“The 8th Royal Highland Festival in Laya, held on 23–24 October 2025, was made especially memorable by the presence of the Royal Family. This year’s theme, “Celebrating Highland Resilience and Prosperity,” highlighted the strength and cultural richness of Bhutan’s highland communities through vibrant performances, traditional sports, and local exhibitions.” From the Daily Bhutan




Having spent the night at a homestay in Gasa, with an alpine start, we drove three additional hours to the road’s end, a three hour hike from there to Laya. Before this last portion of the road was completed, it was a two day hike. The Layap people have depended on horses for centuries to transport goods and for trade. Two years ago we met a school principle at a book store in Thimphu who was purchasing supplies to be transported by horseback over two to three days to his school. The festival preparations and the movement of tourist luggage depends heavily on the continued use of the horses and mules, providing essential income to their Layap owners.
In Thimphu, we go to sleep with the barking and howling of the dogs. In Laya, it was the neighing of the horses and the braying of the mules as they freely moved about the paths between the houses.














Thanks for sharing this amazing adventure! The photos are so striking, capturing the vastness of the terrain and the rich culture you observed.
X- Maia
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Steve, excellent write up and photos. And an inspirational event in Bhutan. It could, I suppose, be classified as a once-in-a-lifetime experience. Congratulations to you both for experiencing it. I hope the Bhutanese can continue their balancing act in this (hopeless) world.
L. Lorenz M Worden – lorenzworden@gmail.com – 518-489-0866
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