
Today, Kopila is chairperson of the Chingkha Allo Cloth Production Club, which has two dozen members, nearly all women, who manufacture allo cloth and transform it into marketable products like shawls, scarves, bags, and jackets. "It's an extra source of income which helps supplement the income from farming. We have to rely less on the menfolk for money," says Kopila.
Koplia makes time to collect and process the nettle in between keeping house and caring for two children. "We're away for three or four days at a stretch, collecting allo from deep inside highland forests, where the sun rarely shines." Men usually help in harvesting the shrub.

The Mountain Institute, which has been carrying out a variety of programs with local people in the Makalu Barun area, recently recognised Koplia's efforts. She is one of 12 "mountain heroes" featured in a 2003 calendar celebrating 14 years of the institute's partnership in the Makalu-Barun area.