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New Tour Circuits

Leh - Fast Facts
Population
15000
Best time to visit May to October
Languages Ladakhi, Purig, Tibetan, Hindi, English
STD Code 01982
The new Tour Circuits
Certain areas of Ladakh, which were formerly
closed to foreigners on account of their sensitive strategic position
or proximity to international borders, have recently been opened. Movement
within these areas, however, is limited to a number of specifically
designated circuits, and foreign visitors are allowed to go only in
groups, accompanied by a recognised / registered tour operator. The
maximum time allowed on a circuit is seven days. Permits must be taken
from the Deputy Commissioner, Leh, but citizens of Pakistan, Bangladesh,
Sri Lanka and Myanmar will be issued permit only with the prior approval
of the Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of India, New Delhi. Foreign
diplomats and members of the United Nations and other international
organisations are required to apply for permits to the Ministry of External
Affairs, Government of India, New Delhi.
He Drok-pa Area Circuit
Khalatse-Domkhar-Skurbuchan-Achinathang-Biama-Dah
and return.
A
Drokpa girl from Ladakh
Down the Indus, between Khalatse and the
Shayok-Indus confluence, live a people, known as
Drok-pa, who are Buddhists
by faith, but racially and culturally distinct from the rest of the
Ladakhis. Two of the five villages inhabited by them, Dah
and Biama are now open to foreign tourists. The route
follows the Indus river down from Khalatse, past the
villages of Domkhar, Skurbuchan and
Achinathang, along a fairly good road.
In
the Indus gorge, where these villages are situated, the sun's heat is
frequently intense which makes it possible to grow two crops every year
in the fields. Fruits such as apricots, apples, walnuts and grapes are
grown. Skurbuchan, Domkhar and Achina-thang are attractive villages,
with an air of modest prosperity about them. But the special interest
of this region is its Drok-pa inhabitants. A minuscule community of
perhaps no more than a couple of thousand, their features are pure Indo-Aryan,
and they appear to have preserved their racial purity down the centuries.
Their culture and religious practices are more akin to the ancient pre-Buddhist
animist religion, known as Bon-chos, than to Buddhism as practised in
the rest of Ladakh. One curious feature is their abhorrence of the cow
or any of its products. They have preserved their ancient traditions
and way of life partly through the celebration of the triennial Bono-na
festival, a celebration of the harvest, and partly through the songs
and hymns.
The Nubra Valley Circuit
Leh-Khardung-la-Khalsar-Tirit-Tegar-Sumur-Panamik
and return.
A Bactrian camel in Nubra valley
The
name Nubra is applied to the region comprising the valley of the river
Nubra and that of the Shayok, both above and below their confluence,
where they meander in many shifting channels over a broad sandy plain,
before flowing off to the north-west to join the Indus in Baltistan.
The Shayok and Nubra rivers drain the east and west sides of the Saser
sub-range of Karakoram. The route from Leh crosses over the Khardung-la,
the highest motorable road in the world. The line of the road is different
from that of the old pony-trail, longer and actually higher (18,300
ft 5,578 m). The view from the top is amazing. One can see all the way
south over the Indus valley to the seemingly endless peaks and ridges
of the Zanskar range, and north to the giants of the Saser massif. For
several kilometres, on each side of the pass, the road, covered by deep
snow in winter, is rough. For the rest of the way the road is good.
At the confluence of the two rivers there is no dearth of water, but
the sandy soil is not suitable for agriculture, which is confined to
the alluvial fans where side streams drain into the main valley. The
valley floor itself is covered with dense thickets of a thorny shrub,
which the villagers use for fuel and for fencing, though there is now
less need for this than there was in the days of the caravan trade with
Central Asia when up to 10,000 horses a year are said to traverse the
district. The villages are large and prosperous, and have thick plantations
of willow and poplar. The altitude is a little less than that of Leh,
varying between 10,000 ft (3,231 m) at Hundar, and 10,600 ft (3231 m)
at Panamik. Summer temperatures vary between 15oC and 28oC.
The
main village is Deskit, which has a bazaar comprising of single line
of shops, and a gompa situated on a rocky spur above the village with
a commanding view. From Deskit, the route follows the course of the
Shayok to Hundar, past an area of rolling sand dunes, with their contours
liable to shift with every gale. There is a small population of the
shaggy double-humped Bactrian camels, which in the old days were used
as pack animals on the Central Asian trade route. During the past 50
years, they have been bred for transport purposes in Nubra. Today visitors
to Nubra can use these animals for going on camel safaris.
Bactrian camels in Nubra
Bactrian camels among the sand dunes of nubra
The other circuit proceeds up the Nubra
River, taking in the pretty villages of Tirit, Lukung, Tegar and Sumur.
Nubra's other major monastery. Samsta-ling is situated on the mountainside
just above Sumur. This was the route taken by the trade caravans. Panamik,
the last village on this circuit, was at that time a busy centre, being
the last major settlement before the caravans entered into the mountains
of Karakoram and the Kun-Lu. Here they halted for a few days to make
final preparations for the journey across the mountains, or to recuperate
on the way back. The Government maintained a granary to sell food grains
for the men and even for the horses. But this arrangement was insufficient
for the amount of the traffic, and the villagers made huge profits,
selling grain and fodder and letting out their fodder-fields for the
horses to graze in. Today, Panamik is a sleepy village, its inhabitants
quietly going about their work in the fields. On the mountainside above
the village, hot water bubbles out of the earth in thermal springs,
reputed to have therapeutic qualities. Across the river, clinging to
the mountains, are a few trees rooted among the rocks surrounding the
tiny Ensa gompa.
Pangong Lake Circuit
Leh-Karu-Changla-Durbuk-Tangtse-Lukung-Spangmik
and return.
The Pangong Lake
This
route proceeds past the picturesque villages of Shey and Thikse, and
turns into the side-valley of Chemrey and Sakti. The Ladakh range is
crossed by the Chang-la (18,000 ft / 5,475 m) which is one of the easier
passes remaining open for much of the year even in winter. Tangtse,
just beyond the foot of the pass, with an ancient temple and a Tourist
Bungalow, is a convenient halting point on this circuit.
The main attraction of this circuit is
the Pangong Lake, situated at an altitude of 14,000 ft (4,267m). It
is a long narrow basin of inland drainage, hardly 6 to 7 kms at its
widest point, and over 130 kms long, and bisected by the international
border between India and China. Spangmik, the farthest point up to which
foreigners are permitted, is about 7 kms along the southern shore from
the head of the lake. It presents a spectacular view of the mountains
of the Chang-chenmo range to the north, their reflections shimmering
in the ever-changing blues and greens of the lake’s brackish waters.
Above Spangmik are the glaciers and snow-capped peaks of the Pangong
range. Spangmik and a scattering of other tiny villages along the lake's
southern shore are the summer homes of a scanty population of Chang-pa,
the nomadic herdsmen of Tibet and southeast Ladakh. The Pangong Chang-pa
cultivate sparse crops of barley and peas in summer. It is in winter
that they unfold their yak wool tents called rebo, and take the flocks
of sheep and pashmina goats out to the distant pastures.
Tso-Moriri Lake
Circuit
Black Necked Crane in Chushul area
Leh-Upshi-Debring-Puga-tsomoriri-korzok and return
Leh-Upshi-Chumathang-Mahe-Puga-Tsomoriri and return.
The area traversed by the Manali-Leh road,
and containing Tso-moriri and other lakes, is known as Rupshu. Here,
the Zanskar range is transformed into bare rolling many-hued hills,
divided by open high-altitude valleys scoured by dust devils. It is
a landscape quite unlike any other in Ladakh or elsewhere in India.
This area is now open for foreigners for visiting, along the two tour
circuits.
Overview of Tsomoriri Lake
The
first circuit follows the Manali road over the Taglang-la as far as
Debring, a Changpa camping place. From here it strikes off eastward
on a rough track across the basin of the twin lakes Startsapuk-Tso (fresh
water) and the Tso-kar (salt water), over the Polokongka-la (about 16,500
ft/5,030 m) to Sumdo in the Puga Valley, near the site of old sulphur
mines, then over a roller-coaster track to the head of the Tso-moriri,
and on to Korzok viilage, a quarter of the way along the lake's 20-km
length.
The alternative route, instead of leaving
the Indus at Upshi, carries on up the river through the gorge between
the Ladakh and Zanskar ranges, to the village of Chumathang, where there
is a hot spring. At Mahe, about 17 kms further, the road crosses from
the north to the south bank of the river, over a bridge, and then follows
the Puga stream up to join the first circuit at Sumdo
Brahmani ducks near Chumathang
Korzok,
situated at 15,000 ft (4,572 m) with its dozen or so houses and its
gompa, is the only permanent settlement in Rupshu, which is otherwise
inhabited only by nomadic Chang-pa herdsmen. The Rupshu Chang-pa live
in tents all the year round, moving according to an old established
annual routine, between the pastures that exist wherever an occasional
stream makes possible the growth of grass, which is said to be highly
nutritious. The few barley-fields at Korzok are believed to be among
the highest cultivation grounds in the world, although there is no guarantee
that the crop will ripen every year.
Despite its barrenness Rupshu’s hills
support a sparse population of wildlife, and the animal most likely
to be spotted is the Kyang, the wild ass of the Ladakh and Tibetan plateaux.
More plentiful are marmots (ubiquitous to mountain slopes all over Ladakh),
hares, and an unusual tail-less rat. The lakes are breeding grounds
for numerous species of birds. Chief among them is the bar-headed goose,
found in great numbers on the Tso-moriri, the great crested grebe, the
Brahmini duck and the bar-headed gull.
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