A team of experienced Nepali adventurers is organizing an expedition from the summit of Everest to the Bay of Bengal. The 2,945km journey begins with an ascent of Everest, then a long kayak paddle down the rivers that feed into the Bay of Bengal.
The route and ethos of the expedition aim to bring awareness to the environmental importance and communities of the Himalayan region. They are currently raising funds.
A team of experienced Nepali adventurers is organizing an expedition from the summit of Everest to the Bay of Bengal. The 2,945km journey begins with an ascent of Everest, then a long kayak paddle down the rivers that feed into the Bay of Bengal.
The route and ethos of the expedition aim to bring awareness to the environmental importance and communities of the Himalayan region. They are currently raising funds.
KATHMANDU: A long-distance expedition tracing the journey of water from the summit of Mount Everest to the Bay of Bengal is set to draw attention to the interconnection between Himalayan glaciers, South Asia’s river systems and downstream communities.
The Everest to Bay of Bengal Expedition, launched under the Summit to Sea initiative by Nepal-based outdoor education organisation Initiative Outdoor, will cover a continuous 1,830-mile route starting with a clean ascent of Mount Everest (8,848 metres) and concluding with a kayak journey through major river systems into the Bay of Bengal.
A team of experienced Nepali adventurers is organizing an expedition from the summit of Everest to the Bay of Bengal. The 2,945km journey begins with an ascent of Everest, then a long kayak paddle down the rivers that feed into the Bay of Bengal.
The route and ethos of the expedition aim to bring awareness to the environmental importance and communities of the Himalayan region. They are currently raising funds.
A groundbreaking 1,830-mile expedition combining mountaineering and river kayaking aims to highlight the critical link between Himalayan glaciers and downstream freshwater ecosystems while promoting environmental stewardship across South Asia.
The “Everest to Bay of Bengal” expedition, led by veteran outdoor educators Chandra B. Ale and Nishan Adhikari, will begin with a clean ascent of Mount Everest followed by a kayak descent through the Dudh Koshi and Ganges rivers to the Bay of Bengal.
A team of experienced Nepali adventurers is organizing an expedition from the summit of Everest to the Bay of Bengal. The 2,945km journey begins with an ascent of Everest, then a long kayak paddle down the rivers that feed into the Bay of Bengal.
The route and ethos of the expedition aim to bring awareness to the environmental importance and communities of the Himalayan region. They are currently raising funds.