
But Manang has seen trekkers drop by 40 percent this year. And that isn't the only loss the area has had to bear-in the last decade this trans-Himalayan valley has lost over 10 percent of its lush forest cover, in large part due to the wave of construction to be ready for what locals hoped would be increasing numbers of tourists. Annapurna Conservation Area Project (ACAP) officials, as well as some locals, are worried that unless they can enforce uniform regulations on felling, or at least run awareness programs about safe logging practices, Manang will rapidly lose its richest natural resource.
ACAP officials say the mushrooming of new lodges and teahouses in Manang and other areas in the Annapurna region last year was unprecedented. "Never before have so many structures been built in these areas in one year," an ACAP employee told us. There are no official records to quantify the increase, but locals say that every village on the trekking route saw at least half-a-dozen new lodges built, and there wasn't any tourist accommodation that did not go in for a renovation or expansion. Given the cost of transporting other construction materials to this remote part of the Annapurnas, most people build structures of wood and stone along traditional lines, paying Rs 50-100 for a tree, and Rs 5 for a seven foot-long wooden plank.

The problem is that in the district, especially in Upper Manang, logging has never been a cause for concern or debate. ACAP has formed a Conservation Area Management Committee in every village under its purview, but says it is difficult to implement new logging-control mechanisms in this area, where traditional practices are still dominant. In many villages, the responsibility for managing the entire common forest lies with a single person, contradicting every conservation tenet of ACAP.
"Outside" administration has virtually no chance of influencing the local community, we were told. "That is why the organisation finds it hard to implement their rules and regulations. There are many instances of bad decisions made by us," said a young resident of the Manang Village Development Committee, who did not want to be named. "There are still no Forest User Groups in the upper belt of Manang, like there are in the lower part," the ACAP official told us. "The fate of the forests depends on the whims of the person who has been entrusted to look after them." In keeping with tradition, permission to fell trees can still be obtained by making an offering of chhang and a khada to the "authority". The District Forest Office has no say, and logging is on the rise.

Even smaller plants are feeling the ill-effects of mis-managed logging. After the trees are felled, the logs, instead of being carried away, are simply rolled downhill, smothering the undergrowth. The Manang forests contain a significant portion of the over 1,200 species of plants found in ACAP, including 40 varieties of orchids and 10 types of rhododendron. The forests are also home to many endangered animal species, such as the red panda and possibly the snow leopard. Our informant in Manang who spoke on condition of anonymity, said that even if control over felling were to follow the old norms, outside agencies could do a lot better in terms of raising awareness about better logging practices. "When the laziness to carry a single log results in the death of so many smaller plants, the least we could get is proper education on these issues."
Executives of the King Mahendra Trust for Nature Conservation, which manages ACAP, say that while things are bad in Manang, the loss of forest cover isn't as swift or extensive as it would be if northern Manang's border with Tibet were easier to cross. Both ACAP and police officials at Chame investigated the possibility of smuggling into Tibet when they heard about the growing illegal timber for salt bartering in the Langtang and Manaslu areas, which have relatively easier access to Tibet. A similar, but far worse, situation exists in Humla, where illegally logged timber is traded in Tibet via Taklakot for food and alcohol. (See "Nepali timber to Tibet," #17.) Ganga Bahadur Thapa, executive officer of the KMNTC insists that all trees felled in Manang are for domestic consumption.

The CAMC is trying to regulate logging, issuing permits in some places, and trying to work with indigenous ways of authorising felling in others, such as fixing the price of timber and trees. Such control mechanism haven't been very effective yet, however. "That's why we are trying to come up with new, strict rules," says CAMC's Lama. If the new regulation can be implemented, no logging will be allowed for the construction of hotels and lodges in Manang VDC for the next 10 years. "We will implement similar ideas in other villages gradually," Lama says hopefully.
Any regulation, no matter how well thought-out and inclusive, will find it tough going against the traditional ways in which natural resources have been used in this tight-knit community. In the meantime, conservationists suggest that the ACAP needs to start evaluating the impact of its work. They fear that Manang may prove to be an unexceptional case in the Annapurna, just more dramatic. "It is high time they did an impact study," says Dr Chandra Gurung, Country Director of the World Wildife Fund- Nepal. "ACAP has been working in the area for 15 years, it is time they assessed the state of the natural resources now, and compared it with what it was back then."