Districts
Gandaki Province
Parbat पर्वत
Kushma bungee and suspension bridges
Parbat, in Gandaki Province, centres on Kushma — a gorge-edge town above the Kali Gandaki that has become one of Nepal's adventure hubs. The Kushma bungee at 228 metres is among the world's highest, and the Gupteshwor Cave, some 1,200 metres of river-carved passage just below the bazaar, draws pilgrims at Shivaratri. Views up the gorge toward the Annapurna and Dhaulagiri ranges frame the whole.
About Parbat
Parbat is a compact hill district above the western Kali Gandaki gorge, its headquarters at Kushma — a gorge-edge town some 57 kilometres from Pokhara — now firmly on Nepal's adventure-tourism map. The Kushma bungee, operated from the suspension bridge linking Parbat and Baglung districts, drops 228 metres and is among the world's highest; the bridge itself offers vertiginous views up and down the Kali Gandaki. Just below the bazaar, the limestone Gupteshwor Cave — roughly 1,200 metres of natural passage — holds Shivalinga formations venerated by pilgrims, particularly at Shivaratri.
The surrounding ridges look out toward the Annapurna and Dhaulagiri massifs, and short day-walks from Kushma pass terraced fields and Brahmin-Chhetri villages typical of the Gandaki mid-hills. Parbat's Hindu pilgrimage culture is layered; the Alpeshwar and Patheshwari shrines around Kushma draw local devotees year-round alongside the Gupteshwor pilgrims. The district is easily reached from Pokhara as a day trip or a one-night stop, and the bungee and bridge crossing have given it a practical reason to hold travellers longer.
At a glance
- Headquarters
- Kushma
- Known for
- Kushma bungee and suspension bridges
Getting there
Kushma is around 57 km from Pokhara — roughly 2–2.5 hours by road south-west along the Kali Gandaki valley. Regular tourist jeeps and local buses run this route from Pokhara's Baglung Bus Park. From Kathmandu the journey is around 8–9 hours via Pokhara. The bungee bridge also connects Kushma to Baglung town on the far bank, making it easy to combine both districts in one visit.