Destinations Covered :-
Delhi - Leh - Ladakh - Tibetan Camp - Leh - Phyang - Alchi - Ridzong - Lamayuru - Likir - Leh - Khardong La - Hundar - Leh - Delhi.
After arrival in Delhi early morning, Swagat Tours Representatives will assist you to transfer to the hotel. Have some relaxation and get back to normal from overnight flight exhaustion. After that, take a half-day sightseeing tour of the city. Delhi is basically divided in two parts, the Old Delhi and the New Delhi. The Old City was the capital of Mughal Domain for a long period. New City was declared the capital of India after India got independence from british rule in 1947. This is the city where one can experience the amazing combination of past and present. The city tours cover ancient monuments, narrow streets and busy bazaars, the vast Red Fort(built in 1648), the Jama Masjid(the greatest mosque in India), and the Raj Ghat(the simple memorial to Mahatma Gandhi). the governments buildings, the India gate, the President House, the Qutub Minar, the Humayun Tomb, the Chandani.chowk, the Laxmi Narayan Temple(popularly known as Birla Mandir) and so on.
Buddha, Ladakh Tourism, Ladakh Tour Packages The predominant faith of the local residents here is the Lamaistic form of Buddhism of Tibet. This is seen clearly in the monastery (gompa) architecture and by the extraordinary number of gods and demons that order the daily life of the community. This morning we will get a chance to witness this for ourselves,when we visit the nearby monasteries of Phyang and Spituk, built in the 15th and 16th centuries. Phyang monastery is located on a hillside that overshadows a valley some 16km to the west of Leh. Belonging to the Red Hat Kagyupa sect, the monastery was built in the 16th century, during the reign of King Jamyang Namgyal. Phyang contains an interesting collection of statues and Kashmiri bronzes and its temple walls are covered in vivid images based on the eight emblems of happiness. This is the setting for the Buddhist festival of Tseruk, a spectacular display of masked dancing that takes place during July. Our second visit today is to the Gompa of Spituk, again located on a hill top high above the valley floor. Built in the 15th century the monastery belongs to the Gelukpa order (the yellow hats), a reformist order of monks of whom the Dalai Lama himself is the head.The monastery is a series of tiered buildings and courtyards that contain a magnificent collection of Jelbagh masks, as well as icons and weaponary from the Potala Palace. After our visit we will return back to prepare for the coming trek.
Day 04 :- Drive to Chilling (3350m); village visit
Today we begin our trek in earnest, with a 5-6 hours walk following the course of the river south. Over the next few days we will traverse a landscape of frozen waterfalls where the harsh winters have preserved the traditions and cultures of the local people in a frozen Shangri-La. We stop for lunch at Tilat Sumdo at the confluence of the Tsarap Chhu, before we continue towards our second camp at Darbau, located next to a cave. The Zanskar Valley is the most isolated of the Trans-Himalaya valleys and that true sense of remoteness will become all the more evident as we approach our camp. As evening falls we sit down to a well-earned and much needed dinner in our comfortable dining tent. Trekking distance 5/6hours.
e small settlement of Yulchung, on the border of the Leh and Kargil districts of Jammu and Kashmir. Continuing through plunging canyons, normally inaccessible, but for the frozen river, we take lunch in the lea of a juniper forest. Sometimes you can hear locals calling down into the valley, a local custom, designed to scare away the spirits that haunt the ice. Above us the craggy cliffs rise to precipitous heights, their slopes sometimes inhabited by fearless ibex and, as we near our camp, we see a bridge high above. This links Zanskar with Ladakh during the summer months, when the river is impassable. Our camp is close now, located below the village of Nyrak near to the summer grazing lands of its people. Trekking distance 5/6 hours.
Departing from the Chadar route today we enter into the Lingshed Nallah. The trek to Lingshed takes us through the passes of the Netuke La and Khyupa La and, as we traverse the undulating landscape, we are afforded some spectacular views of the valley below. Following a small stream we climb higher, across ground criss-crossed by trails used by ibex and blue sheep, their natural instinct taking them towards the gompas of the highlands where life is sacred and hunting banned. As we ascend the altitude will begin to take affect, so it is important that you take it easy today, a task made all the more unhurried by the breathtaking views as we continue to climb. Stopping for lunch we then take a walk up to a locally renowned gompa, majestically located in the shadow of a high cliff, its walls pitted with meditation caves. The monastery and its adjoining school presents us with an exhilarating visit and as we head for our nighstop, in local houses, we will doubtless have much to discuss over dinner this evening. Trekking distance 4/5 hours.
Today we have another opportunity to explore Leh and its environs. The yak caravans that once plied their trade through the Karakoram Pass, into Central Asia and onto the markets of Kashgar are now a distant memory. Today Leh's importance lies in its strategic position, at the juncture of India's borders with China and Pakistan. Although the caravan and pilgrim routes are no longer in use the town still retains a frontier feel and the markets buzz with the sounds and smells of trade. You may wish to spend your day strolling through its vibrant streets, or perhaps to a walk up to the palace. Built on a granite rock meant to represent an elephant's head this was considered such a masterpiece in its day that the king ordered the chief mason's right hand be cut off to prevent him building another. It was eventually destroyed during the Dogra war of the 19th century,when the royal family was exiled to Stok.
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