Pokhara is a vibrant, welcoming city.
It has always been welcoming — vibrancy has come with more and more tourists. The gentle city that welcome me all those years ago would have been horrified to see a casino alongside so many upmarket hotels. There are restaurants from all over the Asia, pizza is everywhere — though no American diner. Shops that once sold little but trinkets or trekking gear now sell expensive cashmere pashminas or carpets from Kashmir.
And so life for many who live here has changed too. For some, there is now a little money over to enjoy themselves: young people meet in coffee bars, or stroll along lakeside showing off their best clothes. There is a pet shop - for those with left enough over from feeding themselves to care for a pet. The electricity supply is almost reliable; for the fortunate, fridges and washing machines have transformed the lives of women. There is a fun fair: I don’t suppose these rides would pass a western health and safety inspection but children love them.
Transport links have improved (though there is still the ever-present challenge of monsoon landslide damage). Most of the road between Pokhara and Kathmandu is now duel carriageway — and the Nepali have a unique way of driving on them. Should you wish to turn right in, say, the next five miles you cross to the other carriageway at the next break in the central reservation and so negotiate oncoming traffic until your turning. As a result, there are vehicles travelling in both directions on both carriageways (and yes, it’s terrifying). It shouldn’t work - but somehow it does.
Places that were once only reachable on foot are now on bus routes. Sarangkot was once a day hike from Pokhara now has, not only a road, but even a cable car! I might mourn the loss of a hike with great views and a beer at the end of it. But the cable car was fun. The intrepid can now jump off the top, riding the thermals alongside the hawks and kites.
But not everyone has been able to enjoy this new prosperity. While most have water now, many women still wash clothes under a cold tap on a rooftop. I saw a woman washing her clothes in the lake. In the villages many still wash clothes and themselves under a cold tap at the roadside. Men climb trees to but food for water buffalo; women carry great weights of animal feed or wood for the fire to cook on.
Back in Pokhara, women walk the streets with sacks of tomatoes, calling as they go. The blind man with his weighing scales cannot tell if he’s been given five rupees or a hundred. Corn cobs are still scorched on a fire from the back of a bike (they smell wonderful but the seller coughs from the smoke):














