With the help of our experienced Sherpas, Mountain Guides and well-equipped trekking team we will make your dream come true, succeeding the climbing of these challenging trekking peaks. We expect the climbers to bring their own Ice axes, Crampons Harness, Carrabinars, Good quality double boots, and proper clothing though we provide some of the necessary camping equipment.
Peaks are opened for trekking groups with permission from Nepal Mountaineering Association (NMA)
Group "A" Peaks S/N. Name of Peak Height Region
01 Mt. Cholatse 6440 m. Khumbu
02 Mt. Machermo 6273 m. Mahalangur
03 Mt. Kyazo Ri 6186 m. Mahalangur
04 Mt. Phari Lapcha 6017 m. Mahalangur
05 Mt. Nirekha 6159 m. Mahalangur
06 Mt. Langsisa Ri 6427 m. Jugal
07 Mt. Ombigaichen 6340 m. Mahalangur
08 Mt. Bokta 6143 m. Kanchanjunga
09 Mt. Chekigo 6257 m. Gaurishankar
10 Mt. Lobuche West 6145 m. Khumbu
11 Mt. Larkya Peak 6010 m. Manaslu
12 Mt. ABI 6097 m. Mahalangur
13 Mt. Yubra Himal 6035 m. Langtang Himal
14 Mt. Chhukung Ri 5550 m. Khumbu
15 Mt. Yala Peak 5732 m. Langtang
Group "B" Peaks
S/N. Name of the peak Height Region
01 Hiunchuli 6441m. Annapurna Himal, Gandaki.
02 Singu chuli 6501m. Annapurna Himal, Gandaki.
03 Mera Peak 6654m. Khumbu Himal, Sagarmatha.
04 Kusum Kangru 6367m. Khumbu Himal, Sagarmatha.
05 Kwangde 6011m. Khumbu Himal, Sagarmatha.
06 Chulu West 6419m. Manang District, Gandaki.
07 Chulu East 6584m. Manang District, Gandaki.
08 Imja Tse (Island peak) 6160m. Khumbu Himal, Sagarmatha.
09 Parchemuche 6187m. Rolwaling Himal, Janakpur.
10 Lobuje 6119m. Khumbu Himal, Sagarmatha.
11 Ramdung 5925m. Rolwaling Himal, Janakpur.
12 Pisang peak 6091m. Manang District, Gandaki.
13 Tharpu Chuli (Tent peak) 5663m. Annapurna Himal, Gandaki.
14 Khongma Tse (Mehra peak) 5849m. Khumbu Himal, Sagarmatha.
15 Ganja La Chuli (Nyakanga) 5844m. Langtang Himal, Bagmati.
16 Pokhalde 5806m. Khumbu Himal, Sagarmatha.
17 Mardi Himal 5587m. Annapurna Himal, Gandaki.
18 Paldor peak 5896m. Langtang Himal, Bagmati.
Some Major Peak Climbing and Expedition mountains in Nepal
Island Peak (6,189m.) 20 Days
The highlight of this adventure is the climbing of Island peak. Allowing 2/3 days for this peak climbing with the support of our well-trained sherpas.
Mera Peak Climbing Trek (6,467m) 21 Days
This climbing trek passes through the homes of Sherpas at Solukhumbu and crosses the Dudh Koshi river. The view from this peak is unmatchable exciting.
Pisang Peak (6,091m.) 16 Days
Pisang peak is considered one of the easy climbing peaks among the trekking peaks in Nepal.
Lobuche Peak East (6,119m) 21 Days
This is beautiful trekking peak, offers various existing as well as new climbing routes to all the amateur mountaineers.
Mt. Yala Peak (5,732 m.) 14 Days
Yala peak is a part if the Langtang Himal which is located at the centerl part of Nepal.The base camp of Yala Peak is Kyangjin Gompa (3749m/12300 ft). Yala Peak is a fantastic beginner’s mountaineering trip, to one of Nepal’s easier trekking peaks.
Hiunchuli Peak (6,441m.) 23 Days
Hiunchuli, at a height of 6,441 meters, forms a massive south-facing wall together with Annapurna South. Its eastern face overlooks the Modi Khola and guards the entrance to the Annapurna Sanctuary.
Monday, April 2, 2007
Friday, March 30, 2007
Where in the world is this little town? Name the townand country. Click here to submit your best guess for the location and country. We'll email the winners and post the results here. The first five correct submissions will win a Google Earth t-shirt.
Last month, we released two significant updates to the Google Earth content. First, we updated some of the imagery to include new high resolution coverage for the entire countries of Denmark and Switzerland, and the entire states of Utah and Wyoming. More importantly for Switzerland, we also added new high resolution 3D terrain for the Swiss Alps at 10 meter resolution. We think the new imagery and terrain for the Swiss Alps are beautiful to behold. But, don't take our word for it, check out a review from blogger Stefan Geens of OgleEarth.com, and a YouTube video flying tour of the Swiss Alps by blogger Frank Taylor of Gearthblog.com. Or, better yet, go visit the area yourself with Google Earth 4 - starting with the Matterhorn (make sure the Terrain layer is turned on). More details on the imagery update here.Also updated last month were several data layers including all new detailed roads (and directions) for Australia, more 3D buildings, new icon designs for the layers, over 300,000 new photos in the Geographic Web->Panoramio layer, and all new data for the Parks and Recreation layer for the country of Brazil. In addition, there were updates to the Google Earth Community layers, Turn Here, Tracks4Africa, and the Digital Globe coverage layer.National Geographic "Ivory Wars"

The March issue of National Geographic has a cover story entitled: "Ivory Wars - Last stand in Zakouma" by Michael Fay. The article tells the story of the world's largest concentration of elephants protected at the Zakouma National Park in southeastern Chad. There is a continuing battle to prevent poachers from killing these magnificent intelligent creatures for a few pounds of ivory. One elephant they called "Annie" was tracked by GPS for 3 months, but sadly ended up a victim of this gruesome crime. National Geographic has also published a comprehensive collection of information for Google Earth tied to this story. The areas of the park, roads, and streams are all highlighted along with photos and links to more information. Also included is a layer called Annie's Journey which shows the GPS track of the elephant Annie which covered 1500 miles before the abrupt ending. Using the time feature in Google Earth you can even watch an animation of Annie's track as she wandered in and out of the park.By the way, Michael Fay is the same journalist who took 92,000 photos from an airplane over Africa. Over 500 of these photos are shown in Google Earth and found under under the layer: Featured Content->National Geographic Magazine->Africa Megaflyover. See this collection of categorized African animals from the photos.

NASA Releases Environmental Satellite Data
Last month, we mentioned the new NASA Satellite Photos for Google Earth which you can check each day. Now NASA has released more data for Google Earth from the Moderate-resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) satellites. This time they have full-globe image overlays which show the following:MODIS Sea Surface Temperature MODIS Chlorophyll Concentration MODIS Cloud Fraction MODIS Snow Cover You should delete, or turn off, each image overlay from "Temporary Places" before loading the next one so they don't interefere with each other. The data is the most current data provided by NASA's environmental satellites.
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