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 Ladakh
offers great opportunities for undertaking adventure activities
amidst landscapes of breathtaking, rugged beauty. The most popular
and best established among these are trekking, mountaineering
and river rafting. 
TREKKING
Trekking possibilities include short, day long walks
up anddown mountain slopes to visit isolated villages or monastic
settlements, or across a ridge to enjoy the sheer beauty of the
lunar mountainscape. Or long, trans mountain treks involving weeks
of walking and camping in the wilderness.
For example, the trek from Lamayuru in the Indus
Valley to Darcha in Lahoul across Zanskar takes nearly three weeks.
Most of the established routes traverse the Zanskar
range which separates the Indus Valley from Zanskar. The 10-day
Markha Valley trek, the 11-day Lamayuru-Padum traverse and the
Stok-Khangri round trek are the more popular ones among the numerous
options available in this convoluted mountain mass. In recent
years, parts of the Ladakh range between the Indus and Shayok
valleys have also become available for trekking. The traditional
trekking season extends from early June to mid-October.
But localized treks within the Indus Valley can be undertaken
even in May. On the other hand, some routes are suitable only
for late autumn as during the summer, the bed of narrow valleys
through which the tracks lie become turbulent streams, as in the
case of the 13-day Hemis-Markha-Padum trek. The winter access
to the Zanskar Valley is actually along the frozen surface of
the Zanskar river. This route, known as Chaddar, calls for elaborate
arrangements, but it is perhaps the most exciting trek in the
world.
Trek
Tours RIVER RAFTING 
A range of rafting options is available on the Indus
and its major tributaries. The best stretch for professionally
guided runs in white water is on the Indus between Spituk and
Saspol. Beyond Saspol, the river becomes difficult and running
it requires technically skilled participants and careful organisation.
Upward of Spituk, the Indus has the easiest stretch up to Karu,
ideal for basic training and for day-return "scenic floating"
for amateurs. In recent years, running the Indus has become an
attractive alternative to trekking and features on the itinerary
of most visitors. The most difficult but exciting option for river
running is on the Zanskar along its spectacular course through
the gorge in the Zanskar mountains, between Padum and Nimo. This
is suitable only for well organized white-water expeditions, prepared
for several days of river running and camping in absolute wilderness.
Participants are required to be trained rafters. Adequate arrangements
for rescue coverage is an essential pre- requisite for embarking
upon a white-water expedition on a river like the Zanskar. MOUNTAIN CLIMBING
The
area most frequented by foreign climbers is the Nun-Kun Massif
in the Great Himalayan Range. Its easy accessibility from the
Kargil-Padum road and the shortest possible approach march to
the base camps makes this massif the most attractive climbing
destination in the Great Himalaya, necessitating advance booking
years' ahead.
Among its six known peaks accessible from the Suru
Valley, Nun (7,135 m) and Kun (7,077 m) are the highest summits.
The area nearest to Leh is the Stok-khangri Massif in the Zanskar
mountains, south of Leh. The base camp for the various peaks of
this massif is about two days' trek from the village of Stok.
Among its known peaks, Stokkhangri (6,150 m) is the highest; it
offers a spectacular perspective to the central expanse of the
Indus Valley which it dominates. Other peaks in the area include
Gulap Khangri (5,900 m), Matho West (5,950 m) and Kantaka (5,275
m). The much higher Konglacha Peak (6,700 m) lies south-west of
Leh and is reached via Rumbak on the first leg of the Markha Valley
trek from Stok. Many un-named peaks in the altitude range of 5,500
metres and 6,400 metres are also available for climbing in the
same region. This entire area falls well outside the Inner Line,
or restricted area. North of Leh, across the Ladakh Range and
the Nubra Valley, lies the Karakoram range. It soars to a number
of known peaks which are, however, within the restricted area
and so not freely accessible to foreign climbers except with special
permission from the Government of India. The most prominent summits
in this range which are accessible from various parts of the Nubra
Valley include, Saser-I (7,415 m), Saser-II (7,513m) and Saser-III(7,495
m). The climbing season extends from mid-May
to mid-October, the ideal period being
from June to September because
during this time only Ladakh remains unaffected by the monsoon
which holds sway over most of the Himalaya. Foreign climbing expeditions
are required to obtain permission from the Indian Mountaineering
Foundation for climbing all listed peaks. |