Nepal
sits uneasily on the shoulder of the southern Himalaya,
wedged between China
to the north and India
to the south. In length and breadth it is just another
small country, but in height it's a world-beater.
Not only does it have the world's tallest mountains,
including the cloud-hugging Everest
and Annapurna. Apart from its four mountain ranges
- Chure Hills, Mahabharat Range, Himalaya
and the Tibetan Marginals.
Nepal
also has vast plains in the south, fertile valleys
in the midlands and high-altitude deserts in the north.
The heavily cultivated belt between the
Mahabharat Range and the Himalaya
supports the bulk of the country's population.
There are over 6500 species of trees, shrubs and wildflowers
in Nepal.
The height of floral glory is in March and April,
when Rhododendrons,
the national
flower, burst into colour. Nepal
also boasts an astounding diversity of animal life,
with 800 bird species and exotic mammals
such as the
royal Bengal tiger and snow leopard,
as well as rhinoceros,
elephant, bear, deer, monkey and jackal.
Unfortunately, due to habitat degeneration and poaching,
opportunities for seeing wildlife are usually restricted
to national parks, reserves and western Nepal,
where the human population is sparse.
Nepal has a typically monsoonal
two-season year: the dry season (October to May) and
the wet season (June to September). The monsoon affects
the whole country, often flooding the southern plains,
before tailing off as it moves away to the north and
west. Temperatures vary but are generally hottest
in the summer months of May and June and coldest during
December and January.