Aarupokhari

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Aarupokhari
आरूपोखरी
Arupokhari
Village development committee
Aarupokhari is located in Nepal
Aarupokhari
Aarupokhari
Location in Nepal
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Country    Nepal
Zone Gandaki Zone
District Gorkha District
Elevation 917 m (3,009 ft)
Population (1991)
 • Total 5,465
Time zone Nepal Time (UTC+5:45)

Arupokhari (आरूपोखारी), also spelled Aarupokhari, is a village development committee in Gorkha District in the Gandaki Zone of northern-central Nepal. At the time of the 1991 Nepal census it had a population of 5,465 and had 898 houses in the town.[1]

Arupokhari sits on a foothill on top of which there is a Hindu temple. The town's water sources are springs that come out of the ground. There is electricity, but it is intermittent. Most of the citizens are farmers, and those who have other occupations still farm as well. The climate in the village is subtropical. The forest is mostly deciduous. The major crops grown there are corn, beans, and potatoes, but mangos, bananas, and other things grow there as well. Most of the houses are constructed with bricks plastered by mud, with mud used as mortar in-between the bricks. The roofs are tin, and the floors are dried mud. Most citizens own cellphones, and there is at least one cell tower in the village. There are at least 2 schools in the village: one elementary and one secondary. The elementary school is called the Sarswati Peace School. The language spoken in the village is Nepali, though there are a few people who know a little bit of English as well. From the village, one can see Manaslu in the Ganesh range to the north. The village is adjacent to Satdobato, and it is a 1-2 hour walk from Arughat, which is a slightly larger town in the valley to the southeast. To get to Arupokari, one must board a bus from Kathmandu to Gorkha and then board another bus from Gorkha to Gairichhap. From there, it is a 1-2 hour walk to Arupokhari itself. During the monsoon season, the village can still be reached, but muddy spots in the roads may require switching buses periodically on the way from Gorkha to Gairichhap, and the buses might stop at an intermediate village prior to Gairichhap entirely, such as Ghyampesal. The temperature in the village during the summer is usually in the 80's when it is not raining and in the 70's when it is raining. It is always very humid in the summer. The village was hit hard by the civil war as many of its citizens went to fight.

File:P1030594.JPG
The village of Arupokhari in the background as seen from the Sarswati Peace School in the foreground

References

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