New members of the Nepal forum, introduce yourselves here - 2018
Newbie on the Nepal forum? DonÂ’t know how to start?
This thread is for youÂ
We invite you to introduce yourself on this topic, to share with us your expat story if you are already living in the country, or to tell us more on your expat projects in Nepal if you are planning to move there.
It will enable us to help you better but above all to wish you a warm welcome.
Welcome on board!
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I'm Hanny, married to a Nepalese man. I'm considering moving to Nepal when I've finished my degree (summer 2019). I'm just casting about to see what's out there and if anyone had any tips for me! At the moment I'm thinking an English teaching job may be a route of employment which is open to me. That's it in a nutshell! Chers guys and hope you're all keeping well.
h x
My advice is that you make full use of the time you have in Scotland between now and your graduation next year in 2019 to usefully contact NGO's or other educational entities in your part of the world, to explore any and all job opportunities that might be open to you in the teaching/educational profession, and postulate with them, destination Nepal, with your credentials. In your place, I would start by contacting both Nepal Trust - (Glasgow)  and The Pahar Trust of Nepal ( ) which you can find on the net. First prepare a full CV, with photo and APPLY to them, with your candidature. No time to waste, start asap! Try to land a job with them before you arrive in Nepal. This is another way of saying that you would do well and better to land in Nepal with a job in hand, in contrast with landing there empty-handed. This way, you can hope to get far better remuneration, perks and benefits, and of course try to get health care/benefits/insurance coverage. Try for a 2-3 year contract. By the way, those two names I found for you in five minutes by surfing on the net but there may be many other entities in teaching field that you can similarly contact. The more the better. Try to also phone them and of course submit your CV to all of them. Best of luck to you.
I am a businessman in the US with several businesses one of which is pretty large. I started over about 5 years ago and we think we can cash out in just under 3 years.

We plan on moving to Nepal in 2 years 11 months permanently to work with www.eternalhopenepal.com and to start some businesses to help the children we are working with and their families get jobs.
Love Nepal and mostly my wife!
A few photos with me in next post.
I thought I should maybe prove that I exist as well.
I like traditional clothes!
I'm Ristri - or simply Rie/Ree whichever you like, from Indonesia.

Moved to Nepal on June 2018 - married with a nice Nepali man, a music teacher/musician, based in Kirtipur, Kathmandu with cool Newari culture and tradition. Is there anyone stayed/ever visit Kirtipur?
I was working as HR Manager in IT company back in Indonesia, but here, since I got Non-Tourist (Marriage) Visa, I'd call myself as Self-employed. I work as freelance guitar teacher at home and in a sponsored school at Martatirtha, Kathmandu. Oh yes, forget to mention that i like music too! Mesmerized by Nepali/Newari music as well!
I would like to start Airbnb business, record and release my new music, selling stuff in online shop, and open music course with musician friends. Is there anyone thinking the same plan as mine? Please share too~
I am also thinking to start funding for getting child/small-size guitars so that I could teach kids to learn playing guitar better/properly in the future. I was visiting schools in Kathmandu who has music subject - guitar, and most of them has adult size guitar, which is uncomfortable to play.
If you are planning to visit Kirtipur, please leave me a message! We can meet up and share stories at my favorite cafe which runs by a nice Nepali and Filipino couple. Their pastries are so tasty, btw!
Thanks!
We recently started working on our Youtube channel. It's a lot of fun and I'm helping travelers to have a better time in Nepal. Â I've always been trying to help travelers with my blog or my little eBook, online advice, etc.
I see an opportunity in exporting handmade musical instruments that could earn you some money. Hope you enjoy living here. I have been here almost 8 years and I love it more every day. Being as you are from Asia you will adapt just fine, but if you need any help feel free to let me know.
Your project sounds very interesting. For many years, starting way back in 2001, I exported various types of nepali products from our base, which at that time was located in central Kathmandu. In the next 10-12 years that followed, our little 5 or 6 men/women office really developed and prospered and we exported those goods to Europe, USA, and many countries throughout the world. Although I am now fully retired, out of business and no longer reside full time in Nepal, I thought with the experience I gathered, I would pass on to you the benefit of that experience, in the hope that it will inspire you. You then decide if you want to follow suit or take a different approach.
1. I don't know this Airbnb organization. What I did on day one was altogether different. First, I purchased a good .com name from GoDaddy, then had our own site hosted in the USA at Eapps.com. With the help of a nepali webmaster in our nepali office, said website was built under my supervision. (Later, we built a larger network of related sites for a number of quality "made in Nepal" handicraft products).
As you say you have IT experience, it's possible you could create your own website solo, without a webmaster? We only did wholesale and large ticket items, but you could do retail/online, or both.
2. In my experience, the products that sold best for us were the following:
- Genuine/high quality Cashmere sweaters, scarves, hats and gloves
- A variety of pure wool products,
- A wide variety of "made in Nepal" handmade incense
- Small copper and bronze statues (Buddhas, Green Tara, and other deities)
- Wax candles and other products.
- Wool/Felt items like slippers, toys, X-mas decorations, etc.
3. In the art field and related, I tried modern art, sold a few but not many
I tried to promote thangkas, but not with a great deal of success. Too specialized a field. OK for the run of the mill $50 variety, but impractical to try and sell large high grade thangkas in the range of say $1,000 to $3,000 to collectors and the like.
4. One products which we did not carry but sold well were fast selling Khukuri knives (Gorkha style). One store owner I know in Thamel was regularly shipping out knives to overseas buyers with good success. Shipments of several thousand dollars worth per month.
Turning to exporting musical instruments, I am sorry to have to say that I have absolutely no experience in this specialty field so I cannot guide you. Our company never promoted them, never offered them to the public. From reading what you had to say, I can fully understand that this is your great love, hobby, and primary interest. Therefore, please understand that it is not my intention to dissuade you from trying to do just that. But have you done any study or research to try and determine the market potential for made-in-Nepal musical instruments to be shipped either to Indonesia or internationally? I am no authority on the subject, but my gut feeling is that this is a limited market in comparison with some of the other products I've named above - which I know for a fact - sell well worldwide. If you do carry out this project, try to tap in on both the domestic market as well as the international market. - I am not insinuating that you should export all the above, but perhaps you could choose to promote, say, musical instruments and felt decorative items....or musical instruments and incense, or some other other combination of your choice. This way, at the end of 1-2 years, you will will be able to determine for yourself and for sure which product sells better than the other!! Guess all I'm saying is why put all your eggs in one basket?
Best of luck on your project's success.

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