Red Panda Himalayan Adventure Pvt. Ltd. KMC-29, Thamel (with Everest Bank).A-One Business Complex, Kathmandu, Nepal. Contact:+977-01-4422070,4429362, Fax: +977-01-4429362, Email: info@mountaintrekkinginnepal.com, Website: www.mountaintrekkinginnepal.com

About us

About us
Red Panda Himalayan Adventure Pvt. Ltd. is a newly established trekking, tours and travels company. This is a government registered company run by highly energetic and well skilled youth having more than a decade long experience in the field of trekking, tours and travels sector in Nepal, Tibet and Bhutan as well. It has established to put new extra things in tourism sector with noble courageness according to the changing context of tourism in passion. It provided fully satisfaction concerning trekking, tours and travels.
Red Panda Himalayan Adventure Pvt. Ltd. commit and guarantees you that fully satisfaction and security for perfect and excursion package. If your interest is to go High Mountain trekking, mountain and peak climbing, pilgrimage and intercity tours, eco-cultural tours, students tours, village hiking, paragliding, jungle safari, white river rafting, bungee-jump, mountain flight, ultra light flight, sight seeing etc; our professional staffs are available to make your trekking, tours and travels comfortable and memorable. Leave your worries to us and enjoy your holiday in Nepal. Nature is waiting for you.

Wel-Come to Red Panda Himalayan Adventure

For many travellers, Nepal is paradise on earth, or at the very least Shangri-La. Wedged between the mountain wall of the Himalaya and the steamy jungles of the Indian plains, this is a land of yaks and yetis, monasteries and mantras, snow peaks and sherpas, temples and tigers, magic and mystery. Ever since Nepal first opened it borders to outsiders in the 1950s, this tiny mountain nation has had an almost mystical allure for travellers. Explorers and mountaineers came to conquer the highest peaks, trekkers came to test themselves against some of the most challenging trails on earth and hippies came to wander in a stoned daze through the temple-filled towns at the end of the overland trail .
You’ll still see a few of the original ‘freaks’ meandering through the backstreets of Kathmandu, but they have been joined by legions of trekkers, clad in the latest technical gear and drawn by the rugged trails that clime to such famous destinations as Everest Base Camp and the Annapurna sanctuary. Other travellers are drawn here by the rush of rafting down a roaring Nepali river of bungee jumping into a bottomless Himalayan gorge. Adventure addicts can get their adrenaline flowing by canyoning, climbing, kayaking, paragliding and mountain-biking through some of the world’s most dramatic landscapes.
Other travellers prefer to see Nepal at a more gentle pace, gazing towards the peaks from Himalayan view points, strolling through the temple-lined medieval city square of Kathmandu, Patan and Bhaktapur and joining Buddhist pilgrims on a parkramaa (ceremonial circuit) around the giant stupas scattered across the Kathmandu valley. In Nepal’s wild and wonderful national parks, nature buffs scan the treetops for exotic bird species and comb the jungles for rhinos and tigers from the backs of lumbering Indian elephants.
But big changes are afoot in Nepal. For one thing, Nepal is no longer a kingdom. A decade of Maoist uprising and civil war came to an end with the election of the communist party or Nepal and the declaration of the Federal Republic of Nepal on 28 may 2008. Since then the last Nepali king, Gyanendra Bir Bikram Shah Dev, has vacated the royal palace in Kathmandu and moved to a modest house in Nagarjun and the word ‘Royal’ has been snipped from the signboards for Royal Nepal Airlines and Royal Chitwan National Park. After years of conflict, peace has returned to the mountains and an air of optimism pervades the nation