Trek is a dark, immersive Nepal travel landing page template built for a single-column scroll. It combines a full-viewport macro header, a gallery-walk narrative flow, and a low-friction event registration form. The design uses a sunset gradient palette to pull visitors through teahouse valleys and high-altitude ridgelines toward one clear action: reserving a seat at an upcoming Nepal travel masterclass or guided-trek launch event.
by Rocket studio
Trek is a single-column, single-page landing page template for Nepal travel guides and blog-driven events. It blends immersive photography, scroll-triggered narrative captions, and a minimal registration form. The dark Sunset Gradient palette and Gallery Walk creative direction make Nepal feel lived-in and real, so visitors arrive at the sign-up form already convinced.
This template is built for Nepal travel creators, trek organizers, and travel bloggers who want to launch an event or guided-trek experience online. It works best when the offer needs emotional storytelling before the ask.
Most travel landing pages feel like brochures. They list facts and dates, but they never make the destination feel inevitable. Trek solves that by turning the page itself into the journey, earning the registration click through immersive narrative rather than bullet-pointed itineraries.
You get a fully structured, single-page landing page built around a Gallery Walk scroll experience and a Dark Immersive visual identity. Every section flows into the next like altitude bands on a topographic map, keeping visitors engaged from the opening prayer wheel photograph to the final registration form.




Theme
Dark Immersive
Creative direction
Gallery Walk
Color system
Sunset Gradient
Style
Single Column Flow
Direction
Event Registration
Page Sections
Full-viewport Macro Header with Timed Headline
Gallery Walk Scroll Narrative
Event Details Section on Dark Canvas
Persistent Fixed Call to Action Button
Low-friction Three-field Registration Form
Free Packing Checklist Secondary Path
Can I use this template for a trek tour or event other than Nepal?
How many fields does the registration form include?
What is the secondary conversion path for?
Do I need professional photography to use this template?
Where does the fixed call-to-action button first appear?
This template is built from a small number of deliberate, high-impact components. Each one has a specific job in moving a visitor from arrival to registration.
The header opens on a hyper-detailed close-up photograph of weathered hands spinning a brass prayer wheel. The headline fades in after a two-second delay at the bottom third of the viewport in thin, tracked-out type: "The mountains are waiting. So is your seat." This pacing creates immediate atmosphere before any copy appears.
Each full-width section presents a single breathtaking photograph with a short narrative caption that drifts in on scroll, like a museum placard. The sequence alternates between wide landscape shots (Langtang valley fog, a sherpa silhouette on a ridgeline) and close-detail images (steaming dal bhat on a tin plate), pulling the visitor deeper with every panel.
Midway through the gallery, the visual rhythm pauses on a dark-canvas section presenting event dates, an itinerary teaser, and guest speaker details. The transition from photography to structured event information is designed to feel earned and continuous, not jarring, because the background and palette remain consistent throughout.
After the third gallery panel, a subtle fixed button labeled "Reserve Your Seat" appears and stays visible as the visitor scrolls. This keeps the primary action accessible without interrupting the narrative experience.
The dedicated registration section near the bottom of the page asks for three inputs only: first name, email address, and a single-select field titled "Which Nepal draws you?" with options for Trekking, Culture, Photography, and All of it. The minimal form reduces drop-off while collecting meaningful intent data.
A secondary conversion path offers a free packing checklist in exchange for an email address alone. This catches visitors who are not yet ready to commit to the event but want to stay connected, extending the page's reach beyond the immediate registration window.
| Section | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Macro Close-Up Header | Opens with weathered hands on a brass prayer wheel and a timed fade-in headline |
| Gallery Panel One | First full-width landscape photograph with a scroll-triggered narrative caption |
| Gallery Panel Two | Intimate detail shot continuing the alternating visual rhythm |
| Gallery Panel Three | Third photograph panel; triggers the appearance of the fixed call to action button |
| Event Details Break | Shifts from photography to dates, itinerary teaser, and guest speakers on dark canvas |
| Continuing Gallery | Remaining narrative photograph panels deepening the Nepal story |
| Primary Registration | Event sign-up form with three fields and the "Reserve Your Seat" call to action |
| Secondary Download Path | Free packing checklist offer requiring email only |
The visual identity runs on a Sunset Gradient color system inspired by the ten-minute window at Poon Hill when the sky cycles through every warm pigment before the valleys go dark. Every color in the palette has a clear role and a specific emotional register.
The single-column flow layout naturally adapts to narrow screens without requiring complex breakpoint logic. Full-width gallery panels maintain their visual impact on mobile because the template is designed around portrait-oriented, vertically scrollable storytelling.
The page is structured so that every section does conversion work before the form ever appears. By the time a visitor reaches the registration fields, the visual and narrative journey has already made the decision for them.
Trek sits at the intersection of Nepal travel guide content, blog-driven storytelling, and live event promotion. It is built for creators who want a single page to handle both emotional narrative and practical logistics without splitting the two into separate pages or tabs.