NATIONAL
PARKS IN NEPAL
SAGARMATHA
NATIONAL PARKS
Area :
1148 sq. km.
Established : 1976
Location:
Sagarmatha National Park is located
to the north-east of Kathmandu in the
Kumbu region of Nepal. The park
includes the highest peak in the
world, Mt. Sagarmatha (Everest),
and several other well-known peaks such
as Lhotse, Nuptse, Cho Oyu, Pumori,
Ama Dablam, Thamserku, Kwangde, Kangtaiga
and Gyachung Kang. The park was
added to the list of World Heritage
Sites in 1979.
Feature :
The mountains of Sagarmatha National
Park are geologically young and
broken up by deep gorges and glacial
valleys. Vegetation includes pine and
hemlock forests at lower altitudes,
fir, juniper, birch and rhododendron
woods, scrub and alpine plant communities,
and bare rock and snow. The famed bloom
of rhododendrons occurs during spring
(April and May) although other flora
is most colorful during the monsoon
season (June to August).
Wild animals most
likely to seen in the park are the Himalayan
tahr, goral, serow and musk deer.
The snow leopard and Himalayan black
bear are present but rarely sighted.
Other mammals rarely seen are the weasel,
maren, Himalayan mouse hare (pika),
jackal and langur monkey.
The park is populated
by approximately 3,000 of the famed
Sherpa people whose lives are
interwoven with the teachings of
Buddhism. The main settlements are
Namche Bazar, Khumjung, Khunde,
Thame, Thyangboche, Pangboche and Phortse.
The economy of the Khumbu Sherpa
community has traditionally been
heavily based on trade and livestock
herding. But with the arrival of international
mountaineering expeditions since
1950 and the influx of foreign trekkers,
today the Sherpa economy is becoming
increasingly dependent of tourism.