It is with Nima, and our courteous and abstemious driver, Karma, that we make for Punakha the next day. Before we get there, we summit the Dochula Pass (elevation 3,100 metres), where 108 memorial chortens or stupas were built to celebrate the eldest Queen Mother. We encounter the colourful annual Dochula Druk Wangyel festival, attended by members of the royal family and prime minister, Lyonchen Tshering Tobgay.*
My wife and I marvel at how accessible Tobgay is. He’s posing for photographs with well-wishers as he chats to us about our forthcoming drive and descent to Punakha – home, incontrovertibly, to the country’s most beautiful dzong. The Buddhist fortress constructed in 1637 sits proudly at the confluence of the Pho Chhu and Mo Chhu rivers. It is the latter that we cross upstream by suspension bridge to arrive at a second, bucolic Amankora lodge, a traditional Bhutanese farmhouse surrounded by paddy fields and rice terraces, crisscrossed by walking trails, in the heart of the valley.