- Apr 27, 2026
- by Sherab
- 130
Where the Rhododendrons Bloom: Inside Merak's Growing Festival
Experience Bhutan’s Rhododendron Festival in Merak, Trashigang, where vibrant alpine blooms, rich Brokpa culture, and warm homestay hospitality come together in one of the Himalayas’ most remote and beautiful highland landscapes.
At nearly 3,900 metres above sea level, the air in Merak located in Trashigang District is thin, cold, and in April, faintly sweet. The rhododendrons are blooming, and for a few weeks each year, this remote corner of eastern Bhutan becomes deep crimson, pale pink, and white blooms spread across slopes that, not long ago, almost no outsider ever saw.
Merak and its neighbouring gewog, Sakteng, are home to 41 of Bhutan's 46 rhododendron species, making the region one of the most botanically significant areas in the eastern Himalayas. Eight of those species including barbatum, bhutanense, camelliiflorum, edgeworthii, flinckii, lindleyi, tsariense, and papillatum are found exclusively in Merak, according to the Pictorial Guide to Rhododendrons by Sakteng Wildlife Sanctuary. It is this remarkable natural richness that gave rise to the Rhododendron Festival.
A Festival finds its footing
Each April, the hillsides of Merak erupt in colour of the rhododendron species, and thousands of visitors make their way up the winding mountain road from Trashigang to witness it. This year's second edition of the Rhododendron Festival, held from April 3 to 9 at a place called Sheytemi, drew over 18,000 visitors from across Bhutan and around the world, a remarkable number for a community that not long ago could only be reached on foot or horseback.
Sheytemi sits at around 2,900 metres above sea level, and its setting: open skies, forested slopes, and air carrying the scent of alpine flowers makes for a festival ground unlike almost anywhere else. The flowering season is the occasion, but the week that unfolds around it is something far richer than a simple celebration of nature.
Culture, Competition, and Celebration
At its heart, the Rhododendron Festival is a celebration of Brokpa culture, the yak-herding highland community that has called Merak home for centuries. Throughout the week, traditional folk songs and dances fill the grounds, and visitors are treated to the sight of distinctive Brokpa attire, handwoven from sheep wool, worn with evident pride by community members young and old.
Sheytemi holds deep cultural significance for locals that predates the festival itself. Each year on the opening day, the strongest men of the village gather to compete in a traditional test of strength, a custom practiced for decades that continues to draw spirited participation and enthusiastic crowds. It is the kind of living tradition that no cultural programme could manufacture, and watching it, visitors quickly understand that they are guests in something genuinely alive.
Performances throughout the week include the Yak Cham, a ceremonial dance paying tribute to the yak, an animal that remains inseparable from the identity and livelihood of highland Bhutanese. The Arpha Cham, performed by the people of Merak themselves, retells the legendary saga of Ling Gesar Gyalpo, a sweeping story of courage, resilience, and the triumph of righteousness that has echoed through these mountains for generations. A beauty contest for young women, with a prize of Nu 40,000 awarded to the winner, adds a contemporary and celebratory note to the week's proceedings.
Food is central to the experience. Local delicacies including rhododendron dishes and fermented cheese, are featured throughout the festival, alongside yak riding and culinary offerings drawn from across the Trashigang district. For those who want to venture beyond the festival grounds, an eight-kilometre hike from Mindula to Jigmeling winds through the pristine landscapes of Sakteng Wildlife Sanctuary, a walk that offers some of the most breathtaking scenery in eastern Bhutan.
Sleeping like a local
When the day's festivities wind down, visitors return to something increasingly rare in modern travel: a genuine home. Merak currently has seven licensed homestays, varying in size from rooms that accommodate three guests to larger spaces welcoming up to twenty. What they share is far more memorable than their differences.
Arriving at a Merak homestay is nothing like checking into a hotel. There is no front desk, no uniformed staff, only a host family with a warm smile, ready to carry your bags and usher you to your room. The rooms themselves are thoughtfully equipped, with electric kettles, tea bags, coffee, warm blankets, and room heaters for the cold highland nights.
The first thing offered to every arriving guest is butter tea (suja), a traditional Bhutanese drink made with tea, butter, and salt. For those unfamiliar with the taste, milk tea is always on hand. Tea in Bhutan is not merely a beverage. It accompanies every meal, every conversation, and every gathering, and in a Merak homestay, that custom is observed without exception.
The food served has no fixed menu, which turns out to be one of its greatest pleasures. Dishes rotate through yak meat preparations, mushroom curries, fresh lettuce from household greenhouses, cabbage, and potato, simple, honest food made with care and served in generous portions. Meals are shared around wood-burning stoves, the boxy, efficient heaters that warm both the room and the atmosphere around it.
With each passing day, the line between guest and family member quietly dissolves. By the time you pack your bags and head back down the mountain road toward Trashigang, the sadness of leaving feels entirely earned.