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Tiger's Nest Monastery clinging to a cliff face in blue hour light with a single warm window glowing inside
Bhutan Photography Expeditions

“Twelve days. Eleven photographers. One kingdom that still closes its doors.”

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Masked cham dancers frozen mid-leap in a monastery courtyard, silk robes billowing
Paro Tsechu · Day 4

The masks weigh four kilograms. The dancers have been rehearsing since age seven.

Private dawn access before the public crowds. 400mm reach into the courtyard.

Rice terraces burning amber at golden hour, stepped into a deep Bhutanese valley
Bumthang Valley · Day 7

Forty minutes of amber. The terraces hold the light longer than the sky does.

Altitude 2,800m. Carbon tripod position scouted the previous evening.

An archer drawing a traditional bamboo bow against a backdrop of falling snow in a mountain village
Paro Archery Ground · Day 2

The target is 140 yards away. He has not missed in eleven years.

Traditional bamboo bows. Overcast diffusion — no harsh shadows, perfect for portraiture.

Field Notes

What the brochure
doesn't tell you.

Altitude Range

2,400 – 3,800m

Paro to Bumthang high passes. Acclimatisation day built into Day 1.

Group Size

11 Photographers

Hard cap. Never more. Courtyard space and guide attention are finite.

Permits Included

SDF + Special Area

$100/night Sustainable Development Fee. Eastern district special-area permits pre-arranged.

Crane Window

Late Oct – Nov 11

Black-necked cranes return from Tibet. Eco-hide access at dawn roost, 100m from birds.

Festival Access

Paro Tsechu

Private morning shoot before public entry. Cham dancers, masked deity performances.

Equipment

L-Series Welcome

Tripods permitted at all external locations. Drone permits must be arranged 90 days prior.

Duration

12 Days / 11 Nights

Paro arrival to Paro departure. All internal transfers by private vehicle.

Included Locations

6 Dzong Districts

Paro, Thimphu, Punakha, Phobjikha, Bumthang, Trashigang (restricted access).

Open Expeditions

The calendar is short.
The light is specific.

Each expedition is timed to a single photographic event — a festival, a migration, a bloom. We do not run generic tours. Every date exists for a reason.

Oct 18 – Oct 30

2026

Crane Migration Window

Black-necked cranes return to Phobjikha. Dawn eco-hide access included.

Places AvailableReserve a Place

Nov 3 – Nov 15

2026

Black-Necked Crane Festival

Nov 11 festival at Gangteng. Cham dancers, school performances, full crane roost.

Last 2 PlacesReserve a Place

Mar 14 – Mar 26

2027

Paro Tsechu & Spring Bloom

Jacaranda at Punakha Dzong. Private pre-dawn access to festival courtyard.

Join WaitlistJoin Waitlist

All expeditions include SDF, special area permits, internal transfers, and accommodation. International flights not included. Deposit: 30% to reserve.

Tenzin Dorji, expedition lead photographer, standing on a mountain ridge in Bhutan with camera gear

Tenzin Dorji

Expedition Lead · 14 Seasons in Bhutan
Your Guide

The difference between
a photograph and the photograph.

Tenzin grew up in Bumthang and has been leading photography expeditions for fourteen seasons. He knows the exact week the black-necked cranes return to Phobjikha — not the month, the week. He knows which monk at Kharchu Dratshang will let a photographer inside the prayer room before first light, and which side of Punakha Dzong catches the last sun in November.

He also holds the special-area permits for the eastern districts that most operators have never applied for. The restricted zones are not a selling point — they are where the unrepeatable images live.

14

Seasons in Bhutan

6

Restricted Districts

340+

Photographers Led

A lone dzong fortress reflected perfectly in the still water of a river at dusk, the sky deep indigo

You are already composing the frame.
The kingdom is waiting.

View Open Expeditions
Not ready to book

Download the Shot List.

Every golden-hour window. Every specific location. The exact week the cranes arrive. The shot list is what serious photographers ask for before they ask about price.