and with the official Nepali name of Sagarmatha. The Sagarmatha National Park is the second-most popular trekking region in Nepal. The GHT passes close to the mountain’s southern base camp
Photograph: Ed Douglas
Photograph: guardian.co.uk
Great Himalayan Trail: Ghandruk, Annapurna
The village of Ghandruk in the Annapurna Conservation Area. Construction of a new road along part of the Annapurna Circuit has worried some locals that tourism will be damaged
Photograph: Ed Douglas
Photograph: guardian.co.uk
Great Himalayan Trail: Into the clouds in Langtan National Park
A mist-shrouded peak above Kyanjin Gompa in the Langtang National Park. Langtang is the third most popular trekking destination, and an excellent introduction to Himalayan walking
Photograph: Ed Douglas
Photograph: guardian.co.uk
Great Himalayan Trail: Langtang National Park
The Great Himalayan Trail crosses one of its most difficult passes to reach the Langtang National Park, Tilman’s Pass (5,301m), named after the British mountain explorer HW Tilman, the first Westerner to explore the region in 1949
Photograph: Ed Douglas
Photograph: guardian.co.uk
Great Himalayan Trail: Mani stones, Langtang
Prayer, or ‘mani’ stones in the Langtang National Park. The region is home to the Buddhist Tamang people. The Sanskrit mantra, reads ‘Om Mani Padme Hum’ and is carved in Tibetan script – Hail to the Jewel Lotus
Photograph: Ed Douglas
Photograph: guardian.co.uk
Great Himalayan Trail: Mugu
The Great Himalayan Trail, where it drops down from Dolpo, the region of Nepal made famous by Peter Matthiessen in the Snow Leopard, into Mugu
Photograph: Ed Douglas
Photograph: guardian.co.uk
Great Himalayan Trail: Mugu mountains
Mugu is the poorest district in Nepal, and is also home to a large number of unclimbed mountains, including all the peaks in this photograph
Photograph: Ed Douglas
Photograph: guardian.co.uk
Great Himalayan Trail: Old Tibetan man, Mugu
An old ethnic Tibetan trader in Mugu, western Nepal. One of the few remaining ancient trans-Himalayan trade routes passes through Mugu, with large caravans of yaks bringing goods over the border, still three days’ walk north of this point. Most people head south in winter, when snow blocks the pass
Photograph: Ed Douglas
Photograph: guardian.co.uk
Great Himalayan Trail: A woman working in the flields in Jugal Himal
A woman cutting crops in Jugal Himal, eastern Nepal. The GHT passes Jugal Himal’s sacred lake, the Bhairab Kund
Photograph: Ed Douglas
Photograph: guardian.co.uk
 

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