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As of July 2021, COMO Hotels and Resorts operates 15 hotels in nine countries in Asia, Europe, North America, and Oceania. [13] COMO Shambhala Estate in Ubud, Bali is the group's flagship. [14] Asia-Pacific. COMO The Treasury, Perth, Australia [15] COMO Uma Paro, Bhutan; COMO Uma Punakha, Bhutan; COMO Shambhala Estate, Bali, Indonesia
Important cultural sites of Paro include: Taktshang, or Tiger's Nest, the most famous monastery and ancient highlights for the people of Bhutan.It was founded as a meditating cave by the famous saint Guru Padmasambhava in the early 8th century upon subjugating a demon and forcing him to take an oath to be the local protector of the region towards the very end.
Paro (Dzongkha: སྤ་རོ་) is a town and seat of Paro District, in the Paro Valley of Bhutan. [1] It is an historic town with many sacred sites and historical buildings scattered throughout the area. It is also home to Paro International Airport, Bhutan's sole international airport. Paro International Airport is served by Drukair.
4.1 Location map templates. 4.2 Creating new map definitions. Toggle the table of contents. Module: Location map/data/Bhutan Paro. 5 languages.
The Paro Chhu flows through the Paro Valley, which is the site of one of Bhutan's main towns, Paro, and many important monasteries. The two best known monasteries here are Taktshang ("Tiger's nest" in Dzongkha), and Paro Dzong. Taktshang clings to a ledge of a high cliff approximately 15 km north of Paro.
Naja Gewog (Dzongkha: ན་རྒྱ་) is a gewog (village block) of Paro District, Bhutan. [1] In 2002, the gewog had an area of 151.8 square kilometres and contained 13 villages and 355 households.
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Passengers disembarking from Druk Air's Airbus A319 at Paro Airport. Tourism in Bhutan began in 1974, when the Government of Bhutan, in an effort to raise revenue and to promote Bhutanese unique culture and traditions to the outside world, opened its isolated country to foreigners. In 1974 a total of 287 tourists visited the Kingdom of Bhutan.