You’ll walk through Pokhara’s Tibetan settlement with a local guide who grew up there, visit a carpet workshop and Buddhist monastery, meet artisans and a traditional doctor, then share an authentic Tibetan lunch before heading back to your hotel. Expect warmth, laughter, and stories you’ll remember long after you leave.
I didn’t expect the smell of yak butter tea to hit me first thing — it’s strong, almost sweet, and honestly, I wasn’t sure if I’d like it. Mr. Thupten Gyatso, our guide (he grew up here), just smiled and poured anyway. He seemed to know what he was doing. We started walking through the Tibetan settlement outside Pokhara, and it felt quieter than the city — prayer flags flapping above us, kids in bright uniforms running past on their way to school. There’s this sense of routine here that made me feel like an outsider at first, but not in a bad way.
We stopped by a carpet workshop where women sat cross-legged, hands moving so fast over the looms I couldn’t keep track. The wool felt rough when I touched it — not scratchy exactly, just real. Thupten explained how each pattern means something (I forgot half of them already), but he didn’t mind repeating himself when I asked again. He even let us try spinning some yarn — my attempt was pretty hopeless, which got a laugh from one of the aunties working there.
The Buddhist monastery was next. It was cooler inside, incense hanging in the air and monks chanting somewhere out of sight. Thupten pointed out the prayer wheels and explained how you’re supposed to spin them clockwise for good luck; I did it wrong at first (of course). We also met a Tibetan doctor who read my pulse — his hands were warm and steady — and tried to explain something about energy channels that went right over my head.
Lunch was simple: momos and thukpa at a place run by one of Thupten’s cousins (everyone seems related here). The chili sauce nearly blew my head off but I kept eating anyway because everyone else was grinning at me like they knew what was coming. On the drive back to town, I kept thinking about how open people were about their lives as refugees — not sad exactly, just honest. That stuck with me more than anything else.
The tour lasts about half a day, from 9 am to 2 pm.
Yes, private transportation with hotel pickup and drop-off is included.
Yes, you’ll walk around a real Tibetan refugee settlement near Pokhara.
An authentic Tibetan lunch is included; vegetarian and gluten-free options are available if requested in advance.
Yes, you’ll meet locals including artisans at the carpet workshop and a traditional doctor.
The tour is suitable for all physical fitness levels except those with poor cardiovascular health.
The tour is led by Mr. Thupten Gyatso, a native Tibetan guide deeply connected to the community.
Bottled water plus coffee or tea are provided during your visit.
Your day includes private transportation with pickup from your hotel in Pokhara, bottled water along the way, guided visits to a refugee settlement and monastery with Mr. Thupten Gyatso leading every step, hands-on time at a carpet workshop plus showroom browsing, meeting a traditional doctor for pulse reading insights, coffee or tea breaks as you go—and finally an authentic Tibetan lunch before heading back in early afternoon.
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