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Tso-Moriri Lake Circuit
Leh
- Upshi - debring - Puga- Tso- moriri - Korzok and return
Leh -
Upshi - Chumathang- Mahe- Puga- Tso-moriri- Korzok and return.
The
area traversed by the Manali Leh road, and containing the drainage basins of
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
valley scoured by dust-devils. It is a landscape unlike any other in Ladakh
-or elsewhere in India.
The first circuit follows the Manali road
over the Taglang-la as far as Debring, a Chang-pa camping place. From here
it strikes off east on a rough traks across the basin of the twin lakes
Startsapuk-Tso (Fresh water) and the Polokangka-la (about 16,500 feet/
5,030m) 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, 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, as it snakes its way through a gorge between the Ladakh and Zanskar
ranges, to the village of Chumathang, where there is a hot spring. At Mahe,
some 17 km further, the road crosses from the north to the south bank of the
river by bridge; it then follows the Puga stream up to join the first
circuit at Sumdo.
Korzok, situated at 15,000 feet (4,572 m) with
its dozen or so houses and its gompa appearing like a mirage among the
barren hills, is the only permanent settlement in Rupshu; otherwise the
region is inhabited only by nomadic Chang-pa herdspeople. The Rupshu
Chang-pa live in tents all the year round, moving in accordance with an
old-established annual routine between the pastures the exist wherever an
occasional stream carrying snowmelt from the heights makes possible the
growth of grass, scanty indeed, but reportedly highly nutritious. The few
barley-fields at Korzok must be among the highest cultivation in the world,
but there is no guarantee that the crop will ripen every year.
Even
Rupshu's bare 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 Tibet
plateaux. More plentiful are marmots (ubiquitous on 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 are the barheaded goose,
found in great numbers on the Tso-moriri, the great crested grebe, the
Brahmini duck (ruddy sheldrake) and the brown-headed gull.
Tso-Moriri Lake Circuit Reservation
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