![]() |
Home | Email |
|
|
![]() ![]() |
Leh and Ladakh.net -> How to Reach LadakhHow to Reach LadakhBy Road
This road journey provides the best introduction to the Ladakh and its people. At one step, as you cross the Zoji-la pass (11,500-ft./3,505 m), one passes the lushness of Kashmir into the barren contours of a trans-Himalayan landscape. Drass, the first township over the pass, inhabited by a population of mainly Dard origin, has the local reputation of being the second coldest inhabited place in the world. In summer when the pass is open and travellers are going through, the standing crops and clumps of willow give it a gentle look. After Drass, the valley narrows down. It occasionally opens up to allow small patches of terraced cultivation, where a small village population ekes out a precarious existence. On leaving Kargil town, the road plunges into the ridges and valleys of the Zanskar Range, over a huge mound of alluvium known as Khurbathang plateau, now made fertile by a huge irrigation system. From here it descends to the Pashkyum area and passes through several roadside villages before entering Mulbek, with its gigantic rock carving of Maitreya Buddha and a gompa perched high on a crag above the village. Mulbek is the transition from Muslim to Buddhist Ladakh. Two more passes, Namika-la (12,200 ft/3,719 m) and Fotu-la (13,432 ft/4,094 m) follow the exit out of Mulbek valley. From Fotu1a, the road descends past the spectacularly sited monastery of Lamayuru and the amazing wind-eroded towers and pinnacles of lunar-landscape rocks, down to the Indus at Khalatse - a descent of almost 4,000 ft / 1,219 m, in about 32 kms. From here the road follows the river, passing villages with their terraced fields and neat whitewashed houses, the roofs piled high with neat stacks of fodder laid in against the coming winter. Here and there one notices the ruins of an ancient fort or palace or the distant glimpse of a gompa on a hill. And at last Leh is visible, dominated by the bulk of its imposing 17th century palace. The Road journey from Manali - The 473 km Manali- Leh Road is open for about three months in the year from early July to September. For much of its length, it passes through areas so barren that it is entirely void of habitation. Lahoul district, through which the road passes, is a typically trans-Himalayan landscape.
By Air
Internal Transport
|
| All rights reserved by Leh
and Ladakh Tours Our Travel Partners: India Tours Flexible Tours Budget Tours Tour Packages South India Tours Domestic Tour Packages Indian Wildlife Tours Holidays in India Indian Cultural Tours Pushkar Fairs Hotels in India Ladakh Tours Hotels in Ladakh This Site is Designed, Developed and Promoted by IndiaTimes Holidays & LehnLadakh Tours |