Advertisement
Advertisement
Asia travel
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Marine Annic (left) with female guide Santoshi Magar (centre) on a trek in Nepal. More women tourists looking to trek in Nepal are hiring female guides and using women-led companies. Photo: Marine Annic

Female trekking guides in Nepal and their clients talk empowerment and equality: ‘we see women in tea houses working, but not leading trails’

  • Most treks in Nepal are led by male guides, but an increasing number of female trekkers are looking for female guides, for safety reasons among others
  • Hiring female guides helps empower Nepali women and give them financial independence and respect, and gives the client a different experience of the country
Asia travel

When Marine Annic, 35, a singer from France, wanted to trek in Nepal, she scoured the internet for female guides.

“Only a few women were proposing trekking services,” says Annic. “As a woman, I felt hiring a woman guide would bring me a nice experience, interesting conversations about Nepali culture and traditions.”

Each year, thousands of tourists visit Nepal to trek, but almost all expeditions are led by men. However, officials the Post spoke to say that enrolment of women in trekking courses at national academies in Nepal has been rising.

This is a blessing for people such as Veronika Jacenkova, 41, from the Czech Republic, who, like Annic, sought out women-led trekking companies when she visited Nepal.

Marine Annic with guide Santoshi Magar from Duluwa Outdoors in Upper Mustang, Nepal. Duluwa Outdoors aims to combat gender bias and bridge the pay gap in Nepal’s tourism industry. Photo: Santoshi Magar
Czech tourist Veronika Jacenkova with a guide from Duluwa Outdoors. Photo: Duluwa Outdoors

“It’s more comfortable to travel with a woman because of safety factors,” says Jacenkova. “I didn’t think a trip alone [through the Langtang National Park] was safe.”

Duluwa Outdoors is an all-women tour company and community project that aims to combat gender bias and bridge the pay gap.

“While we are on trails, we see women in tea houses, working in the kitchen or the reception counter, but not leading those trails,” says co-founder Menuka Gurung.

“We want youth, especially women, to see the outdoors as a reliable, well-paying career, and encourage Nepali women to travel.”

Duluwa’s programme lead, Shanti Rai, says: “Women are perceived as physically weak and outdoor activities [are seen] are exclusive to men.”

I wanted to trek with a female guide to encourage the empowerment of Nepali women, who deserve to live the same experiences as male guides
Marine Annic, 35, a singer from France

United by their love of travel, Gurung and Rai joined forces with Binita Jirel, Rejina Tamang and Juliana Shrestha, women belonging to indigenous communities in Nepal, to launch Duluwa Talks as a podcast in 2019.

Duluwa fostered a supportive and collaborative environment for women who shared an interest in travel and the great outdoors, including entrepreneurs.

After a year, the group began to plan outdoor events and experiences for women, and Duluwa Outdoors was registered as a company in 2021.

Marine Annic (right) with her brother and their trekking guide, Santoshi Magar (centre). Photo: Duluwa Outdoors

The founders wanted to empower women as leaders while creating bespoke experiences for visitors interested in trekking, camping, climbing and kayaking in the Himalayas, “opportunities we wish we had when we were younger,” says Rai.

Short itineraries designed by Duluwa last for a few hours, and are open to all, whereas those that extend overnight or for longer are exclusively for women, says Gurung. The company also devises bespoke tours and treks for clients.

Having been introduced to the company through a Facebook group for French tourists in Nepal, Annic employed Duluwa to lead her and her brother on a trek in Upper Mustang in 2023.
Setting up camp in Nepal on a women’s trek organised by Duluwa Outdoors. Photo: Duluwa Outdoors

“I wanted to trek with a female guide to encourage the empowerment of Nepali women, who deserve to live the same experiences as male guides,” says Annic.

“Hiring female guides also promotes opportunities for Nepali women, creating financial independence and respect from men in the society.”

Jacenkova, who has trekked in New Zealand and across Europe, says that with a female guide, it’s possible to share issues that only women face: “I have no problem to say I have menstruation, but it’s more comfortable if the guide knows what you are going through.”

Annic says that most of the other hikers she and her brother encountered “were glad to see that a young woman could be hired to be a trek guide in Upper Mustang”.

It’s not uncommon for tourists to express surprise when they come across female-led treks, says Rai.

“Not because they doubt the capabilities of women guides, but because they might not have encountered such a set-up before,” she says.

Women meet up at Duluwa Outdoors. Female trekking guides share stories and support each other at these meetings. Photo: Santoshi Magar

In Nepal, it’s common to see groups of men sitting and sipping tea, discussing their work. But that is “a culture that doesn’t exist for women”, says Gurung.

Attempting to change that, Duluwa “organises meet-ups where guides can engage in conversations about their unique perspectives, hurdles and successes in their professions”, says Rai. “These sessions are a space for mutual support and growth.”

Many trekking companies that profess to empower women do little to support their female guides, says Santoshi Magar, the freelance guide who led the Annic siblings’ trek.

“They don’t do enough and offer low pay,” she says, claiming she was offered work for as little as US$12 a day when the daily guide rates are much higher.

Many women feel more comfortable trekking with female guides. Above: the mountains of Upper Mustang in Nepal, where Santoshi Magar led the Annics’ trek. Photo: Getty Images

Magar, who began trekking in 2019, says: “I shared my experience for the first time with Duluwa. I was comfortable in their company.”

Cultural immersion is another aspect of Duluwa’s business model.

“Exposure to Nepal’s diverse traditions, customs and local communities deepens trekkers’ understanding of cultural diversity,” says Gurung. “They develop a heightened awareness and appreciation for different ways of life.”

If the trek through Langtang was “a real vacation” for Jacenkova, who felt she’d “never been so taken care of”, Annic called her trek in Upper Mustang “a reset experience, and an anchor to remember what really matters”.

What really matters to Duluwa Outdoors is that women are given the same opportunities as men, the company no doubt buoyed by new research from the World Travel & Tourism Council and the Sustainable Tourism Global Centre that shows the number of women directly employed in the global travel and tourism sector rose from 38.6 million in 2010 million to 47.8 million in 2019.

Post