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Bhutan
General information
BY AIR
The best way to enter Bhutan is by Druk Air, Bhutan's
National Flag carrier. Druk Air has flights from India
(Delhi & Calcutta), Nepal (Kathmandu), Thailand
(Bangkok) and Bangladesh (Dhaka). Druk Air is the
only air operating TO/FROM Bhutan.
BY LAND
By land, one can enter or exit Bhutan from Phuntsoling,
the southern Bhutanese border town that is soon connected
to West Bengal state of India. For travellers willing
to visit Darjeeling, Sikkim and Nepal, Phuntsoling
serves as a best connecting point. Exit from Bhutan
can be made from Samdrup Zongkhar also. This frontier
town is approximately three hours drive from Guwahati,
the capital city of Assam state of India. Samdrup
Zongkhar is the only other authorised exit point in
Bhutan from where you can make further visit to other
parts of India.
As
per government rule, it is mandatory to travel at
least one way to/from Bhutan or both.
VISA
A visa is required for traveling to Bhutan and it
is processed and arranged by travel agents in Bhutan.
No foreign mission grants tourist visa. Once you've
decided to participate in one of Around Himal's Bhutan
programs, our partner agent in Bhutan will take care
of your Visa preparation. Please download this <Visa
Application Form> fill it carefully and mail it
to us at least four weeks prior to date of your proposed
travel, for processing it with the concerned authorities.
Please include four copies of a recent passport size
photographs. Actual visa is stamped on arrival in
Bhutan while visa is cleared in advance and a visa
clearance number issued. Once we've gone through this
process and received a clearance number, we will confirm
your travel.
CUSTOMS & REGULATIONS
The Bhutanese authorities strictly prohibit the export
of any religious antiquity or antiques of any type.
All personal electronics, cameras, video cameras,
computers and personal electronic equipment may be
brought into the country but they must be listed on
the Customs form provided on arrival at Paro and will
be checked on your departure. Two liters of Alcohol
and reasonable quantity of cigarettes may be brought
in to the country without duty.
CURRENCY
Bhutan's unit of currency is the Ngultrum (Nu), which
equals 100 Chetrums. It is at par with the Indian
rupee, itself a legal tender in the kingdom. One US
dollar is exchanged for roughly 44 Ngultrums. Tourists
can exchange traveller's cheques or cash at the Bank
of Bhutan or at any authorised hotels. US dollar,
Australian dollars, pound sterling, Euro, French and
Swiss francs, German marks, Dutch guilders, Hongkong
dollars, Singapore dollars, Thai bath or Japanese
yen are all accepted currencies.
ACCOMMODATION
Hotels vary in style and quality but are generally
considered one of the welcome surprises for visitors.
There is a variety of hotels in Bhutan, ranging from
simple huts that cater to Bhutanese yak herders to
Paro's fancy Olathang Hotel, which was built for royal
guests. There is no International chain of hotels
and not much imported hotel equipment. To be more
precise, what you get is a Bhutanese version of what
the tourists expect. In most cases, the facilities
and service are good. The Tourism Authority of Bhutan
approves the hotels for the International tourists.
PHOTOGRAPHY & VIDEO
The photography opportunities in Bhutan are immense.
Photography is permitted nearly everywhere in Bhutan
and the local population has no aversion to being
photographed. If you wish to record the local people,
their houses, shops etc, always ask by gestures if
it is okay to do so. Photography inside the Dzongs
and Monasteries are not permitted. Please follow our
guide's instruction carefully while visiting Dzongs,
monasteries and religious institution. |
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