Trek difficulty level in Nepal

Trek difficulty level in Nepal

Nepal is a Travel destination for most of the nature lover out there in world most of the people are dreaming about visiting in the Nepal once in their life more over most of us are amazed by the fact that we can see the world highest mountain the Mountain Everest from Nepal as it is situated in Nepal .

 

How hard is trekking in Nepal?

The treks on Nepal range from moderate to difficult which is up to 4,500m. Not all the treks around this range are difficult and the majorly the treks are classified as Moderate like the Annapurna Circuit.

 

What grade is trekking in Nepal?

Most of the trekking of Nepal is in grade 3. You need some previous trekking experiences and have decent physical fitness. Climbing and descending are very usual experiences for these types of trekking and you may have to cross small glaciers as well.

Dhaulagiri Circuit Trek

Dhaulagiri Circuit Trek is always known as the most challenging trek in Nepal Himalayas. Dhaulagiri is a difficult trek because we need to organized everything on this trek. It’s a camping trek need to carry each and everything for this trek. There is no comfort or basic lodges on this trail.

Is Annapurna or Everest harder?

The trek to Annapurna Base Camp is ever so slightly easier than Everest Base Camp. As Everest region and Annapurna region have  totally differences in their culture, tradition, food, costumes .The route to Annapurna is generally at lower altitudes, with fewer steep climbs. Where Everest region is at higher altitude.

Why is Annapurna harder than Everest?

Difficult Terrain
Annapurna has one summit above 26000 feet, thirteen over 23000 feet, and sixteen over 20,000 feet. Not only that, but the mountain is riddled with cliffs, steep slopes, and crevasses (deep open cracks). Annapurna is one of the most challenging mountains to climb because of this combination.

Trekking  as a beginner?

Although it’s defined as a journey on foot in remote areas, which sounds quite simple, actually doing it requires a lot of preparation and planning. You can’t just wake up one day and go on a 5-day long trekking trip. You have to start at the beginning and gradually progress, just like everything else in life.