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Just like Prince Harry in Nepal: My travel experience fit for a royal

by Heather Galloway

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What happens when you go trekking in Nepal at the same time as Prince Harry? Well, we were definitely a step ahead of the adventurous royal as we touched down in the dreamy lakeside cityof Pokhara in western Nepal. The 31-year-old royal was due toarrive any day, en route to a local Gurkha homestay.

Prince Harry visited Nepal in early April Photo: Getty Images

Although it was an official visit, it was also a personal tripfor Harry, who had been inspired by the "bravery, courage…humility and kindness" of the Gurkhas – Nepalese soldiers – he met during service in Afganistan and he had made it clear he was hoping to eschew five-starhotels for an experience of ordinary Nepali life. We, like the Prince no doubt, were also inspired to see-first hand the resilience and beauty of a country still recovering from the devastating earthquakes that struck central Nepal last year.

PRINCE HARRY IN NEPAL: ALL THE BEST PHOTOS

Pokhara was stillpreparing for the royal's visit when we arrived, though thereseemed some confusion over which Prince the were expecting. "Prince Charles!" cried a Tibetan street vendor. "He is doing homestay!" laughed his friend.

Phewa Lake in Pokhara

Trekking like Prince Harry meant that we also had a homestay with a Gurkhaconnection on our agenda. In fact, as we booked the eco-friendly Nepal Community Trek in the Dhaulagiri–Annapurna region,hopes of our paths crossing soared, not least because the trek wasrun by just the kind of people Harry was so eager to meet – membersof the Gurkha-related 'Pun' ethnic group who established the trek inorder to fund the development of education and health in theircommunity.

Prince Harry extends his trip in Nepal to rebuild a local school

We wandered along theshore of Pokhara's Phewa Lake, where a young boy helped row us throughthe mist to the foot of the World Peace Pagoda, a sparkling whiteBuddhist stupa which looks over the city, spreading serenity and goodkarma.

There seemed to be some confusion as to which royal was to visit, with at least one local exclaiming, "Prince Charles!" – Prince Harry's dad, seen here on his 1998 trip – when I asked Photo: Getty Images

One of 80 peace pagodas in the world, it is a focus for prayer and meditation which you walk around counter-clockwise in silence. One of it's main attractions is the stunning views it offers of the Annapurna mountains, Phewa Lake and Pokhara.

I could have spent a week,a month, years in Pokhara but it was our moment to go up in theworld. Chitra Pun, the coordinator of the Nepal Community Trek, metus at the crack of dawn and took us off the beaten track to the smalltown of Galeshwor where we began our ascent through orange groves andremote farmsteads to our first homestay in a village calledBanskharka.

A magnificent rhododendronforest on the other side of Nangi Photo: Heather Galloway

There, the sound of traffic is replaced by the bleats ofgoats, the shouts of children and the songs of the birds in thesurrounding forest.

Like Prince Harry as he enjoyed the hospitality at his own local homestay, we also had a delicious home-cooked feast: fresh organic vegetables,steaming mounds of rice and sweet local oranges. After a spectacular sunset we retired to abasic but comfortable room that looked across the valley to themajestic 26,795ft Dhaulagiri 1 peak.

The spectacular Dhaulagiri mountains

We made light work of the next day's six-hour trek to Nangi,skipping across the swinging bridges that spanned deep gorges andthrough villages that looked as though they hadn't changed in morethan 200 years. We didn't mind that we hadn't bumped into any British royals, because we felt like kings ourselves as a bonfire was lit after dinner and we gazed up at thegalaxy of stars in its glow.

A magnificent rhododendronforest on the other side of Nangi swept all thoughts of royal watching fromour minds as it enveloped the scene in a great splash of color. The onlyother people sharing in this breathtaking beauty were local farmhands grazing theirbuffalo or villagers gathering dead wood in huge wicker baskets whichthey carried on their backs.

Prince Harry at a local homestay where he spent the night – ours was in a village called Banskharka where we feasted on fresh organic vegetables, steaming mounds of rice and sweet local oranges Photo: Getty Images

"The mountain isrising," our guide Prem Pun told us as we felt the immensity ofDhaulagiri 1 and Annapurna 1 – both over 26,250ft – bearingdown on us at dawn from Mohare. Their sculpted peaksseemed so much closer and Prem's description was pure poetry.

Poetic, too, was our dip inthe hot thermal pools at the foot of the impressive Nilgiri North(23,170ft) in the town of Tatopani. We were back on the tourist trailnow but the soak was worth it.

So we didn't see Harry – but we did have a stay fit for a Prince! Photo: Getty Images

When PrinceHarry was later to say of his own visit, "I have rarely in my life felt as welcomedas I have over the last few days," I couldn't have agreed more.

And as we massaged our weary limbs inthe shadow of the mountain, we reflected that though we hadn'tmanaged to say “Namaste!” to our favorite royal, we had enjoyeda trip fit for a Prince.

Heather Galloway (@heathernomadas) is a freelance journalist, passionate traveler, co-founder of Nomadas Solidarios and former senior writer for HELLO! magazine.

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