It
begins at Tumlingtar and ends at Chatara, Kartikeghat.
The starting point can be approached either
by flight or by road. Some parts of the river
are smooth while some are rough and challenging.
On the sixth day Arun River meets Sun Koshi.
Rafters either drive back Chatara via Biratnagar
or fly from Biratnagar to Kathmandu.
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| River
Bheri |

The first section of the remote and relatively
unexplored river has many twists and turns. The
gorge occasionally opens into valleys and small
villages. The trip can be continued with a jungle
tour in the Bardiya Wildlife Reserve.
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| Bhote
Koshi |
 It
is a two-day run of pure adventure. The rafting
site is located only three hours from Kathmandu.
Twenty-six kilometers of continuous white water
soaks rafters as they shot through a veritable
maze of canyons and boulders. It is the steepest
river rafted in Nepal and required a lot of concentration.
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| Kali
Gandaki |

It winds through remote canyons and deep gorges
of intense rapids among. Starting at Baglung,
you could raft down to Kamdighat in five or six
days. Trips on the Kali Gandaki begin and end
in Pokhara and offer on exciting alternative to
the Trisuli. The run flows 120 km and its challenges
are continuous.
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| River
Marshyangdi |

It provides four days of uninterrupted white-water
rafting. It begins from the village of Ngadi from
Besishahar in Pokhara. The rapids on the river
are unrelenting. It runs sandwiched between 52
kilometers of boiling foam and towering peaks
of Annapurna.
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| River
Seti |

It can be reached from Damauli roughly
160 kilometers west of Kathmandu. Rafters encounter
several rapids before reaching Trisuli River. Rafters
have a choice of either coming back to Kathmandu
or continuing the journey to visit the Chitwan National
Park.
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| River
Sun Koshi |
 It
is Nepal’s longest rafting trip. The rafting
site, three hours drive from Kathmandu is more accessible
than the Karnali. The sun is 270 km and requires
9 to 10 days from Dolalghat to Chatara down to the
Indo-Gangetic plains. The first couple of days are
relatively easy while surprises sneak up on you
during the last days. The white water stays white
until the very end.
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| River
Tama Koshi |
 It
starts from the Twerolpa Lake and Gaurishanker Glacier.
Rafting or kayaking point starts from Busti on the
way to Jiri. Tama Koshi is not safe for commercial
run as it sometimes has impossible rapids. For kayakers
however, this river is good. Three days of kayaking
on Tama Koshi brings one to River Sun Koshi. Another
4 days paddling leads to Chatara on the banks of
River Chatara on the banks of River Saptakoshi and
Hindu pilgrimage site Baraha Chhetra.
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| River
Karnali |
 It
is the longest and largest river in Nepal. It flows
through steep, jagged canyons where rapids are tightly
packed, offering continuous challenging water at
all flows. It takes about 7 days to navigate the
90 kilometers of canyons and waterfalls. During
most of this trip, the wilderness is uninterrupted
by human habitations.
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| River
Trisuli |
 It
is one of the most poplar Nepali rivers for rafting.
For first time rafters it offers plenty of excitement.
Due to its proximity to Kathmandu and easy road
access we offer trips on the Trisuli. It is the
cheapest river trip available in Nepal. A river
trip on Trisuli can be combined with trips to Chitwan
or Pokhara.
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