Peak — Curated Himalayan Adventure Landing Page Template
Dzong is a neo-retro Bhutan travel guide landing page template built for horizontal scroll storytelling. It uses a scrapbook collage aesthetic, a Rainforest color palette, and scroll-linked panels to move visitors emotionally through Bhutan's landscapes. Two clear calls to action guide readers toward the full guide or the 7-day itinerary, with no forms required.
by Rocket studio
Quick summary
Dzong is a single-page horizontal scroll template for a Bhutan travel journal and blog. It blends neo-retro scrapbook design with purposeful click-through architecture. Visitors move through layered panels, from subtropical jungle to high-pass snowfields, and land on one of two clear action paths. The design earns trust before asking for a click.
Who this template is for
This template is built for travel content creators, editorial bloggers, and independent journey writers who want their Bhutan travel guide to feel as textured and authentic as the destination itself. It suits creators who prioritize atmosphere over utility and want a landing page that converts through emotional resonance rather than feature lists.
- Solo travel writers documenting trekking routes, dzong visits, and high-altitude experiences across the Himalayan kingdom
- Honeymoon and slow-travel content creators drawn to a landlocked country that intentionally limits its visitors
- Burned-out professionals turned travel bloggers who want a page that speaks to readers who typed "gross national happiness" at 2 a.m. and never looked back
What problem this template solves
Most travel landing pages sell logistics. They list flights, mention paro international airport, and drop an itinerary into a grid. Bhutan deserves something different. Readers visiting bhutan for the first time arrive carrying questions, curiosity, and a quiet hunger for something that feels real. A flat, card-based layout cannot carry that weight.
This template solves the gap between editorial depth and conversion design. It gives a Bhutan travel blog a spatial, immersive entry point that pulls readers inward before asking anything of them.
- Generic travel templates feel like booking engines, not journals. Dzong reads like a worn Moleskine left on a hostel shelf.
- Readers researching bhutan travel need to feel the place before they commit. Scroll-linked panels across season and altitude do exactly that.
- Standard landing pages bury the call to action. This template places it as a torn-paper tab in the header and reinforces it as a fixed button after the third panel, once emotional investment is established.
What you get with this template
You get a complete horizontal scroll landing page designed around five distinct scroll panels, a scrapbook collage header, and two optimized conversion paths. Every visual layer, typographic choice, and interactive element is built to serve the Bhutan travel narrative specifically.
- A five-panel horizontal scroll layout that moves visitors from subtropical entry through monastery mid-altitude to high-pass snowfields, with a minimal footer closing the journey
- A Collage/Scrapbook header featuring a rubber-stamp headline, a torn-paper call-to-action tab, a hand-drawn elevation map strip, a typewriter-font postcard fragment, and a layered passport-page composition
- Two conversion paths: a primary "Read the Full Bhutan Guide" click and a secondary "See the 7-Day Itinerary" path surfaced on the final panel beside a hand-drawn route map
Feature list
This section describes the core built-in features of the Dzong template, drawn directly from the design and structure brief.
Horizontal Scroll Panel Architecture
The template uses CSS scroll-snap to lock each panel cleanly during horizontal navigation. Five panels progress through distinct altitude zones, each with its own seasonal texture and visual tone. The scroll does not inform readers, it transplants them. Each swipe moves visitors deeper into the Bhutanese interior and further from the ordinary.
Collage and Scrapbook Header Composition
The header is built as a layered, non-grid composition styled like a passport page. Elements include a torn-edge photograph of Tiger's Nest monastery placed slightly askew, a hand-stamped Bhutanese visa mark, a washi tape strip holding a hand-drawn elevation map, and a postcard fragment reading "Thimphu to Punakha to Bumthang" in typewriter font. The rubber-stamp headline sits above it all, unapologetically off-center.
Scroll-Linked Panel Transitions with Parallax Layers
Each panel is animated with parallax depth using GPU-accelerated transforms. Stamp reveal animations fire as panels enter the viewport. The result is a page that feels handmade and physical, not digital and frictionless. The visual rhythm mirrors turning pages in a scrapbook, with season and texture shifting at every panel boundary.
Fixed Vermillion Call-to-Action Button
After the third scroll panel, a fixed button in faded dzong vermillion (#C4503A) appears and remains visible for the rest of the scroll journey. This placement is intentional. By the time visitors reach panel three, they have moved through jungle humidity and prayer flag mist. The click feels earned, not demanded. No form, no fields. One tap carries them forward.
Dual Conversion Path Design
The template includes two conversion paths without competing for attention. The primary path, "Read the Full Bhutan Guide," appears first in the header as a torn-paper tab and again as the fixed button. The secondary path, "See the 7-Day Itinerary," surfaces on the final panel beside a hand-drawn route map. Planners who scroll all the way through are caught exactly where their intent peaks.
Atmospheric Testimonial and Social Proof Blocks
The template includes space for atmospheric testimonials and guest voice quotes integrated into the panel design. Social proof here does not read like star ratings. It reads like elevation stats and handwritten notes. This approach builds trust in a way that matches the journal format, giving readers confidence without breaking the scrapbook illusion.
Page sections overview
| Section | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Hero Collage Header | Rubber-stamp headline, layered scrapbook composition, torn-paper call to action tab |
| Subtropical Jungle Panel | Dense green entry atmosphere, humidity texture, low-altitude immersion |
| Tiger's Nest Panel | Mid-altitude monastery, prayer flags, mist, emotional peak moment |
| Traveler Archetype Panel | Three audience portraits, social proof quotes, elevation context |
| Snowfield Itinerary Panel | High-pass finale, hand-drawn route map, secondary itinerary call to action |
| Minimal Footer | Centered minimal footer, pattern 4 Superhuman style, closing anchor |
Design & branding system
The visual identity follows a Neo-Retro direction that treats every color as if it were earned by altitude and weather. The palette draws from a 1970s National Geographic sensibility, saturated at the edges and bleached warm at the center. Nostalgia here is specific and earned, not decorative.
- Color system uses deep rhododendron canopy (#1B3A2D), monsoon moss (#5E8C61), aged rice paper (#F2E8D5), and faded dzong vermillion (#C4503A) for interactive hotspots and accent typography
- Typography pairs Fraunces as the serif display face, DM Sans for body text, and IBM Plex Mono for stamps, labels, and typewriter-style details, giving every text layer a distinct physical register
- Textures reference paper grain, ink bleed, washi tape, and torn edges throughout, creating a digital aesthetic that resembles old film and tactile print media rather than a polished web page
Mobile & speed optimization
The template is built desktop-first around horizontal scroll, and it includes a mobile vertical fallback that reorders panels into a top-down sequence. This ensures the content remains readable and the conversion paths stay functional regardless of device.
- CSS scroll-snap manages panel transitions cleanly without JavaScript overhead, keeping horizontal navigation smooth on desktop
- GPU transforms handle parallax layer animations, and lazy image loading delays non-visible assets until they are needed
- The mobile vertical fallback reflows all five panels and preserves both call-to-action placements so visitors on phones reach the same conversion endpoints as desktop users
How this template helps you convert
The Dzong template does not lead with a sales pitch. It leads with atmosphere, then earns the click. Every structural decision, from the torn-paper tab to the fixed vermillion button to the dual conversion paths, is designed to move emotionally engaged visitors toward action at the right moment.
- The header torn-paper tab introduces the primary call to action immediately, before any scroll, for readers who arrive with high intent and want to move fast
- The fixed vermillion button appears after panel three, once visitors have traveled through jungle, monastery, and mist, so the click lands when commitment is highest
- The final panel's hand-drawn route map and secondary itinerary path catches detail-oriented planners at the moment their logistics questions peak, converting a second visitor type without extra friction
Other information about this template
This section covers additional practical context for people considering the Dzong template, including destination facts that inform the guide's editorial scope.
- The Dzong neo retro Bhutan travel guide landing page template is purpose-built for Bhutan-focused editorial content and is not a generic travel layout adapted for the niche
- Bhutan is a landlocked country tucked into south asia, bordered by india to the south and west and tibet to the north. It sits in the Eastern Himalayas and is recognized globally as one of the world's few carbon-negative countries
- Bhutan's capital city is Thimphu, which is the only capital city in the world without traffic lights. The country prioritizes gross national happiness over gross domestic product, a philosophy that shapes every aspect of life from governance to tourism
- Bhutan officially targets "high value, low impact" tourism. The sustainable development fee (SDF) is currently $200 per day for adult international visitors and $100 for children aged 6 to 12. The SDF is not applicable to children below a very young age of 6. Funds from the fee support national infrastructure, social programs, and environmental protection
- Visitors must apply for a visa backed by a confirmed itinerary from a licensed tour operator. Most people who enter bhutan are required to book through a government-approved agency. The visa application fee is $40, payable by credit card. The tourism council oversees these requirements under Bhutan's cautious approach to the growth and development of the tourism industry
- Bhutan's only international airport is paro international airport, served by two airlines: Druk Air and Bhutan Airlines. Druk Air operates flights from bangkok, singapore, kathmandu, Dhaka, and major cities across india. Direct flight options are limited, so many visitors connect through nepal or india before landing at paro airport
- Flights into paro valley descend between steep mountain ridges, a notoriously demanding approach that requires specialized pilot training. Motion sickness on mountain roads after landing is common for those unaccustomed to high-altitude driving
- To reach bhutan overland, travelers can enter bhutan by road from india through designated border towns. A licensed guide is required to move between towns and cities
- Paro valley is home to rinpung dzong, built in the 1600s, which houses roughly 200 monks and symbolizes the country's religious and political authority. Tiger's nest, formally known as Taktshang Lhakhang, clings to a cliff face above the valley floor and is considered one of the most sacred sites in the Himalayan kingdom
- Tiger's nest monastery is said to have been blessed by Guru Rinpoche, who is credited with bringing Vajrayana Buddhism to Bhutan. According to tradition, Guru Rinpoche flew to the site on the back of a tigress. Prayer flags hung across the trail to Tiger's Nest flutter constantly, carrying blessings and warding off evil spirits
- Punakha Dzong stands at the confluence of the Mo and Pho rivers and is widely considered the greatest fortress in Bhutan. The architecture of punakha dzong features intricate murals and statues that represent some of the finest examples of Bhutanese art
- The divine madman, Drukpa Kunley, is celebrated throughout Bhutan. Chimi Lhakhang, built in the 15th century and dedicated to the divine madman's legacy, sits near Punakha and remains a pilgrimage site. Imagery and references to the divine madman appear across rural bhutan and central bhutan alike
- The haa valley, in western bhutan, is one of the country's most secluded regions. Fewer tourists reach the haa valley than the more visited western bhutan circuits around Paro and Thimphu. It offers a quieter, less-traveled alternative for visitors interested in rural bhutan and off-route trekking
- Trekking routes across Bhutan range from accessible valley walks to the Snowman Trek, which crosses 11 high-altitude passes and is considered one of the hardest treks in the world. Mount Jomolhari and mount everest are visible from high vantage points on certain northern routes
- The dochula pass, between Bhutan's capital and Punakha, offers panoramic views of the eastern Himalayan range on clear days. It is a common stop on the Thimphu-to-Punakha leg of a standard bhutan trip itinerary
- Traditional cuisine includes ema datshi, a chili and cheese dish that is the unofficial national dish, as well as yak cheese, red rice, and dishes influenced by indian dishes from the southern regions. Food served in Bhutan often includes spices and flavors unfamiliar to visitors from thailand or singapore
- Traditional hot stone baths are a Bhutanese wellness practice in which river stones are heated and placed in a wooden tub. The experience is offered at many lodges and is one of the most memorable ways to recover after a day of trekking
- The royal family plays a significant role in Bhutanese public life. The king is widely respected, and photographs of the royal family appear in homes, shops, and dzong corridors throughout the country
- Travel insurance is strongly recommended for any bhutan trip. Medical facilities in rural areas are limited, and evacuation from high-altitude trekking zones can be complex. Good travel insurance coverage should include emergency evacuation and trip cancellation protection
- The thunder dragon is the national symbol of Bhutan, appearing on the country's flag. In modern times, the thunder dragon imagery continues to represent the country's identity at home and abroad
- Bhutanese people are known for their warmth toward visitors, and monks are frequently encountered at dzongs, monasteries, and roadside shrines. Cultural immersion activities range from cooking ema datshi to joining monks at morning prayers
- Bhutan is considered very bhutan safe for travelers who follow the country's guidelines, respect cultural sites, and travel with a licensed guide. No credible safety concerns have been raised specific to visiting bhutan for most international tourists
- Summer travel, including june, brings lush green valleys but also heavy southern rainfall that can disrupt road travel. Spring and autumn remain the most popular seasons for trekking and cultural visits. People visit year-round, though visitor numbers peak in spring and autumn aligned with major festivals




Theme
Neo-Retro
Creative direction
Atmosphere & Mood
Color system
Rainforest
Style
Horizontal Scroll
Direction
Click-Through
Page Sections
Horizontal Scroll Panel Architecture
Collage and Scrapbook Header
Scroll-linked Parallax Panel Transitions
Fixed Vermillion Call-to-action Button
Dual Conversion Path Design
Atmospheric Social Proof Blocks
Related questions
What type of page is the Dzong template, and who is it built for?
How does the horizontal scroll work on mobile devices?
What calls to action are included, and how are they triggered?
Can I customize the color palette and typography?
What practical information should my Bhutan guide cover to serve readers well?