NMA - the turbocharger of Nepal's academic mountaineering

ITAHARI, September 14: NMA is unique name in itself in Nepal's mountaineering spectrum. However, there are two separate organizations with the abbreviation of NMA. The first one is Nepal Mountaineering Association. The first and only alpine club of Nepal was officially established on 1 November 1973.  Nepal Mountaineering Association has been running national and international level mountaineering related training and skills programs in Nepal.  It has also established two famous mountaineering landmarks including Pokhara's International Mountain Museum, which was established on 5 February 2004, and International Mountaineers Memorial Park of Kakani, foundation stone laying ceremony for which was held on 28 May 1998.  Another NMA stands for Nepal Mountain Academy. Unlike Nepal Mountaineering Association, Nepal Mountain Academy is purely government entity formally instituted on 30 May 2002 under the aegis of Nepal's Ministry of Culture, Tourism and Civil Aviation.  NMA has 140 hectares of area at Garma of Solukhumbu and has academic complex at Thapagaun, Bijulibajar of Kathmandu. According to Lakhpa Phuti Sherpa, the President of NMA said NMA aims to build Tourism University in the distant future at Garma.  NMA has turbocharged Nepal's academic mountaineering and training. It has initiated many pioneering academic courses and training packages not only in Nepal but also in the world.  World's first university level course in mountaineering  NMA is the first institute in the world to run university level academic mountaineering course with practical exposures. It got affiliation from the meeting of the Executive Council of Tribhuvan University on 24 January 2018 for Bachelor of Mountaineering Studies (BMS). NMA started to run Bachelor of Mountaineering Studies (BMS) from October 2018.  There are 110 students, including 10 female students, studying BMS at NMA.  Yearly intake quota for BMS is 30.  According to Uttam Babu Bhattarai, the Spokesperson and Information Officer at NMA. An author of travel essay titled, Aaha Himal, NMA has allotted 30 seats for each batch of BMS. The eight-semester BMS fee for Nepali is Rs. 600,000. The same fee for SAARC and foreign students is Rs. 800,000 and  Rs. 1,200,000 respectively. This nascent course has not attracted students from abroad, though. However, for Nepali youngsters, BMS  has fulfilled their long-cherished dream. Pranjal Pokharel, 23, hails from Nepal's southern plain Terai and had not seen mountain in his childhood. However, this seventh semester student of BMS, has joined this course to live his dream.  ''I simply wanted to wander through various parts of Nepal and want to know men and mountains'', said Pokharel, ''This is what brought me here.'' Pokharel has been to the base camp of Mardi Himal and even have climbed little known Diji Diri peak of Mustang.  Nepal's first masters program in adventure tourism  NMA also holds its title as the pioneering institute in Nepal to run master program in adventure tourism sector.  On 9 December 2019 another meeting of the Executive Council of Tribhuvan University granted affiliation of MATS i.e. Master of Adventure Tourism Studies (MATS).  From January 2020, MATS classes are operational. As of the ongoing academic colander of 2021, total students studying MATS are 35 including 9 female students.  MATS fee for Nepali, SAARC and foreign students is Rs. 400,000, Rs. 600,000 and Rs. 800,000 respectively. Total yearly quota for MATS is 35 seats.  First institute to train and guide civil servant to scale Everest  Nepal's Prime Minister Tanka Prashad Acharya introduced first Civil Service Act in 1956.   Before five years on 15 June 1951, Public Service Commission came into existence to recruit civil servants.  Despite decades of their service as civil servant in Nepal, Nepal's civil servants had not scaled Everest until 2011. On 18 May 2011, NMA-trained and guided 9 civil servants scaled Everest first the first time. It was a historic achievement for Nepal's civil servants.  For this feat, 15 civil servants were trained and guided by NMA. They were selected among many aspirants. In Nepal's Everest Measurement of 2019 also, NMA instructor Tshiring Jabgbu Sherpa was the Sherpa guide for summit observation led by Surveyor Khimlal Gautam.  The summit observation was made on 22 May 2019. Pioneer of female trekking guide trainings and other trainings  NMA introduced female trekking guide training for the first time in Nepal. It has produced 291 female trekking guides and 1,890 male trekking guides. As of September, total trained people of liaison officer training for mountaineering, ski, mountain safety and security training and high altitude training are 960, 116, 80 and 451 respectively.  For ski programmes, trainees are regularly taken to the Switzerland for further training.  For the exploration of new peaks, rock-climbing venues and other adventurous avenues, NMA is doing its best, said the Spokesperson and the Information Officer, Uttam Babu Bhattarai.  In academic and research field, NMA published two separate volumes of 'Voice of Himalaya' and 'Journal of Tourism and Himalayan Adventures'. So far, three volumes of Journal of Tourism and Himalayan Adventures and eight editions of Voice of Himalaya has been published featuring dozens of research works and creative articles including authors both from Nepal and abroad.  

सम्बन्धित सामग्री

Spring permits for mountaineering begin

The Department of Tourism has started issuing mountaineering permits for the spring mountaineering season. The post Spring permits for mountaineering begin appeared first on OnlineKhabar English News.

Issue of spring permits for mountaineering begins

KATHMANDU, MARCH 26: The Department of Tourism has started issuing mountaineering permits for the spring mountaineering season. A total of 33 people have already taken permission to climb four different mountains to date, according to the Director of the Adventure Tourism and Mountaineering Branch of the Department, Rakesh Gurung. Among them, one is permitted for […] The post Issue of spring permits for mountaineering begins appeared first on Aarthiknews:: A leading business & economic news portal from Nepal.

Sunar Gurung selected as mountaineering training coordinator

Sunar Gurung, Nepal's first international mountaineering guide, has been appointed as the coordinator of the Training and Mountaineering Campaign Committee.

Sunar Gurung selected as mountaineering training coordinator

Sunar Gurung, Nepal's first international mountaineering guide, has been appointed as the coordinator of the Training and Mountaineering Campaign Committee.

Joint Nepal-US mountaineering expedition

Climbers from the two nations will hold a joint mountaineering expedition.

Mera Peak deemed suitable destination for ski mountaineering

KATHMANDU, May 23: A feasibility study conducted by a team of four mountaineers, two foreigners and two Nepalis, have concluded that Mera Peak is suitable destination for ski mountaineering. The study team found out the 6,473-metre high peak was apt for ski mountaineering. Leonardo Bernard, 35, and 40-year-old Deidrick Bhan Reason from the Netherlands had skied from the summit of the Peak on May, according to the Ski and Snowboarding Academy. The skier duo had skied to the base camp of the Mera Peak within half an hour, shared Academy’s President Utsav Pathak. Academy in collaboration with the Snow Guide Nepal Treks and Expedition conducted the feasibility study and the ski mountaineering activity in the Peak. Training for ski mountaineering will be conducted in the Mera Peak from coming October to train Nepal’s team to compete in the Olympic Ski Mountaineering to be held in Italy in 2026. A ski completion was organized by the Academy in Kalinchowk in 2019 winter and ski mountaineering activities and training were organized in other peaks in Humla, Dolpa, Mustang and Kaski for five years. Academy aims to popularize ski mountaineering in the country that houses 8 among 14 highest mountains including 8,848.86-metre high Sagarmatha (Mt Everest).

Mera Peak is suitable for ski mountaineering: Study

A feasibility study conducted by a team of four mountaineers, two foreigners and two Nepalis, has concluded that Mera Peak is a suitable destination for ski mountaineering.