About Mahesh Neupane — Solo Builder in Nepal
I’m Mahesh Neupane. Here’s What I Actually Do.
Most personal websites read like resumes. Skills. Experience. Education. A photo in a blazer.
This one isn’t that.
I build things for people in Nepal. A hammock brand for day-trippers. A web agency that gets Nepali businesses online. A productivity app I built because nothing else worked.
There’s no team. No office. No funding. Just a laptop, a home server, and a lot of late nights.
Here’s how it all started — and why I’m still going.
The Layoff That Changed Everything
I’m from Kathmandu. Before any of this, I worked at Imagine Web Solution in Thamel — an agency that built websites for travel, trekking, and hospitality businesses. I learned the trade there. How to build. How to deliver. How to handle clients who need things done yesterday.
Then COVID hit. The agency let people go. I was one of them.
Most people would have updated their resume and started applying. I almost did. But the thought of building someone else’s dream again — for someone else’s profit — sat wrong.
So I decided the opposite: I’d build my own.
I didn’t have a plan. I had a laptop, a severance, and a stubborn refusal to work for anyone else again. That was enough.
Here’s what came next.
How a Developer Ended Up Selling Hammocks
Langtang Gear didn’t start as a business plan. It started with a personal problem: I wanted a good hammock for day trips — picnics, couple outings, riverside relaxation. The options in Nepal were either flimsy cheap imports or premium brands priced like luxury goods.
Nobody was offering a quality hammock at a fair price, built for the way Nepalis actually spend their Sunday afternoons.
So I found a manufacturer. Placed an order. And figured out the rest — customs clearance, payment gateways, WhatsApp order management — by doing it, not by planning it.
Today, Langtang Gear is becoming the most obvious choice when someone in Nepal searches for a hammock. Single. Couple. Straps. Carabiners. Four colors. All from one guy in Kathmandu.
I didn’t know anything about importing when I started. I knew even less about running an e-commerce business. But I knew the hammock I wanted didn’t exist, so I made it exist.
The Agency Side — The High Road
Building Langtang Gear taught me something: a lot of Nepali businesses struggle with the same thing. They need a website. They need someone who actually delivers.
So I started The High Road — a web development and digital agency. Laravel. WordPress. Payment integrations. Whatever it takes to get a business online and selling.
Langtang Gear itself runs on a platform I built through The High Road. So do client projects. No outsourcing. No handoffs. Just me and the stack I know.
The App I Built Because Nothing Else Worked
It began with a question I couldn’t answer: Where did all my money go last month?
Bank statements didn’t help. Spreadsheets felt like work. Every app I tried was either too complicated or built for someone with a very different life.
So I did what any developer would do: I built my own.
I called it FlowDesk — a Laravel productivity app that started as an expense tracker and grew into something bigger. Tasks. Goals. Habits. A pomodoro timer. And yes, the expense tracker that started it all.
It’s not a startup. It’s not VC-funded. It’s a tool I built because nothing else fit — and a handful of other people use it because it fits them too.
The Thread That Connects Everything
Langtang Gear. The High Road. FlowDesk. They seem unrelated. A hammock brand, an agency, and a productivity app. What’s the connection?
It’s this: I build what I can’t find.
Langtang Gear exists because I wanted a hammock that was affordable and reliable. The High Road exists because businesses needed someone who would actually deliver. FlowDesk exists because I wanted tools that understood how I work. None of it was available, so I built it myself.
That’s been the pattern my entire career. I don’t start with a grand vision. I start with a frustration, then work backward until there’s a solution.
The Setup, Unfiltered
I get asked what tools I use. Here’s the honest picture:
- Main machine: HP DU13, Ubuntu
- Home server: Toshiba C640, Ubuntu Server (headless)
- Hosting: Shared cPanel server
- Stack: Laravel, WordPress, Next.js, and plenty of cron jobs
- Payments: eSewa, Khalti, Fonepay, COD
- Shipping: NepalCanMove and PickNDrop
- Team size: One
This isn’t a humblebrag. It’s context. If you’re reading this and thinking “I could never start something with so little,” you’re wrong. I started with less.
What I Believe
Three things I’ve learned that I’d tell anyone building in Nepal:
- Start before you are ready. I didn’t know how to import goods when I placed my first order. I learned because I had to.
- Solo doesn’t mean small. A team of one can move fast, make decisions instantly, and build a real business — if you pick the right problems.
- The boring work is the real work. Fulfillment, customer messages, customs paperwork — none of it is glamorous. All of it matters more than the launch post.
What I’m Building Next
FlowDesk is getting better — more structure for people who run their lives and businesses without a team. The High Road keeps taking on projects that matter. And I’m planning the next Langtang Gear batch, incorporating everything I’ve learned so far.
This site is where I’ll write about all of it: the tools I build, the lessons I learn, and the businesses I run.
If you want to know when the next post drops, you know where to find me.
Let’s Talk
- Instagram: @zero_gravity_zero, @langtanggear
- WhatsApp: +977 9849831360, +977 9705831360
- Email: [email protected], [email protected], [email protected]
Or if you’re in Kathmandu and want to try a hammock before you buy one — just ask.
Last updated: June 2026
