| country: | Nepal |
| departures: | Departures can be arranged anytime throughout the year to suit you |
| price: | From £750 (1 month) - £880 (2 months), £1010 (3 months), £1140 (4 months) and £1270 (5 months) excluding flights. Price includes pleasure flight over Everest and charity donation |
the amazing things you'll be doing
You don’t have to be a teacher to participate and enjoy teaching in Nepal with us. From the moment you arrive to the day that you depart we want you to experience the wonderful hospitality of the Nepali people not as a tourist but as a guest in the local community. In return, we want you to give 18 hours a week of your time to teaching and helping students practice their conversational English in a village school and / or a hostel.
As a volunteer we will provide airport pickup, backup, orientation, training, a voluntary placement, food, lodging, a SIM card, a Lonely Planet guide, an email address, and amazingly a complimentary Mountain Flight over Everest! We know what volunteers want because we are volunteers. It makes us look at things differently. You have been the lifeblood of our organisation for the last 7 years and we want to share our enthusiasm and love for volunteering in Nepal with you.
You can volunteer in a school or you can help children in a hostel. In fact you can do both at no extra cost. We recommend that you do both because they complement each other and because hostel children also go to school between 10am-4pm. You can always change your mind when you get to Nepal and see what it is like. It’s your choice!
English is the medium of choice in most schools, colleges and jobs and so there is tremendous pressure to learn the language. We want you to give 18 hours a week of your time to teaching and helping students practice their conversational English because this is a fantastic opportunity for Nepali children to gain confidence in their second language (sometimes their third). Confidence is the key to learning any language and we have seen the difference one volunteer can make.
Get to experience the famous hospitality of the Nepali people first hand by living in a village environment which is always a bus ride away from the city. We will arrange for you to live with a friendly and welcoming family where you will be served traditional Nepali food. Host families are carefully chosen because they are friendly, helpful and caring towards guests and because they offer clean, comfortable lodging and healthy, hygienic food. Whilst your host village has been chosen for its beauty, people, convenience and cultural heritage.
As a volunteer we will provide airport pickup, backup, orientation, training, a voluntary placement, food, lodging, a SIM card, a Lonely Planet guide, an email address, and amazingly a complimentary Mountain Flight over Everest! We know what volunteers want because we are volunteers. It makes us look at things differently. You have been the lifeblood of our organisation for the last 7 years and we want to share our enthusiasm and love for volunteering in Nepal with you.
the charity
We are a registered charity in the UK and Nepal. We want you volunteer where you are needed most. As a result, we work with local organisations and that would otherwise not get any help from English language speakers. We want volunteering to be accessible. You simply decide how long you want to volunteer for and then make a donation. For example, if you volunteer for 4 weeks we will ask you for a £700 donation and if you volunteer for 8 weeks we will ask you to donate £830. In the last financial year we spent 98.2% of our donations on running Little Gems Hostel -supporting the care and education of former child labourers. The best thing about all this is that we will introduce you to our work in Nepal. We will invite you to accompany our staff on a field visit to a stone quarry or a brick kiln to learn about child labour in Nepal. You will also get to see firsthand, how your donation helps to provide education and care to children in Little Gems. a day in the life of a volunteer
In your first few days you will receive orientation and training. Specifically, your supervisor will advise you on what is expected from your school, hostel, host family and what is culturally acceptable behaviour in Nepal. You can volunteer in a school or you can help children in a hostel. In fact you can do both at no extra cost. We recommend that you do both because they complement each other and because hostel children also go to school between 10am-4pm. You can always change your mind when you get to Nepal and see what it is like. It’s your choice!
English is the medium of choice in most schools, colleges and jobs and so there is tremendous pressure to learn the language. We want you to give 18 hours a week of your time to teaching and helping students practice their conversational English because this is a fantastic opportunity for Nepali children to gain confidence in their second language (sometimes their third). Confidence is the key to learning any language and we have seen the difference one volunteer can make.
Get to experience the famous hospitality of the Nepali people first hand by living in a village environment which is always a bus ride away from the city. We will arrange for you to live with a friendly and welcoming family where you will be served traditional Nepali food. Host families are carefully chosen because they are friendly, helpful and caring towards guests and because they offer clean, comfortable lodging and healthy, hygienic food. Whilst your host village has been chosen for its beauty, people, convenience and cultural heritage.
volunteer travel - what's it all about?
Are you are looking for an adventurous trip with a purpose, or on a gap year or career break? If you want to make a difference in some of the world’s most important conservation areas - and in community projects - then volunteer trips are for you! Volunteers tend to have a sense of adventure, and come from a range of different backgrounds and from all over the world. Edward Abbey said 'sentiment without action is the ruin of the soul'.
how this holiday makes a difference
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We are a registered charity, a non profit organisation and a voluntary organisation that invests almost 100% of our funds into the education and care of child labourers. As an example, we spent 98.2% of our income on running Little Gems Hostel and supporting the care and education of former child labourers.
We believe that our main achievement as a charity is in arranging volunteer opportunities that benefit both the volunteer, our beneficiaries, the local community and the environment. We offer low prices because we want volunteering to be accessible to everyone and benefit as many people as possible. We believe that the true value of volunteering is how much a volunteer can gain from the experience and how much it can benefit the local community. We employ people on the basis that they have a good understanding of poverty in Nepal. We also give preference to former students who understand from their own experiences what it is like to be living in poverty and working in dangerous conditions to survive. Our field co-ordinator, Rabindra, has many years of experience dealing with volunteers and understands their needs, expectations and how different travelling to Nepal can be for them. He offers support and advises volunteers on what is culturally acceptable behaviour. We have 6 local staff that are paid to run and manage Little Gems Hostel which is partly funded through the help of volunteers who come to Nepal. Rabindra is our Field Coordinator and Warden of the hostel. Keshari is our mother and housekeeper who love the children as her own. Ishwori, Manshova and Nirmala are big sisters from the village who also happen to be pretty good teachers. We work with schools and hostels and advise them and try to support them where possible. We recycle old clothes and books by donating them to less well off hostels and teach the children we sponsor to help other children by managing small projects to meet the needs of children less well off than themselves. As an example, three of our sponsored girls were asked to visit a local disabled hostel to find out what they desperately needed. We gave the girls a little bit of money to buy the items and to donate them to the hostel. Along the way, they made some friends and learnt a little bit of sign language! We do not import any of our goods. We purchase only from local shops, suppliers and producers except where items are unavailable in the local market such as OUP English language text books. For the most part; volunteers spend much of their money in the local shops, cyber cafes and family restaurants which helps economic development at a local level. Our volunteers live with local families or within a hostel or school. The cost of living (food and rent) is given to people in the local community. Nepal is famous for its natural beauty and it would be a great loss if volunteer tourism leads to its demise. We therefore ask volunteers to respect the environment and reduce their impact in any way that they can. We are an online charity that is boundless. Without an office, we reduce everything to a website and for the most part, paperless communication (email / telephone). This not only helps reduce administration costs but helps us reduce our impact upon the environment. In Nepal, we operate in the villages where the lifestyle is conducive towards protecting the environment. Food is naturally grown and eaten. Most people are subsistent farmers and live without many of the facilities that are responsible for damaging the environment. There are no facilities for recycling plastic bottles and so we reuse the few we get as drinking bottles for the children. For the most part, we filter water and collect it in a water tank. We only get tapped water for a 2 or 3 hours a day which means that we must manage our supply efficiently. Hence, the water tank! Much of the electricity supply in Nepal is hydropower as a result of large scale development projects which is a safe and clean supply of energy. Other than powering computers for learning and lights we have very little use for electricity which reduces our dependency upon it considerably. |
Tourism can be good and bad for destinations & local people. We carefully screen every holiday against our criteria for responsible travel. 'Look behind the brochure' to find how each holiday makes a difference (see left). We don't claim to be perfect - there is no global accreditation - but we've led the way since 2001 and screened 1000's of holidays. We invite every traveller to write a review about their experiences and responsible tourism. This valuable feedback is sent to the people who run the holidays. We keep a very close eye on it and take off holidays that don't live up to our standards. |












We work with schools and hostels and advise them and try to support them where possible. We recycle old clothes and books by donating them to less well off hostels and teach the children we sponsor to help other children by managing small projects to meet the needs of children less well off than themselves. As an example, three of our sponsored girls were asked to visit a local disabled hostel to find out what they desperately needed. We gave the girls a little bit of money to buy the items and to donate them to the hostel. Along the way, they made some friends and learnt a little bit of sign language!