Showing posts with label Ladakh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ladakh. Show all posts

Sunday, September 17, 2017

Markha Valley in pictures

I trekked along the Markha Valley in Aug 2013 with a guide - Dorje - whom I found from one of the travel agencies located on Changspa road in Leh. We did not carry tents or cooking implements and stayed at homes in the villages along the way. The highest point in the trek was Gongmaru La, 5250 m. During the trek, I saw only foreigners (other than the local guides and poney men) with the exception of one Indian woman who was travelling in a group. The trek over 6 days cost me Rs 9000 and this included the charges for the travel agency, guide, food and lodging at the homestays and taxi for commuting to/from Leh.

Aug 20th: Leh (3400 m) - Skiu (3350 m)

On the morning of the 20th, we took a cab from Leh to the Zanskar valley road. The road was damaged by rain and the cab dropped us a couple of km short of the ropeway across the Zanskar from where the trekking route started.

Walking on the Zanskar Valley Road

There was a long wait at the ropeway caused by a large expedition with a lot of luggage who had reached the spot earlier. After crossing the Zanskar, we soon reach the right bank of the Markha which flows into the Zanskar. Our night stay is in Skiu village.

The ropeway across the Zanskar

Walking along the Markha

Aug 21: Skiu (3350 m) to Markha (3800 m)

Markha river just beyond Skiu

Dorje (my guide) looking back for me on the trail.

Markha Village - first sight

Children of Markha Village



Markha Village towards evening
Our homestay in Markha

Aug 22: Markha to Hangkar (4000 m)

A famous rock formation off the trail



Fields of Hangkar. KangYatze (6300 m +) in the background
Like the wild west


Art in the fields of Hungker 
A pair of Chukar
Our host in Hangkar




















Our host at Hangkar is Shiring Doshkar Tamalung. She runs the Tamalung homestay. Her children are away in school in Leh and her husband also stays away because of his work. Besides looking after guests at her home, she also has horses to take care of.

Aug 23: Hangkar (4000 m) to Nimaling campsite (4840 m)

Today was to be a good climb - over 800 m. I was fortunate that our host at the homestay arranged a horseman to carry my luggage to Nimaling and further over the Gong Maru La to Chumdo. Setting out, I came upon a pair of Chukar absorbed in each other. Quite some distance from the house, on the way to Nimaling I was surprised to see our host again. She had got there apparently looking for her horse which had strayed.

Kang Yatze straight ahead

Fantastic earth formations

Approaching the plains of Nimaling
Nimaling campsite along a tributary of the Markhs

Aug 24: Nimaling (4840 m) - over the Gong Maru La (5250 m) - Chumdo

This was the toughest day of the trek. I was gasping for breath every step of the way. Soon I started counting steps and pausing after a count of 50. After some more time I think this reduced to 20 steps. My guide took over even the day pack that I was carrying to lighten my load. I was carrying only a water bottle. AFter crossing the pass, the trail soon follows another stream all the way to Chumdo village and then the road head. The stream flows into the Indus.

View at the start of the climb from Nimaling

Kang Yatze 1 (left 6401 m) and Kang Yatze 2 (right 6250 m) peaks seen during the climb to Gongmaru La

Nimaling campsite from above
Negotiating a narrow gorge on descending from Gongmaru La
First view of Chumdo village


Aug 25: Chumdo - road head - Leh

Approaching the road head
View from the Leh highway
Postscript:
On the bus journey from Leh to Manali, I meet a couple of young men from Bengal, Arup and Adhiraj who are returning home after climbing Kang Yatze 2.
Dorje a resident of Leh who served as my guide can be contacted at 9622375220

Himalayan Trek 9, Aug 2013

Saturday, March 25, 2017

Sham Valley, Ladakh - trek diary from Aug 2013

Fields of Turutse

Background

The Sham Valley trek is considered a "baby trek" and recommended as a first trek for acclimatization for visitors to Ladakh who intend to attempt treks over high passes. Two days after I flew into Leh, I decided to do this trek in preparation for a later trek in Markha Valley. The plan was to do the trek alone, but as it turned out I had at least one companion all along the way.

Purab's house

Day 1 Leh to Tarutse

The 4 pm bus to Likir from Leh is jampacked. Since I had boarded the bus way before its departure time, I had a seat. In the bus I befriend an Israeli who is also headed for Likir. We reach Tarutse at 6.30. It turns out by a happy coincidence that the daughter of a homestay owner is also on the bus. Purab Dorje, a tenth class student, guides us to her home. We have ceremonial tea with the Bhutia family on the low seating with a bowl of Apricots placed in front of us.

Purab we find out studies in Leh and stays in a hostel. She knows Bhote, Hindi and English. Her father is a carpenter. She is the eldest of 3 siblings.

Purab with her grandmother and nieces
There is a long evening ahead of us and Purab volunteers to take us to her uncle's house which is close to the Likir monastery. We get a great welcome in the house where several generations - Purab's grandparents, aunts and uncle and nieces and nephews - are living together. Purab's uncle is a soldier and her aunt teaches in Leh. Two other uncles are Lamas by choice. It is still light and we get a chance to see a watermill which is used to grind roasted barley.

Back at the homestay, dinner consists of butter tea and sattu followed by a stew of wheat momos, vegetables and milk served on the characteristic low tables and shared with family. I share the bedroom with Uri and a Frenchman who has been laid up by diarrhea.
(The homestay in Tarutse is run by Kunzang Dolma, phone 9469448973)

Likir Gompa
Day 2: Tarutse to Sumdo

We begin the day with an intended quick visit to the Likir Gompa losing the way midway. Uzi has a running stomach and is desperate for his toilet paper. The return path is along the Likir topko (stream).

After lunch we start the days trek heading for Yangthang. There are now three of us with the Frenchman Pierre joining us. Uzi is getting sicker by the minute and slows us down. After passing the Likir school, the path follows a line of electric poles. The tar road winds nearby. We reach the top of the pass (Phobe La 3580 m) from where the road winds down to Sumdo. There is also a footpath descending into the valley, but looking at Uzi's condition, we decide to follow the tar road. Climbing a mound just to the left of the road, we can see Sasopol topko (stream) flowing down to Alchi. Further down the road we reach an intersection. One arm winds down while the other follows the topko upstream. The two houses that comprise Sumdo are just across the stream accessed by a rickety footbridge. The path beyond the footbridge disappears in brambles and we are not clear how to approach the houses. Just then, a man appears out of nowhere and after some negotiation we have a place to stay the night. One of the houses belongs to this farmer, while the other belongs to his sister who is a nurse and works in Leh.

Our rest is rudely interrupted by our host asking for help in his fields. Barley has been cut and stacked in the field awaiting the arrival of the thresher. Meanwhile dark clouds have gathered overhead and his crop is likely to get sodden unless protected. There is a massive tarpaulin sheet which the three of us help to move and cover the cut stalks. There are cut stalks with some grain strewn all over the field and the next task is the collect it with the family.

The women in the family, our hosts daughter, daughter-in-law and wife, are also busy in the fields. This means we have a late dinner. Over dinner we lean of this farmers travails. He has a back and tooth problem. Not many trekkers stop bye in Sumdo so he does not get much of an income. He is the only man here. His two sons are  respectively in the army and studying in Chandigarh and he has no one to help him.

The pass
Day 3: Sumdo to Hemis Shukpachan

Our host pleads with us to stay another day to help him in the fields and Pierre nearly accepts. We ask him to put Uzi in the bus for Leh that passes by later and start our trek.

The trail goes behind the farm in the upstream direction. We climb up to the top of the pass from where we can see the tar road leading to Yumthang. The road passes by a camping site where we rest a while. The trail to Hemis starts from near the camp and leads down to the river flowing far below.

We sit by the edge of the beautiful river for some time. The climb starts beyond the river. At the top of the pass, we see the tar road and Hemis comes into view.

Approaching Hemis
Hemis is a large village, much larger than the others wwe have passed through so far. We spend a couple of hours trying to locate a homestay that has been recommended to us and it turns out that it is full. We settle for a guest house on the main street of Hemis.

Day 4: Hemis to Timosgang

This morning, we take the trail to Ang past the famous Juniper trees of Hemis. A large french group is travelling our way and we take help from their guides for direction. We enter a large plateau .... then veering right, we go down a gully till we enter a valley with a forbidding wall. The narrow trail zig zags up this wall to reach Mebtak La (3750 m).



The climb along the narrow zig zag path is scary. The steep incline of the mountain face means that a slip may result in an unstoppable slide down to the base. After the pass, the trail slopes down a gully and follows a straight line to Ang.
Timosgang

Ang is not very impressive and we decide to press on towards Timosgang, a prosperous village with numerous Apricot trees and find a cosy guest house for the night.

That afternoon I have my fill of delicious Apricots, offered by the host family which is engaged in plucking them from a huge tree in front of their house. I wander around the roof of the house where apricots are being sun dried and help myself to more.

Day 5: Timosgang - Lamayuru - Leh

This morning, I bid adieu to Pierre. This is the end of our trekking trail and from here onwards it will be road travel. I am at the main intersection of Temisgang at 8am. It is some time before I get a lift to Khalse driving along the muddy brown waters of the Indus. I reach Khalse which looks like a military town at 9.30. At 10.15, I get a car to Lamayuru. We leave the Indus at the Batalik fork.

At Lamayuru, I bump into Pierre again in the company of a French couple who are travelling by car. I spend some time in the Gompa and also get a birds eye view of the "moon scape" of Lamayuru.

The "moon scape" of Lamayuru
Getting back to Leh proves to be tougher than expected. There are no buses. After a long wait, I get a lift to Khalse.

Pierre and Uzi
Then follows a hair-raising journey with a Lama in a maruti 800 to Leh. After a close brush with a car with some Punjabi youth, Lama Dorje chases the offending car and forces it to pull up by the side of the road. It is a wonder that there is no violence when Dorje gives the youth a piece of his mind. Emerging unscathed from the encounter, the Lama drives like mad and drops me right in front of my guest house.

Postscript:

I met Uzi again in Leh a few days later. He had recovered fully and was trying a motorbike on which he planned to ride to Timosgang.



Himalayan Trek 8, Aug 2013

Saturday, September 7, 2013

Birds found in Ladakh in August


Oriental Turtle Dove - Leh














Juvenile Brown headed Gull on the waters are of Pangong Lake. According to Salim Ali, these breed in bogs around lakes in Ladakh and Tibet. Seen in winter (Sept/Oct -> April) in the western and eastern seaboards of India and even in inland waters












Black Billed Magpie - The bird I saw most often in Ladakh near populated areas with the exception of the Sparrows of Leh. Saw one bird (unsuccessfully) trying to make off with a baby Chukor while the mother stood its ground.

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A Plain Mountain Finch ?







Below: A Rock Bunting


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Common Chifchaf ? Seen in the fields in Hunder.











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Male and Female Cuckoo spotted in the Diskit - Hunder area





















Chukar pair spotted in the Markha Valley


















A Robin Accentor Near Kongmaru La, 5100 m








Yellow Billed Chough



Black Redstart near the Likir Gompa. Commonly seen in many parts of Ladakh. Also saw a few White capped Redstart.

A Common Rosefinch at Chundo, Markha Valley