back to top
Friday, June 5, 2026
Home Blog Page 98

TPOL’s Biggest Fears: Some Conquered, Some Endure

Fear is part of the ANA, Take Me ‘Round the World Trip Report.


After swimming with crocs in Darwin, braving the rapids in Bhutan (see Finding Happiness: Bhutan Day 3), and paragliding in Pokhara, I started to wonder what Red Bull activity I would not try.

Fears 

What is a thrill for me may be a fear for you and vice versa. Here are my biggest fears which I have yet to conquer and a brief explanation of why I am still scared.

Motorbikes/Mopeds

I will hop on the back of a motorbike anywhere in the world. I am not scared of the Excitebike action. What I won’t do is drive one myself. They are too dangerous for my taste. As an adolescent, I recall driving my cousins moped in his neighborhood. I was supposed to turn left but, paralyzed by fear, hopped the curb right onto the lawn of a man watering his grass. He looked at me in disbelief. I tried it again another day and once again found myself steering onto another person’s lawn. And that’s in a suburban neighborhood. I couldn’t imagine doing it in a big city. I once was told that one person dies each day in Vietnam in a motorbike accident. I know how to cross the street in Vietnam, but riding a motorbike? No thank you. I would be terrified at the sight of oncoming traffic and would cave if a truck honked at me when it passed. I literally think I would wipe out just to be done with experience.

Bicycles

On par with motorbikes are bicycles. Though I’m prolific on the spin bike, I have no balance on a bicycle. Like the moped, I am scared of falling over. I’m also scared of traffic. Anytime a car is approaching in the opposite lane, I somehow wander towards it. If I sense a vehicle is coming from behind, I freeze and have to come to a complete stop. Unfortunately, there’s no getting around bicycling for some tourist activities. In Mendoza, I needed a bike to go on a wine tour (see “It’s Like Riding a Bike.” Those words have haunted me for years.). In Blenheim, it would’ve been so boring to go on a wine tour via minibus. There’s no way I could’ve seen the beauty of the vineyards (see Wine Tours by Bike NZ: A Must for Wine Enthusiasts). In Bagan, the best way to see the pagodas is with a rickety bike (see Guns & Butter: Bagan Travel Guide). In Bhutan, I should’ve skipped the downhill only ride from the Big Buddha (see Finding Happiness: Bhutan Day 2).

Unlike motorbikes, I will get back on a bicycle and I think I’m making some progress.

Stick Shift

Once upon a time, my friend and I were driving were driving to Canada when we were stopped by American border patrol for CWA – crossing while Arab. While it’s not uncommon to be questioned or detained by the country you are going to, it’s not very often that you’re stopped by the country you are leaving from (see “You Leave Only with Passport!” Detained in Tel Aviv Again). After a thorough pat-down which included a gentle massage of my privates, I was put back in the waiting room. My friend was still being interrogated. The agent, whose name I will never forget, came out and told me that my friend had a suspended drivers license. If I didn’t want to see him go to jail I would have to drive his car. At that point, Officer Hiscock asked me if I knew how to drive stick? With my friend’s freedom hanging in the balance, I said, “Absolutely!” We were released and taken to my friend’s car which had been ripped apart. With the agents watching, I had my crash course in driving a manual. The scariest part was reversing on a bridge with semi-trucks whizzing by. I thought I would slingshot the car right off the bridge. Somehow I managed to do it and got us to the Canadian entry point. Canada doesn’t have the same CWA rule and let us in right away. Despite stalling at the border, I got the hang of it and drove all the way to Hamilton. On the way home, I had to drive again. Though Officer Hiscock wasn’t there that day, we were still stopped. There was no ball touching this time around, but we were still detained momentarily.

Besides the PTSD from this experience, I’m also terrified of shifting from neutral to first while being on an incline. I feel I would start sliding backward, panic, and either hit the car behind me or descend uncontrollably to my death.

Driving on the Left

Manual or auto, my third and final fear is driving on the left. I can’t do it. I end up either being too close to the left shoulder or in the middle of the road. Like motorbikes and bicycles, I get nervous when other cars come towards me or from behind.

Thrills 

Here are fears that have since become thrills.

Jetski (Conquered)

When I was a kid, I rode on the back of a jetski with my cousins. They thought it was fun to go as fast as possible straight and then jerk the jetski sideways so I would fly off. Falling off didn’t hurt but the anxiety of when it would happen was too much to bear. Since then I avoided jetskis for the most part, and if I did go on one, I would not go fast. Two summers ago, my friend invited me to go jet skiing on the Hudson. The water was choppy and I was nervous. I would hit the gas, let go, then hit the gas. This was getting me nowhere. Since I was scared of falling off, I abandoned this strategy and decided to go for it. Zipping along at speeds over 50mph, I started doing turns and having fun. I realized that it wasn’t jetskis that I should be wary of, it was my reckless cousins.

Bungee (Conquered)

I’m not scared of heights, but I was scared of bungee jumping because of the risk that the rope would break (see Woman Survives Terrifying Bungee Accident) or that I would get whiplash. I said if I went to Zimbabwe, I would face this fear and jump off the bridge. On the ledge, jumpers hear the announcement, “3, 2, 1 bungee!” From there they have to jump. I wondered if I would freeze when it was my turn. I did not and actually was not scared at all (see 3,2,1 Bungee! Bungee Jumping Victoria Falls).

And there you have it. Those are the activities I am scared of. Some I have conquered, others I have not. Obviously, there are things that I will not do, like scaling a mountain with no rope but neither would 99.9 percent of people.

a person flying with parachutes
I ain’t scared of no ghost.

Paragliding Pokhara: Born to Be Alive

Paragliding Pokhara is part of the ANA, Take Me ‘Round the World Trip Report.


We were born to be alive! Born to be alive.

That song captures the point of life. I seek out adventure when I travel. Whether it’s swimming with crocodiles in Darwin (see Guns & Butter: Darwin Travel Guide), wading with the devil in Zambia (see The Devil’s Pool Zambia: Loungin Atop Victoria Falls), bungee jumping in Zimbabwe (see 3,2,1 Bungee! Bungee Jumping Victoria Falls), or braving category 3 rapids in Bhutan (see Finding Happiness: Bhutan Day 3 ), I get after it.

The adrenaline activity I chose in Pokhara was paragliding. Unlike riding a bicycle which is still terrifying to me (see Finding Happiness: Bhutan Day 2), heights do not scare me. Still, there is a small degree of risk when you’re feet are off the ground and the only thing keeping you from death is a parachute.

Before detailing my ride, let me describe my second favorite travel activity: bargaining (see Master Bargainer: TPOL’s TIPS for Shopping Abroad). I went all over Pokhara looking for the best price to go paragliding. As I was lowballing every travel agency, it occurred to me that this strategy may not be prudent. I don’t think it’s wise to go cheap when it comes to my life. At the same time, I was taking a tandem flight, so it’s not like the pilot would be less inclined to be cautious with his life just because I paid less.

Ultimately, I booked my flight with Adam Tours, the agency I used for all my excursions, for 5000 rupees ($141) per person.

TPOL’S TIP: Contact Adam.a hand holding a card

With only 2 days in Pokhara and a monsoon that never seemed to end, I was worried that I would not be able to go paragliding. If the ground is wet, the pilots understandably won’t fly because it makes taking off and landing tricky. It also kills the experience if the scenery is drab and gray. As the rain stopped and the sky cleared, we were given the go-ahead to go ahead. a landscape of a valley with clouds and a city

A caravan of SUV’s proceeded up a bumpy road and we eventually made it to the launch point. The safety instructions were brief: keep running until we are up in the air.a landscape of a valley with clouds and a city a man standing on a hill with mountains in the background

Takeoff

Helmet on my head, arms at my side, I took off running on the uneven terrain. By running, I mean a brisk walk. Eventually, the wind lifted us off the ground and ever so smoothly we were in flight. It was a peaceful take off compared to the bungee dive.

Up in the Air

Up in the air, the GoPro was turned on and great photos were taken.

a group of people in parachutes flying over a valley

a man and woman in parachutes

a man and woman in paragliding

a man and woman paragliding over a valley

a man and woman in parachutes

a man holding a person in a parachute

Finally Fun

Down below, I saw a paraglider doing some tricks. I told my pilot I wanted to do the same. He obliged and starting turning abruptly from left to right. Finally, I was having fun. The free-fall feeling is my favorite.

a man and woman in parachutes

Descent

As we went closer to the ground, I wondered why I felt safer high in the air than closer to the ground. It would seem to make sense that being closer to earth would mean I am safer, but the more we descended the more I could feel how fast we were traveling

a person paragliding over a valley

a man in a parachute over a valley

Landing

The second set of safety instructions were delivered minutes before landing: keep your feet up and stand up when we land. Then the pilot said we are landing over there, pointing to an X on the ground. Coming in hot, I made sure my feet were up. A nice way to break your legs would be to have them get caught on the ground. The landing was executed smoothly. We transitioned from a rapid descent to standing upright without dramatics. With that, my adventure was over.

Risk

Paragliding was fun but not high on my list of thrill-seeking activities. I am sure when my pilot flies solo, the rides are far from tame. For safety reasons, pilots don’t perform crazy maneuvers with tourists because they do not know how tourists may react.

Overall

Now I’ve been paragliding. What is there left to do?

Big Pillow Pokhara: Better Accommodation in a Backpack Town

Big Pillow is part of the ANA, Take Me ‘Round the World Trip Report.


Pokhara is the beginning of the journey for those looking to trek to Annapurna. For me, it was a refuge from one of the most hectic, least desirable places to return, Kathmandu. Because it is a literal backpacker town, there are rooms for next to nothing. I picked Big Pillow because it wasn’t $1 a night with no a/c and it wasn’t $100 a night for unnecessary overwhelming luxury. I also picked it because who doesn’t love big pillows? At $40 a night, I received a nice room, air conditioner, CNN International, and excellent service. If this was not the end of my trip, I probably would’ve been fine with a cheaper room (see Frontier Hotel Darwin: My Case for Hostels).

a bed with white sheets and towels on it

Laundry

TPOL smelled how the streets of Kathmandu looked. After Bhutan hikes, there was nothing left that was clean. The hotel charges 150 rupees ($1.25) per kilo and returns the clothes the same day. What a blessing.

Breakfast

Breakfast was included but I chose to go out for momo (see Guns & Butter: Pokhara Travel Guide) instead of continental breakfast. They did graciously pack us breakfast for our drive to Chitwan (see Rhinos in Chitwan)a plastic bag with a message on it

Location

Big Pillow is located right off the main street and steps away from the city center.a tree in a street

Overall

For two nights in Pokhara, Big Pillow was a solid choice.

Rip-off Alert: Golfing in the Himalayas

Pokhara Golf Review is part of the ANA, Take Me ‘Round the World Trip Report.


As a rule, I only play golf abroad if it is a unique course or locale (see Golfing on the Moon: Club de Golf, La Paz). In Bhutan, I found Total Consciousness golfing in Thimphu. It was a marvelous experience.

Golf is available in Pokhara against the backdrop of the Himalayas. That qualifies as a novel place to play golf, so I went ahead and booked it. This is the worst golf course I have ever played. It is not a golf course. It is an overrun lawn with patches of shorter grass with a stick in a hole.

Before I get to that, let’s talk money.

Cost

For $50, a caddy is included along with rentals. Golf balls are 2100 rupees ($18) for 12 used balls.

a motorcycle parked in a grassy area

a building with a sign over it

Range

Is this a gun range?

a person running on a field

Clubs

My Pings are too good for me, but I am better than these caveman clubs.

a golf bag with clubs on grass

a group of golf clubs in a bag

Course

Half the course was under construction. The other half was overrun by jungle. I tried to play the first two holes seriously, but this was nonsense.

a river running through a valley

a man playing golf on a grassy hill

Child Labor

I had two kids with me. One carried my clubs. One ran around looking for my errant shots.

a person walking on a grassy field

Hiking

You’ve heard of cart path only. How about trekking only? It was like the winter Olympic sport biathlon but instead of a gun, I had a golf club. Climb up this hill in the sweltering heat, lower your heart rate, and fire a drive.

a man carrying golf bags on a rocky road

a man carrying a bag on a trail

a rock with a yellow text on it

Cows

I’ve seen deer on a golf course, but cows?

a man standing on a rocky road with a dog in the background

Pictures

I took some good pictures but please do not play here just for a photo opp.

a golf ball on a tee in the grass

a man standing on a rocky hill with a golf bag

Last Hole

Like the course in Bolivia, this course had a hole that went over a canyon. I was supposed to aim left but I ended up hitting it far right. It almost landed on the green in the hole below.

a man playing golf on a hill

a man swinging a golf club on a hill

a man swinging a golf club on a grassy hill

a river running through a valley

Caddy Bet

The clubs were prehistoric The course was awful. The balls were used. Surely, no one could play well here. After I hit my ball in the direction of Bhutan, I told my caddy I would give him 500 rupees if he could make it over. The kid steps up with an 8 iron, I had used a 6, in his sandals and does the following!

I made good on my promise to pay and gave an additional ten percent to his agent, who I presume to be his little brother.

Overall

This place is a joke. It’s like if my dad said he would build me a pool in my backyard and just dug a hole and filled it with water. I played 4 holes and asked for my money back. I was told no.

a poster with pictures of people playing golf

TPOL’s TIP: Great White Cage Diving was a rip-off in South Africa. Golfing in the Himalayas was a rip-off in Nepal.

TPOL’S TIP: Do not repeat outdoor activities on the same trip. One rafting, one golf, one paragliding. I did white water rapids for the first time in Bhutan (see Finding Happiness: Bhutan Day 3). It was exhilarating. It is available in Pokhara. In order not to tarnish the high of the first time, I purposefully did not do it again. I should have applied this logic to golf.

Souvenir Pricing Guide: Pokhara, Nepal

Souvenir Shopping Pokhara is part of the ANA, Take Me ‘Round the World Trip Report.


I continue to document how much I spend on souvenirs because nothing is worse than finding out you paid too much. From the Fake Market in Shanghai, the Penis Shop in Bhutan, or the hustle and bustle of Kathmandu, TPOL knows the right price. In this episode, we are in Pokhara, Nepal buying the essentials.

Jerseys 

Penises are not enough for TPOL (see Finding Penis (Happiness): Bhutan Day 4). I need more souvenirs. Since I bought the jumpsuit in Bhutan, I thought it would be fitting to buy the Nepalese cricket jersey. I bargained hard and ended up paying $12 for it. $10 was the goal.

a man sitting at a table with a plate of food and a beer

Coats

The best accomplishment was purchasing two North Face coats for 3500 rupees ($46). The official store in Pokhara sold them for significantly more. I’ll leave it to you to figure out why.a store front with furniture outside

T-Shirts 

Instead of buying t-shirts from the hagglers, I bought them from a store that does not bargain. At $10 each, they are more than the $7 designer replicas from the Fake Market Shanghai and well above the 25RMB max for basic tees. But they actually fit. They remind me of my defunct t-shirt business (see Souvenir Pho Shirts).a street with cars and people on it

Overall

I’ve outdone it this time with souvenirs and clothes on this trip, but I have some quality merchandise.

What I Look Forward To

Pandemic, pandemic, pandemic. It never ends and there’s nothing to do besides order nonsense off of Amazon and wait for my expected ship date to be updated. I don’t bother reading travel blogs about points deals. Points, like the US passport, are essentially worthless. My pizza coasters, on the other hand, will come in handy.

screenshot of a screenshot of a website

Post TPOL, Frontier Erases Alfredo’s Adventure to Puerto Rico

Hitting the delete button shouldn’t excuse companies from posting stupid things. I called out Frontier for being the Super Spreader to Puerto Rico. Specifically, I posted that link on their Twitter page below two posts detailing oblivious Alfredo’s travel experience to Puerto Rico (during a pandemic).

Instead of a response defending its actions or putting context behind them, Frontier erased the posts completely.

On the one hand, that’s better than the boilerplate apology used by everyone when they post something offensive. On the other hand, it shows how they don’t care and how they don’t get it. How do I know this? Cheap fares are still available to come here, while the pandemic rages on.

Stay home. Stay away.

a screenshot of a social media post
I knew it was you. You broke my heart.

 

 

Yeti Airlines: Finally Taking Off from Kathmandu to Pokhara

Yeti Airlines is part of the ANA, Take Me ‘Round the World Trip Report.


The flight from Kathmandu to Pokhara is only 25 minutes long. You wouldn’t know it by the level of service. First, passengers are given candy. Then the flight attendant comes around with peanuts. Then the flight attendant comes around with water. Compare this to my United Polaris flight where I received no attention (see United Polaris EWR-BRU: The Horror Show!).
people standing next to a plane a propeller of an airplane a propeller of an airplane a towel on a seat a group of people sitting on seats in an airplane a group of people on an airplane a candy wrapped in white paper a bag of peanuts on a red surface

The tiny plane did not make me nervous, though I can understand why the airline canceled the flight the day before (see Nepal Domestic Flight Misery). Taking off and landing during a monsoon is not worth the risk. On the day I traveled, it was still overcast but clear enough to take pictures of Kathmandu, a city that is peaceful from up on high (see Guns & Butter: Kathmandu Travel Guide).

an airplane wing and a city an airplane wing over a city

Nepal Domestic Flight Misery

Nepal Domestic Flight Misery is part of the ANA, Take Me ‘Round the World Trip Report.


Kathmandu to Pokhara is a 25-minute flight, but the initial flight was delayed due to weather, and this cascaded down onto my flight which was supposed to take off at 1PM. Here’s how it went:

1130AM: Ding dong, Yeti Airlines would like to announce the delay of flight 667 to Pokhara.

2PM: Ding dong, Yeti would like to announce the cancellation of flight 677 to Pokhara. Please see a gate agent. Sorry for the inconvenience.

I went to the check-in agent to see if this was my flight. It was confirmed that it was flight 677, not flight 667.

I went back to the departure terminal prison feeling hopeless. I began to believe that I would never leave. It reminded me of a scene out of Beetlejuice. Now serving number 895 was flashing. Meanwhile, my number was 324,564. I can’t recall a worse airport than this one besides Kolkata. And there isn’t a Priority Pass Lounge, not even a yuck one.a group of people sitting in chairs in a waiting room

4PM: Ding dong, Yeti would like to announce the cancellation of flight 667, please see a gate agent. Sorry for the inconvenience.

Believing my flight was cancelled, I went out of the terminal and back to the ticket counter. There I was told that it was an incorrect announcement and that it was flight 677 that was cancelled.

Mildly hopeful, I went through security and back to the boarding gate. I was told that both 667 and 677 were cancelled because Pokhara airport was closed due to weather. I was also told that there was one last flight that day that might take off and there may be a few seats available.

people at a counter

5:30PM: As I ran back to the ticket counter to see if I could get on that flight, I heard the boarding announcement for Buddha Airlines: last call for all flights to Pokhara. How can an airport be closed to one airline but not another?

At the ticket counter, I waited as passengers from flight 667 and 677 reclaimed their luggage. After another hour, I was told that the last flight scheduled to Pokhara had also been cancelled. I was re-booked on the flight the next day at 6:45AM but was told, given the intense monsoon, that it may be cancelled again (see Would You Travel During the Rainy Season?). Exhausted, I went back to the Hyatt.

a building with a dog in front of it

Guns & Butter: Kathmandu Travel Guide (Bargaining Edition)

Kathmandu Travel Guide is part of the ANA, Take Me ‘Round the World Trip Report.


TPOL’s Guns & Butter Travel Guide is the best way to see as much as you can in as little time as possible. Here’s how it works – A trip is composed of two factors: Labor And Lazy. The opportunity cost (what is given up) for relaxing and being Lazy is gained by being adventurous in the form of Labor and vice versa. The guide includes inefficient activities i.e., tourist traps that should be avoided and aspirational activities that are worth doing but may be impossible to see given the constraints of time and resources.


Welcome to Kathmandu. If you stepped out of the airport, were overwhelmed, and already want to leave, this Guns & Butter Travel Guide is for you. Be forewarned, this is more a bargaining guide than a sightseeing one.

Kathmandu Travel Guide
In need of Kathmandu directions? Look no further.

Taxis

Kathmandu has topped the list for Worst Places to Hail a Cab. The drivers have an excuse for why the fare is never uniform. At the international terminal, I paid 300 rupees ($2.50) for a taxi to the Hyatt. When I tried to pay that much from the adjacent domestic terminal following my flight cancellation (see Nepal Domestic Flight Misery), I was told it was not possible because the hotel was too far.

From the Hyatt, it will be difficult to bargain for a good price. The hotel calls the taxi and you have no leverage if more than one taxi doesn’t agree to your price. The Hyatt is one of the nicest properties in Kathmandu, and it is assumed that if you stay there that you are wealthy. Little do they know it only costs 5,000 points a night!

If you want to get around the city, the taxis insist on 600 rupees and refuse to go down to 300. Because I was there when it was monsoon season and there were torrential downpours, I gave in to 500.

My guess is that locals pay 300 or less. With that in mind, don’t accept the go-to line recited all over SE Asia, “right now too much traffic.” Dismiss the “airport charges us for parking” lie. And don’t buy the, “It’s night time boss,” malarkey. That’s why there are headlights.

a car parked in a puddle
Ride in style.

Toll Road Premium

I thought Puerto Rico had bad roads. Kathmandu has more potholes than smooth pavement. If there were a toll road premium, I would pay it. Unfortunately, that’s a myth that I made up.

Kathmandu Travel Guide

a street with buildings and a sign

people on motorcycles in a dirty street

Boudha Stupa

If you’re staying at the Hyatt, you can avoid the taxi for your first stop, the Stupa. I walked around and tried to find the mask that evaded me in Bhutan.

Kathmandu Travel Guide

people walking on a wet street with people walking with umbrellas

a white building with a dome and flags with Boudhanath in the background
No matter where you walk, you are being watched.

I could not believe that I negotiated the price from 5000 rupees ($66) to 1700 rupees ($22) when the lowest anyone would go in Bhutan was $282 for a plain one and a scam price of $772 for what I believe is a mass-produced mask with stones (see Finding Penis (Happiness): Bhutan Day 4).

Kathmandu Travel Guide

TPOL’s TIP: Know which country to buy souvenirs. My Bhutanese guide said unless you are buying them from the factory, chances are they are made in Nepal.

Paintings

If masks were the tourist trap in Bhutan, then paintings are the con in Nepal. All over Kathmandu and Pokhora, there are elegant art dealers selling paintings found in Buddhist temples. Every dealer says that they are hand-painted and justify random prices based on the level of detail of the painting, the size, whether there is gold on the painting, or whether the painting was signed.

I was presented expensive ones and cheap(er) ones. I could not tell them apart. Indeed, I was told that only Tibetan experts or skilled artists would know which was real and which was fake. Like masks, I kept seeing the same ones over and over. I hypothesized that there was no way that these were not mass-produced. How can thousands of pieces be available, all of which were painted by hand? If these were real, there must be hundreds of savant painters in Nepal who must work round the clock.

After intense bargaining from $100, I bought one painting for 2500 rupees ($33).

Maya Momo

It was rainy. I was wet. And the taxis were trying to charge triple to go the next place on this list. Instead of being pressured by nature, I took a timeout from the hustle and stumbled upon Maya Momo. After a few beers and an order of buff momo, I was at ease again.

a street with colorful flags over it

a menu on a red surface

a can of beer next to a glass ashtray

a plate of dumplings with sauce

a bowl of soup with dumplings

TPOL’S TIP: Buff Momo Soup is not Xiao Long Bao (see Xiao Long Bao: A Tutorial). It’s momo in broth. Think wonton soup.

I also ordered lo mein.

a plate of food and two beer bottles on a table

TPOL’S TIP: Chinese food and Indian food is great in Nepal.

Basantapur

Under the influence of momo, I was ready to take on the taxi drivers and go to Basantapur. The price, as stated above, was 500. Rain is a taxi’s best friend for inflating prices.

Basantapur is a UNESCO world heritage site. It is also an area hard hit by the 2015 earthquake. There are many captivating temples. Unlike Bhutan where I had a guide explaining what was what (see Guided Tours: Like Attending Class, It’s Boring But Sometimes Useful), in Nepal I only took pictures of the buildings and read signs when provided. I like to call this speed tourism.

a sign on a metal pole

a bicycle with a covered canopy in front of a building

a group of people standing under umbrellas next to a statue

a man in a yellow robe holding an umbrella

a man sitting on a step outside a store

a group of pigeons in front of a building

a statue of a lion with an umbrella in front of a building

a stone building with a red roof

a person holding an umbrella in front of a building

a man sitting on a chair with a statue in front of him

a group of people sitting on a red porch

a building with many motorcycles parked in front of it

a group of motorcycles parked in front of a building

a horse carriage with a colorful cover

people walking down a wet street with people walking under umbrellas

a group of people walking down a street with umbrellas

a group of people walking down a street with many buildings and umbrellas

a group of people walking in a courtyard

a building with a green tarp on top of it

Patan Durbar Square

From Basantapur, I should have gone to Monkey Temple because it was close by. Had I done so, perhaps I could have taken the early flight to Pokhara and avoided the unanticipated cancellation

The speed tourism continued as I took more photos of temples. Had it not been wet and muddy, perhaps I would have stayed a few moments longer. Call it laziness, call it indifference, but I don’t have an interest in seeing temple after temple. I appreciated it in Bhutan because I was forced to go and had no choice but to listen to my guide to explain why they were significant.

a stone monument with text on it

a large building with many arches and a tower

a sign on a fence

a building with a roof and a stone staircase

a fountain with water spouts

a building with a tower and people walking around

people walking on a wet street with people walking on a rainy day

As stated in the post’s title, this is more of a guide about immersing myself via bargaining. I saw many stores selling pashminas. I had read online that many were fake, but like the paintings, I am not an expert in scarves.

TPOL’s TIP: Avoiding fakes is difficult. Unless you’re at a factory, assume it is not real and bargain like it’s a replica (see Fake Market Shanghai: 2019 Pricing Guide). That way you only pay a few dollars for something that you hope lasts and not a hundred dollars for something you hope is real (see Master Bargainer: TPOL’s TIPS for Shopping Abroad).

TPOL’S TIP: “I give you local price,” is the worst words you can hear. The merchant is admitting he rips everyone off. Why are you so special to get the local price?

And back to the bargaining. The scarves cost 400 ($3.33) rupees each. He wouldn’t budge off of that. For that price, I am sure they aren’t top quality material, but they look nice. I am also willing to wager that they will last longer than H&M shirts.

Thamel

Thamel, Thamel, Thamel. That’s all I heard from everyone when I said I was going to KTM. It was supposed to be the Khaosan Road of Nepal. All I found were a bunch of suspect locals trying to sell me hashish. Don’t they know that weed is basically legal in America? And why do they presume that everyone wants to get high? Sell me a Mt. Everest beer, I don’t like marijuana. I’m guessing the drug trade is why there are so many ATM’s.

a street with cars and people on it

a street with people walking on it

a street with signs and people on it

a group of people walking down a street with signs

a store front with a sign

shelves with cans of beer and cans of different flavors

New Orleans Bar

I went to New Orleans Bar because I am a tourist and was nostalgic at how the bar looked so much like Pat O’Briens. The hurricanes were not the same (see Guns & Butter: New Orleans Travel Guide (Binge Edition).

two glasses of orange liquid with straws on a table

a bottle and glass of beer on a table

TPOL’S TIP: Pay attention to how much drinks cost. Alcohol is expensive compared to food in Nepal. I was expecting to pay $1 a beer. Big bottles of beers are 350-600 ($3 to $5) each, even local ones.

Hyatt

I was supposed to stay at the Hyatt for one night. I ended up staying three. The second was after my flight to Pokhora was canceled. The third was when I hired a driver to take me from Chitwan because I didn’t want to risk missing my flight back to Shanghai. Ironically, I was stuck in an 8-hour traffic jam. Hyatt is worth seeing for one night to escape the madness of Kathmandu. It is not a good base if, for some reason after reading this review, you feel it necessary to stay in Kathmandu longer.

a pool in front of a building

Monkey Temple

What’s a Kathmandu Travel Guide without monkeys? Thus far Kathmandu was a chaotic mess. It was rainy. It was noisy. It was not fun. Then I went to Monkey Temple (Swayambhu). That was great. The monkeys are nuts. If you see only one thing in Kathmandu, see Monkey Temple.

a monkey sitting on stairs

a group of statues on steps

a stairs leading up to a temple

a group of people walking up stairs

a group of people walking down a staircase with flags and trees

a group of flags over trees and a city

a tree with flags and a city in the background

a large building with Swayambhunath and flags

a large building with Swayambhunath and flags

a large gold object with a large object on top

a monkey sitting on a wall with a city in the background

a monkey sitting on a wall with a city in the background

a monkey sitting on a ledge with a city in the background

a monkey sitting on a roof

a monkey sitting on a roof

a statue of a dog

a monkey on a door

a monkey sitting on a gold staircase

a monkey sitting on a statue

a monkey sitting on a statue

monkeys climbing on a statue

a building with a door and a door with a cat on it

a group of small buildings with Swayambhunath in the background

two monkeys climbing up a statue

a tower with colorful flags

a metal fence with prayer wheels

a gold temple with monkeys on top of it

a monkey on a gold object

a monkey walking on a fountain

a large gold statue with a large blade

Kathmandu Travel Guide

a city with many buildings and trees

a city with trees and buildings

Kathmandu Travel Guide

TPOL’s TIP: The cost was 700 rupees on the way there and then 500 on the way back.

Overall

TPOL is one and done with Kathmandu. I got more than I bargained for.


Kathmandu Travel Guide is part of the ANA, Take Me ‘Round the World Trip Report.