Genekha Gewog is a rural block in Thimphu Dzongkhag, Bhutan, about an hour's drive south of the capital. Known for its production of prized matsutake and chanterelle mushrooms, it hosts the annual Genekha Matsutake Mushroom Festival and serves as the starting point for the Dagala Thousand Lakes Trek.
Genekha Gewog (also spelled Geney, Genyekha or Ge-nyen; Dzongkha: དགེ་གཉན་) is one of eight gewogs that make up Thimphu Dzongkhag in western Bhutan. It lies in the forested southern part of the district, with its valleys descending towards the boundaries of Dagana and Chhukha dzongkhags. The gewog centre sits roughly an hour's drive south of Thimphu city and is reached by farm road from the Thimphu–Phuentsholing highway.[1]
Genekha is best known nationally for its wild mushroom harvest and as the starting point of the Dagala Thousand Lakes Trek. Locally it is sometimes referred to as a "mushroom village" for the matsutake and chanterelles gathered from its forests during the summer monsoon.[2]
Geography
The gewog occupies a band of forested ridges and side valleys on the southern flank of the Thimphu Chhu watershed. Settled land lies roughly between 2,000 and 3,000 metres above sea level, with the cultivated valleys at the lower end and the alpine grazing grounds of the Dagala range rising to over 4,000 metres along the southern boundary. Mixed conifer and broadleaf forest covers most of the territory, including the temperate pine stands in which matsutake fruit during the monsoon.[1]
The Thimphu Dzongkhag Administration places Genekha within the southern cluster of district gewogs alongside Chang, Kawang, Mewang and Dagala, distinguishing it from the high-altitude northern gewogs of Soe, Lingzhi and Naro.[1]
Administration and chiwogs
Genekha is administered by a gewog office headed by an elected gup (head) and a gewog tshogde (local council). As an electoral unit the gewog is divided into chiwogs, the basic precincts used for local-government elections. According to the Election Commission of Bhutan's demarcation, the gewog comprises the chiwogs of Wangbama, Chizhi, Zhanglegkha, Genyenkha and Tshochhenkha Zamtog.[3]
Population and economy
The population of Genekha is small. National-level reporting of the 2017 Population and Housing Census of Bhutan groups Thimphu Dzongkhag's rural gewogs together at around 24,000 residents across 40 chiwogs; Genekha is one of the less-populous rural blocks within that total, with most households concentrated in the Wangbama and Genyenkha settlements.[4]
The local economy is based on subsistence farming, livestock rearing and the seasonal collection of non-timber forest products. Households grow potato, maize, vegetables and small quantities of rice in the lower fields, and keep cattle and a small number of horses. Garlic has been promoted as a cash crop in Wangbama and Genekha under buy-back arrangements with private agricultural traders.[1]
The most distinctive source of income is wild mushroom collection. Genekha is one of the country's principal sites for the harvest of Tricholoma matsutake, known in Dzongkha as sangay shamu, which is exported to Japan at high prices. Chanterelles and other edible mushrooms supplement the matsutake harvest. The Department of Forests and Park Services regulates the harvest through community forest groups, and the gewog has been cited in Kuensel coverage of fluctuations in the matsutake export trade.[5]
Culture and religious sites
Like other gewogs in the Thimphu valley, Genekha contains village lhakhangs (temples) that anchor local Buddhist practice. The most prominent religious landmark associated with the gewog is Talakha Goemba, a fifteenth-century hilltop monastery at about 3,080 metres on the ridge between Genekha and the Thimphu valley. The monastery is the destination of the short Serbithang–Talakha hike and the end point of variations of the Dagala trek, and houses a community of monks under a chief lama.[6]
The gewog has been associated in local accounts with a historical tradition of metalworking; tour and trekking literature describes Genekha as a settlement once known for blacksmiths and copper extraction near the neighbouring village of Zanglay Kha. These claims are not extensively documented in the academic literature on Bhutanese metallurgy, which more often cites Woochu, Chakorla and Barshong as canonical sites of the garzo tradition.
Matsutake Mushroom Festival
Genekha hosts the annual Matsutake Mushroom Festival, usually held over two days in August at the height of the matsutake season. The festival was developed by the Tourism Council of Bhutan and the gewog administration to combine on-site mushroom sales, cooking demonstrations and cultural performances with awareness campaigns on sustainable harvesting. Activities include guided forest walks, matsutake soup tastings and cultural items performed by villagers and Wangbama Central School students. The festival has been promoted as one of Bhutan's monsoon-season tourism draws and is the gewog's main appearance in national and regional media.[2]
Dagala Thousand Lakes Trek
Genekha is the usual starting point for the Dagala Thousand Lakes Trek, a four- to six-day route that climbs from the gewog onto the Dagala range and traverses a high plateau of alpine lakes used as summer pasture by yak and sheep herders. The route reaches passes above 4,500 metres and offers views of the eastern Himalayan giants, including Jomolhari, Masagang and Gangkhar Puensum in clear weather. The trek's accessibility from Thimphu, combined with the mushroom festival, has given Genekha a modest profile in domestic and cultural tourism.[7]
Connectivity and services
The gewog is reached by a farm road that branches off the Thimphu–Phuentsholing national highway south of Thimphu. Wangbama, the main settlement on the road, sits about 29 kilometres from Thimphu city.[8] Services include a Basic Health Unit, the gewog renewable natural resources extension office and several primary schools.
The principal education institution serving Genekha is Wangbama Central School, established as a Government of India–funded central school and formally launched on 28 April 2015. The school runs classes IX–XII on a fully residential model and incorporates a campus in Genekha proper which has been recognised as a model farm school within the central-school system.[8]
See also
References
- Genekha Gewog — Dzongkhag Administration, Thimphu (Royal Government of Bhutan)
- Genekha Mushroom Festival — Tourism Council of Bhutan / VisitBhutan
- Chiwogs of Bhutan — Wikipedia (Election Commission of Bhutan demarcation)
- 2017 Population and Housing Census of Bhutan — National Statistics Bureau
- Matsutake export takes a dip — Kuensel
- Talakha Goemba, Thimphu — Asian Historical Architecture
- Dagala Thousand Lakes Trek — itinerary and route notes
- Campus — Wangbama Central School
See also
Soe Gewog
Soe Gewog is a remote highland block in the far north of Thimphu Dzongkhag, Bhutan, under Lingzhi Dungkhag and bordering the Tibet Autonomous Region. Lying at altitudes from around 3,800 metres to over 5,000 metres at the foot of Jomolhari, it is the smallest gewog in the country by population, with a yak-herding community of about 200 people. Several of Bhutan's major trekking routes pass through it.
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places·4 min readLingzhi Gewog
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places·6 min readHaa Wangchulo Dzong
Haa Wangchulo Dzong is a fortress-monastery in the Haa Valley of western Bhutan. Originally the administrative and religious centre of the Haa region, the dzong has served since 1962 as the headquarters of the Indian Military Training Team (IMTRAT) in Bhutan, a role reflecting the close security relationship between the two countries.
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Kurjey Lhakhang is a major temple complex in the Bumthang Valley of central Bhutan, renowned as the site where Guru Rinpoche (Padmasambhava) left a body imprint on a rock while meditating in the eighth century. The complex comprises three temples spanning from the eighth to the twentieth century and serves as one of the royal burial grounds of the Wangchuck dynasty.
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