When sisters Lucky, Dicky and Nicky Chhetri began guiding trekkers through Nepal challenging mountain routes in 1994, disbelief came from many angles.

“At first, people thought we were doing sex tourism, not trekking -- going into the mountains with foreigners for weeks,” says Lucky.



Surrounded by skeptics in an industry dominated by men -- of 452 Nepalis who summited one of the country’s peaks in 2011 only three were female -- the three sisters, now all in their mid-forties, have established not only a successful company of female guides and porters, but a pathway for girls from Nepal’s most remote and rugged areas toward employment and empowerment.

Sisters Lucky, Dicky and Nicky Chhetri, with guide Mana Kunwar. The first company to employ female guides in Nepal, 3 Sisters Adventure Trekking now employs around 25 women as guides and 40 as assistant guides and porters.

After leaving their hometown of Darjeeling for Pokhara, a lakeside tourist hub at the foot of the Annapurna mountain range, the sisters opened a restaurant and guesthouse in 1993.

A year or so later, stories of female trekkers feeling uncomfortable with their male guides and porters in the mountains led them to post a sign advertising treks “by women, for women."

In the first season, Lucky guided trekkers to Annapurna Base Camp, at 4,130 meters. Her training: a basic course at the Himalayan Mountaineering Institute in Darjeeling.
''We are investing in our girls''

Mountain guiding in Nepal is big business, with at least a quarter of all tourists who visit Nepal engaging in some form of trekking.

With each season, the three sisters’ business grew quickly, with more trekkers opting for female guides.

While guiding groups through the mountains, the sisters noticed the harsh conditions faced by young girls living in the remote areas, including some who had been sold by their families to work in trekking lodges.

Guides and trainees in the Langtang region of Nepal.“We knew the women living in the remote mountain areas had an emotional, physical and economic hard life," says Lucky. "The girls have to walk miles for water, climb trees for firewood, work in fields. Hardly any opportunity, hardly any ambition."

She remembers thinking, “If I can [be a guide], the women in the mountains who do so much physical work, they all can do it too.”

The Chhetri sisters’ successful company is only one half of their work.

Two years after starting the company, they established Empowering Women of Nepal (EWN), a non-profit organization that provides training for girls over the age of 16 to become mountain guides.
 

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