| Rolwaling Trekking
(16 -18 days)
From
Kathmandu we will board on our charter bus after for a half - day
ride on the road between Kathmandu and Lhasa in Tibet. Built many
years ago with Chinese aid, this road follows the Sun Kosi river
until we come to the village of Barabise (2700 feet) . Here our
porters and Sherpas, who have shared our ride from Kathmandu , will
help us unload the bus. Off will come duffel bags, food, kitchen
equipment and tents, and our trek will begin. This
trek has been fully scouted by our guide and very few other trekkers
were seen on these treks, so you can count on this being a trek
to an area not yet spoiled by hoards of trekker as are the Everest
and Annapurna areas.
The trek starts with
a 2500 foot climb through Hindu villages until we are high on the
slope of a ridge over looking one of the many river valleys in Nepal
that are equal in depth to the of the Grand Canyon. Our second day’s
trek will see us reach our first Buddhist villages and Gombas/ Monastery.
On this day we will also see the forests change from oak to rhododendrons
are Nepal’s Nationals Flower and are not bushes but trees up to
60 feet high and are covered in red, pink and occasionally white
flowers in spring days. These rhododendron forests are to be found
at elevations between 6500 and 1,2000 feet.
For many of you the
first three days of the trek will be the hardest of the trek as
we steadily climb to Tinsang La Pass (10,900 feet) which we get
our first view of the Himalayas which, although still somewhat distant,
are breathtaking. The tower of Chobo Bemare in Tibet is visible
along with the peaks of the Rolwaling. We will descend from the
pass through alpine meadows ringed with the rhododendrons in a riot
of red and white blossoms until we come to Bigu Gomba at 8,200 feet
elevation.
Set among juniper
trees, Bigu is one of the most fascinating Buddhist nunneries in
Nepal. Built in 1933 it houses about 35 nuns, most of them Sherpas.
The walls inside the gomba are lined with interlacing statues of
Avalokiteswara, each with eleven heads and 1000 arms, hands and
eyes.
Our next two days will
see us pass many small villages and hike up and then down seldom
used trials through rhododendron and magnolia forests. We are sure
to see groups f monkeys in the forest as we make our way over several
ridges between 7000 and 9000 feet and finally come to the valley
of the mighty Bhote Kosi river. We must drop all the way down to
the village of Congar (4100 feet) on the Bhote Kosi, and our camp
on one of its tributaries will give us our first of many opportunities
for swimming on this trek. Heading up the Bhote Kosi the valley
becomes V-shaped and very rugged as you pass a beautiful waterfall
on the opposite bank. You are now on one of the historic trade routes
to Tibet.
To reach the Rolwaling
Valley we leave the Tibet trade route and cross the Bhote Kosi on
an exciting suspension bridge before we begin a zigzag climb up
to the village of Simagaon (6400 feet) populated by Sherpas and
Tamangs . Simagaon, besides having many Buddhist chortens and mani
stones, also has a small gomba. We climb to the ridge summit above
the village and get our first close-up view of Gauri Shankar (23,442
feet), the Rolwaling’s most famous peak, as it looms above the valley
of the Rolwaling Khola.
Gauri Shankar has deep
religious significance for both Hindus and Buddhist . Jumbled rock
escarpments sweep upwards into knife-edged and corniced ice ridges
which finally merge at Gauri , the south summit. So prominent is
Gauri Shankar from the Ganges Plain that legends long claimed it
to be the highest mountain in the world. The Rolwaling Sherpas call
it Jomo Tseringma and throughout Buddhist Lamaism, to as far away
as Sikkim, Tseringma is considered the most holy mountain of the
Sherpas.
After several days
of trekking through rhododendron forest on the slopes high above
the lower Rolwaling valley, we drop down to cross the Rolwaling
Khola. Views of Gauri Shankar are plentiful as are spring wildflowers
especially primroses. We come to the first human habitation since
leaving Simagaon as we make our way up the valley to the only permanent
village, Beding ( 11,900 feet) . Beding is a small villages of perhaps
200 Sherpa families living in stone houses. There is a monastery
here and a small hermitage set in a cliff above the village. Here
Guru Padma Sambhava is said to have meditated 2000 years ago. Beding
is located in a narrow gorge and boasts a school built by Sir Edmond
Hillary. Yaks are plentiful.
From Beding we will
hike up the upper Rolwaling valley which is a stark moraine amid
a confusing tangle of ice peaks, glaciers and little used passes.
Along the ridge to the North is the Tibetan border. Views of Menlungtse
(23,500 feet) appear as well as that of the beautiful fluted ice
peak of Chobutse (21,900 feet) , one of the more prominent peaks
in the upper Rolwaling. The valley becomes U shaped as we pass the
potato fields and houses of the summer village of Na. All moving
days past Beding will be short to allow for acclimatisation, and
we will make camp by lunch. We finally reach our final objective,
Tsho Rolpo, a large glacial lake at almost 15,000 feet dammed by
the great Ripimo Shar glacier. Our highest camp at the base of the
great ice-wall of Chobutse. Mountain vistas of the mountains surrounding
the Ripimo Glacier and of Chobutse from this camp are unsurpassed.
On our return we retrace
our route for three days until we reach the Bhote Kosi river again
at the village of Congar (4100 feet). Continuing down the warm Bhote
Kosi valley we reach the Hindu village of Suri Dhoban (3400 feet).
A half-day rest here will allow us to escape the heat to be found
at this lower elevation by taking a swim in the pleasant clean waters
of the Khare Khola. From Suri Dhoban we trek for three days to the
end of the trek at Jiri. First, we must climb our of the heat of
the Bhote Kosi valley passing many small villages and finally crossing
a ridge at about 9200 feet. Descending through meadows and villages
we reach Jiri (6100 feet), the terminus of the new road from Lamasango
built with Swiss aid. Our last camp at Jiri will include a party
with the porters featuring lots of local singing and dancing and
consumption of rakshi the local firewater.
Our charter bus will
take us back to Kathmandu from Jiri after 16 days exciting trek.
Cost: Please contact
us.
Minimum Group size: 4
Season: March - November
Grading: 4
Departure date: as per your convenience.
Included:
- Daily itinerary
as described,
- all inclusive camping
or lodge trek with English speaking guide and porters,
- all meals on trek,
- all fees and land
transportation,
- camping gear such
as twin sharing tent,
- mattress,
- toilet tent, dinning/kitchen
tent,
- necessary staff.
Not Included:
- Bottled beverages,
- tips,
- items of a personal
nature,
- delay due to weather,
- equipment failure
or situations beyond our control.
For
More Information: info@ecotrek.com.np
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