10 FACTS ABOUT BHUTAN

10 Surprising Facts About Bhutan

 

Bhutan borders India and China and is a predominantly Buddhist country. Rimmed by the Himalayas, its high altitude and inaccessibility has allowed it to remain cut off from the rest of the world (until recently, when it started to allow limited tourism). Here are 10 interesting facts about Bhutan an intoxicating country.

Best places to visit in Bhutan the Trongsa Dzong with clouds gathering above it in the mountains

 

1: LAND OF THUNDER DRAGON

Bhutan is called “The Land of Thunder Dragons” because of the violent and large thunderstorms that whip down through the valleys from the Himalayas. The contrast in temperature from the Indian plains and the high mountains of the Himalayas also creates dramatic cloud-scapes that can be seen as you drive over the high mountain passes.

The landscape of Bhutan with clouds gathering along the hillside
Trashigang to Samdrup Jonkhar 

 

2: CLOSED TO TOURISTS

In 1974, the first international tourists were allowed into Bhutan by invite only. Today it’s fully open for tourism, but at the high cost of $250.00 a day per person. You must arrange all your travel through a government authorized tourist agency, but once you arrive everything is taken care of from food through to your transportation and guide.

People walking away from Druk Air plane in Paro Bhutan after landing
Paro airport & Druk Air

 

3: GROSS NATIONAL HAPPINESS

Bhutan is the first country to switch from the western ideal of Gross National Product to “Gross National Happiness,” which is achieved through four foundations: good governance, natural environment, sustainable growth, and cultural values.

A group of monks making the peace sign for camera in Bhutan
Friends 

 

4: NO SMOKING

Bhutan is the first country to have outlawed tobacco in 2004. Although, in 2012 the laws were loosened and smuggling now occurs. It is still rare to see people smoking on the streets, but drugs and alcohol have continued to create problems and the government has started a program to educate and deter citizens from abusing or using the smuggled narcotics.

Monk looking out of a window in Bhutan
Monk inside of a Dzong

 

5: THE NATIONAL SPORT

The national sports of Bhutan are archery and darts – I am not sure how darts qualifies as a sport! In the city of Paro I had the opportunity to whiteness an archery competition and was surprised how far they had to shoot. After watching for over forty minutes not one person had hit the bullseye!

A man pulling his arrow for archery in Thimphu Bhutan
Archery in Bhutan 

 

6: NO TRAFFIC LIGHTS

The capital city, Thimphu, has no traffic lights– just white-gloved traffic officers. When the city tried to install some lights there was a public outcry, and they were promptly removed.

The only traffic stop in the town of Thimphu BhutanBhutan
The only traffic stop in Thimphu Bhutan

 

7: STATE RELIGION

Tantric Buddhism is the official religion, followed by Hinduism. Buddhism is state sponsored and the Dzong’s and temples are maintained and supported by the government. There are even trade schools to teach new artisans that work on the paintings and carvings of these holy places.

Dancing in Jakar Bhutan the Kurjey Lhakhang Tsechu or festival with costumes and drums
Jakar Bhutan the Kurjey Lhakhang Tsechu 

 

8: THE HIGHEST MOUNTAIN

Gangkhar Puensum is the highest mountain in Bhutan and considered so sacred that no one has yet climbed to its peak (at 24,840 feet). The views of the mountains as you drive across the high passes are jaw dropping and the highlight of any journey through Bhutan.

best places to visit in Bhutan the Douchula Pass with it's hundreds of Stuppas
Douchula Pass 

 

9: NO TV OR INTERNET

In 2001 Bhutan lifted its ban on TV and Internet—the last country in the world to do so. But today it is not strange to see computers and cell phones in the hands of teenagers especially in the capital city of Thimphu.

Monks in Bhutan at the kurjey lhakhang tsechu blowing horns
Jakar bhutan, kurjey lhakhang tsechu

 

10: ENVIRONMENTALISTS

Bhutan is one of the only countries in the world where citizens have a constitutional obligation to preserve and protect the environment. You need to visit before it all changes. So you should visit Bhutan before it changes – the western world is slowly creeping in despite the governments best intentions. You can learn more about the country and how to start planning a trip on my Bhutan Country Guide Page.

The mighty Mo Chhu River running through the valley of Bhutan

SOURSE: JOSEPH KIELY

Bhutan: A trip to the happiest place on earth

Trekking through the Himalayas in Bhutan.

Trekking through the Himalayas in Bhutan.

I’m in the prayer hall of Tango Buddhist monastery high on a mountainside in Bhutan, watching as a woman performs chag, ritual prostrations before the Buddha.

Three times she clasps her hands in the prayer position, brings them to the crown of her head, to her throat and then to her heart before folding to a kneeling posture and touching her forehead to the floor.

Chag is one of seven ritual practices known as yoen lak duen pa; the woman is a Westerner. Over the next week it’s a theme repeated with many small variations, foreign visitors spinning prayer wheels, lighting butter lamps, wearing the white khata, Buddhist symbol of purity.

Monks look out of a temple in Tango monastery on the outskirts of Thimphu. Photo: Reuters

“Why do people come to Bhutan?” a guest at dinner in my hotel asks me that night. He’s Bhutanese, a lawyer, and it’s a rhetorical question.

“It has a wonderful topography of mountains and forests and rivers, clean air, small population, but then so does Colorado, so does New Zealand and Switzerland. So why do people come from so far when they could so easily and so much less expensively find all these things closer to home?

Because they come to Bhutan for the culture. Because they sense in Bhutan something that has been lost from their own existence,” he says. “They want to change their lives.”

Mount Jumolhari at 7300 metres, seen through prayer flags from Chele La Pass. Photo: Danita Delimont

The last Himalayan Buddhist kingdom, Bhutan is a world apart, a misty, mystic, sequestered realm of chanting monks, prayer flags and monasteries perched high on sub-Himalayan ridgetops. Known as Druk-yul, “Land of the Thunder Dragon”, Bhutan moves to its own rhythm.

This was the last country to get television, and still, so they say, the last without a traffic light. The sale and distribution of cigarettes and other tobacco products is illegal. The gho, the knee-length robe that is the Bhutanese national costume, is required for men working for the government, schools or the tourism industry.

Most famous is Bhutan’s concept of Gross National Happiness, its unique contribution to the way nations measure their success. Rather than the crude yardstick of Gross Domestic Product, Bhutan gauges its position in the world by the four yardsticks of culture, environment, good governance and economic development. It’s another kind of richness, and viewed through the prism of GNH, Bhutan scores well.

 Elderly men in traditional Bhutanese dress are seen at a Buddhist festival in Thimphu. Photo: Reuters

Bhutan offers a masterclass in another way to live, but it’s not for everyone. Bhutan pursues a policy of high-value, low-impact tourism “aimed at attracting tourists who will respect the unique culture and values of the Bhutanese people”, according to the government’s website.

Apart from visitors from India, Bangladesh and the Maldives, every visitor pays an admission fee of US$250 (NZ$380), a figure that deters backpackers and budget travellers. Excluding visitors from the subcontinent, Bhutan laid out the welcome mat to a little more than 50,000 international arrivals in 2013. It’s exclusive, and the high admission price adds to its mystique. It also fosters a clubby elitism among its visitors.

Although it has all the right credentials to become the adventure capital of Asia, apart from white-water rafting on the Pho Chu River and a couple of hardcore treks, the lack of specialist operators and the high cost rules this out as a premium adventure destination. Once you’ve visited a couple of monasteries, admired the sunrise over the Himalayas, shopped for prayer wheels or singing bowls and drunk your fill of butter tea, there’s not an awful lot to do.

A statue of Lord Buddha is pictured at Kuensel Phodrang in Thimphu. Photo: Reuters

Walking, however, is essential, and it’s humbling as well as challenging. Visitors must get used to panting. Paro, Bhutan’s international airport, sits in a valley at an altitude of 2200 metres. Almost exactly the same altitude as Mount Kosciuszko, and, from Paro, just about everything is up.

Walking here takes you into thigh-burning territory, along forest paths where the trees are webbed with wild clematis or old man’s beard, known here as Dakini hair after the female sky dancers who assist Buddhists along the path to enlightenment. The trail will usually deliver you to a monastery, which are pitched high on the mountainsides for reasons of security as well as the essential quality of isolation.

The ParoTaktsang Palphug Buddhist monastery, also known as the Tiger’s Nest. Photo: Reuters

I’m on a high trail climbing towards the pass at Chele La when there’s an almighty howling. One of the dogs that has been accompanying us has invaded the territory of another. “Anger,” says Kuenzang Tobgay, my guide. “One of the three poisons that stands in the way of enlightenment.”

Although my prostrations might be less than perfect, if I can cling to that thought in traffic, in the supermarket queue or next time I’m on hold on the phone listening to inane music, Bhutan will have changed my life for the better.

 A boy and an elderly man are seen at a prayer wheel at the National Memorial Chorten in Thimpu. Photo: Reuters

MORE INFORMATION tourism.gov.bt

GETTING THERE Druk Air has daily flights from Bangkok and twice weekly flights from Singapore to Paro, the only international airport. See drukasia.com/Bhutan

New Zealand passport holders require a visa and must book their holiday through a Bhutanese tour operator or one of their international partners.

STAYING THERE Le Meridien is a new addition to Bhutan, the first Western-style hotel from one of the major hotel groups. Close to the heart of Thimphu, the capital, it offers a high level of comfort, style and amenities.

See starwoodhotels.com

The daily package price that all visitors are required to pay US$250 covers the cost of three-star hotel accommodation, meals, tours, guide services and transport. Visitors who choose to stay in more comfortable accommodation pay more.

Jordan Siemens, The writer travelled as a guest of Le Meridien Hotel in Thimphu.