Experience GLAMPING on the Roof of the World

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Experience GLAMPING on the Roof of the World Experience GLAMPING on the roof of the world. India’s exclusive mobile luxury camp. CHAMBA CAMP, THIKSEY Ladakh TH th Validity: 15 May - 10 October, 2017 Chamba Camp, Diskit Chamba Camp, Thiksey DOCUMENTATION: Indians: At least one Government approved ID ( i.e Driving License, PAN Card, Passport etc) necessary for arrivals in Leh, Ladakh. Foreigners: PIO, OCI and NRI (who are staying abroad for more than 6 months) will have to apply for regular Protected / Restricted Area Permit (PAP). PAP’s will allow these guests to get to Restricted Areas such as Nubra Valley, Tso Moriri, Pangong Tso, Dha-Hanu etc. PAP is issued for 07 days and can be extended conditionally. Nagaland Kohima Camp, Nagaland It is very important that these guests keeps at least 05 photocopies of their Passport, Indian Visa and passport size photos, along with their originals with them before entering Ladakh. They need to sign into a C-Form at Camp. TUTC will procure Protected / Restricted Area Permit prior to their scheduled trip to Ladakh. Special instructions applicable to visitors with Journalist Visa, foreign diplomats and members of the United Nations and International Organizations holding Diplomatic / Official Passport are issued by the Ministry of External Affairs. The application for Special Permit should be referred to the respective Ministries for prior approval, at least eight weeks before the date of the expected visit. ** These should be procured by the travel organiser of respective guests and TUTC shall not be liable for these. ***The Rules & Regulations are subject to change. Please refer to latest update from concerned Ministry. CAMP LOCATION: • Strategically located on the upper Indus Valley on the main Leh-Manali road • In the shadows of the famed Thiksey Monastery •10 minutes walk to the River Indus • Altitude : 3,500 mtrs (11, 550 ft approx) • Area : More than 15 acres • Geo Coordinates : N : 34° 02’ 24’’ ; E : 77° 40 ‘ 30’’ FEATURES: Excursion: English speaking Excursion specialists • Car at disposal with flexibility on excursion onsite Highlights: Experiential forays into ancient secrets of monasteries and palaces • Exploratory walks into picturesque villages • Cycling down the world’s 4th highest mountain pass - Wari La • Rafting down the primeval River Indus • Séance with the village oracle • Morning Buddhist prayers at Thiksey Monastery • Rediscover songs and dances of Ladakh with our cultural troupe - Zybro • Heritage Walk through the bylanes of the Old Leh City • Be a part of the Royal sport of Polo • Day drives to enchanting places such as Alchi, Pangong Tso etc. TELECOM CARRIERS WORKING IN LEH VALLEY: • Prepaid cards subscribed outside the state of Jammu & Kashmir, not operational in Ladakh region • Aircel, Airtel (post paid only) and BSNL works • Takes a minimum of 48 hours to activate a local registered number • Chamba Camp, Thiksey will provide our guests with a local number for their stay duration CAMP FEATURES: TENT FEATURES: • 30 minutes’ drive time (18 kms) from the Leh Airport • Each tent has a private terrace • Relive the Glamping legacy of the British Raj • Refreshment snack drawer • 24 hour security at Camp • Large netted windows • On-site paramedic • Writing Desk with in-house stationery • In-House Restaurant with multi-cuisine menu • Designer Crisp Linen • Organic Garden • Menu of pillows • 3 water bodies with wooden decks • Large wardrobes with electronic safe • Archery and Croquet • Exclusive guest lounge • Ensuite Bathroom with Shower • Free Wi-Fi Access at Reception Tent Cubicle • In-house Library • Running Hot and Cold Water • Boutique shop • Hair-dryer and shaver socket • Indoor Games • Specially designed ayurvedic toiletries • In-House Excursion Specialist & Guest Relations • Laundry Services Executive • Private Butler Service PUBLISHED TARIFF 2017 (VALIDITY – 15th May to 10th October) SUITE TYPE OCCUPANCY TOUR COST (IN INDIAN RUPEES) 3 NIGHTS 4 NIGHTS 5 NIGHTS 7 NIGHTS Single Occupancy Per Tent 1,86,000* 2,40,000* 2,90,000* 3,92,000* Double Occupancy Per Tent 2,04,000* 2,64,000* 3,20,000* 4,34,000* LUXURY Third Person Supplement (Above 11 years)** 51,000* 64,000* 75,000* 98,000* SUITE TENT Child without bed (6 - 11 Years) 13,500* 18,000* 22,500* 31,500* Child with bed (6 - 11 Years) 28,500* 38,000* 47,500* 66,500* Child without bed (6 - 11 Years) 15,000* 20,000* 25,000* 35,000* Single Occupancy Per Tent 2,07,000* 2,68,000* 3,25,000* 4,62,000* Double Occupancy Per Tent 2,28,000* 2,96,000* 3,60,000* 4,90,000* Third Person Supplement (Above 11 years)** 57,000* 72,000* 85,000* 1,12,000* PRESIDENTIAL Fourth Person Supplement (Above 11 years)** 45,000* 56,000* 65,000* - SUITE TENT Child without bed (6 - 11 Years) 13,500* 18,000* 22,500* 31,500* Child with bed (6 - 11 Years) 28,500* 38,000* 47,500* 66,500* Child with bed (1 - 5 Years) 15,000* 20,000* 25,000* 35,000* *Prices listed are in INR. Government Service Tax of 9% as applicable. Subject to change without prior notice. Conditions apply. **Prices are for each additional person. GETTING THERE: LADAKH : AT A GLANCE Point of Entry: Leh • Airport : Kushok Bakula Rinpoche Airport IXL (code) 3,265 mtrs Area: 45,110 sq. km makes Ladakh the largest district in India one of the highest civilian airports in the world and is connected to Delhi, Jammu • Population: 1,17, 232 and Srinagar with daily service of Jet Airways, Go Air and Air India (Delhi-Leh is • The Leh district is the coldest and most elevated inhabited region in the 01 hour and 20 minutes flight time) •IXL to Camp : 18 kms (30 minutes drive time) country with altitude ranging from 2, 300 meters to 6, 500 meters CLOTHING: WEATHER PATTERN: • Light layered clothing in the day time • Heavy woollens, with scarves, • Expected temperature during mid May to mid October gloves and hats are recommended for late evenings and nights • Day time : 10° C - 32° C • Sunscreen lotion of SPF 30 and above • Comfortable walking shoes • Night time : 02° C - 12° C Address: Ki Ki Naga, Near Govt. High School, Thiksey, Leh - Manali Road, Leh (Ladakh) – 194201 • Tel: 01982-267144 REDISCOVER THE JOY OF TRAVELLING CALL INDIA: CALL UK / EUROPE: CALL U.S.A.: CALL U.A.E.: CALL RUSSIA: +91 801 090 2222 +44 207 808 5691 +1 212 967 5895 +971 561 302 570 +7 495 645 0424 [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] www.tutc.com | #ArtofGlamping.
Recommended publications
  • Markha Valley Trek
    Anchor A WALK TO REMEMBER The Markha Valley in central Ladakh is a remote high altitude desert region snugly tucked between the Ladakh and Zanskar ranges. This is one of the most diverse and picturesque treks, taking one through the Hemis National Park, remote Buddhist villages, high altitude passes and a lake—the perfect way to acquaint with the mystical kingdom of Ladakh. Words HIMMAT RANA Photography HIMMAT RANA & KAMAL RANA Snow-capped mountains in the backdrop, star-studded sky above and a river flowing right outside the camp— everything came together perfectly at this night halt site near Hanker Village 56 AUGUST 2018 DIC0818-Anchor-Markha.indd 56-57 03/08/18 3:12 pm his is a story from my bag of adventures, in order to stretch the trek to over a week, decided to tweak about two boys, or to be more precise the trekking route a little. While the conventional trekking two men, stubbornly refusing to grow up, routes start from either Chilling (three-four day trek) or trekking by themselves through the Markha Zingchen (five-six day trek) and end at Shang, ours was going Valley in Ladakh, for eight days and seven to commence from Leh city itself and boasted of an additional nights. Not sure if you choose to make a plan pass in Stok La (4,850 metres/15,910 feet), stretching the Tor the plan chooses you, but whichever way it works, it worked duration of the trek to seven to eight days. With a heavy perfectly for me and Kamal as we embarked on an impromptu Ladakhi breakfast in our bellies, we commenced our little trip to Ladakh—the land of high passes, to figure out what the adventure from Leh city.
    [Show full text]
  • Figure 3. Terrace Sections
    Quaternary Research (2018), 89, 281–306. Copyright © University of Washington. Published by Cambridge University Press, 2017. doi:10.1017/qua.2017.92 Quantifying episodic erosion and transient storage on the western margin of the Tibetan Plateau, upper Indus River Tara N. Jonella,b*, Lewis A. Owenc, Andrew Carterd, Jean-Luc Schwennigere, Peter D. Cliftb aSchool of Geosciences, University of Louisiana at Lafayette, Lafayette, Louisiana 70504, USA bDepartment of Geology and Geophysics, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70803, USA cDepartment of Geology, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio 45221, USA dDepartment of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Birkbeck College, London WC1E 7HX, United Kingdom eResearch Laboratory for Archaeology and the History of Art, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3QY, United Kingdom (RECEIVED April 13, 2017; ACCEPTED September 27, 2017) Abstract Transient storage and erosion of valley fills, or sediment buffering, is a fundamental but poorly quantified process that may significantly bias fluvial sediment budgets and marine archives used for paleoclimatic and tectonic reconstructions. Prolific sediment buffering is now recognized to occur within the mountainous upper Indus River headwaters and is quantified here for the first time using optically stimulated luminescence dating, petrography, detrital zircon U-Pb geochronology, and morphometric analysis to define the timing, provenance, and volumes of prominent valley fills. This study finds that climatically modulated sediment buffering occurs over 103–104 yr time scales and results in biases in sediment compositions and volumes. Increased sediment storage coincides with strong phases of summer monsoon and winter westerlies precipitation over the late Pleistocene (32–25 ka) and mid-Holocene (~8–6 ka), followed by incision and erosion with monsoon weakening.
    [Show full text]
  • 2000 Ladakh and Zanskar-The Land of Passes
    1 LADAKH AND ZANSKAR -THE LAND OF PASSES The great mountains are quick to kill or maim when mistakes are made. Surely, a safe descent is as much a part of the climb as “getting to the top”. Dead men are successful only when they have given their lives for others. Kenneth Mason, Abode of Snow (p. 289) The remote and isolated region of Ladakh lies in the state of Jammu and Kashmir, marking the western limit of the spread of Tibetan culture. Before it became a part of India in the 1834, when the rulers of Jammu brought it under their control, Ladakh was an independent kingdom closely linked with Tibet, its strong Buddhist culture and its various gompas (monasteries) such as Lamayuru, Alchi and Thiksey a living testimony to this fact. One of the most prominent monuments is the towering palace in Leh, built by the Ladakhi ruler, Singe Namgyal (c. 1570 to 1642). Ladakh’s inhospitable terrain has seen enough traders, missionaries and invading armies to justify the Ladakhi saying: “The land is so barren and the passes are so high that only the best of friends or worst of enemies would want to visit us.” The elevation of Ladakh gives it an extreme climate; burning heat by day and freezing cold at night. Due to the rarefied atmosphere, the sun’s rays heat the ground quickly, the dry air allowing for quick cooling, leading to sub-zero temperatures at night. Lying in the rain- shadow of the Great Himalaya, this arid, bare region receives scanty rainfall, and its primary source of water is the winter snowfall.
    [Show full text]
  • Migratory Birds of Ladakh a Brief Long Distance Continental Migration
    WORLD'S MIGRATORY BIRDS DAY 08 MAY, 2021 B R O W N H E A D E D G U L L MIGRATORY BIRDS OF LADAKH A BRIEF LONG DISTANCE CONTINENTAL MIGRATION the Arctic Ocean and the Indian Ocean, and comprises several migration routes of waterbirds. It also touches “West Asian- East African Flyway”. Presence of number of high-altitude wetlands (>2500 m amsl altitude) with thin human population makes Ladakh a suitable habitat for migration and breeding of continental birds, including wetlands of very big size (e.g., Pangong Tso, Tso Moriri, Tso Kar, etc.). C O M M O N S A N D P I P E R Ladakh provides a vast habitat for the water birds through its complex Ladakh landscape has significance network of wetlands including two being located at the conjunction of most important wetlands (Tso Moriri, four zoogeographic zones of the world Tso Kar) which have been designated (Palearctic, Oriental, Sino-Japanese and as Ramsar sites. Sahara-Arabian). In India, Ladakh landscape falls in Trans-Himalayan Nearly 89 bird species (long distance biogeographic zone and two provinces migrants) either breed or roost in (Ladakh Mountains, 1A) and (Tibetan Ladakh, and most of them (59) are Plateau, 1B). “Summer Migrants”, those have their breeding grounds here. Trans-Himalayan Ladakh is an integral part of the "Central Asian Flyway" of migratory birds which a large part of the globe (Asia and Europe) between Ladakh also hosts 25 bird species, during their migration along the Central Asian Flyway, as “Passage Migrants” which roost in the region.
    [Show full text]
  • Quaternary River Erosion, Provenance, and Climate Variability
    Louisiana State University LSU Digital Commons LSU Doctoral Dissertations Graduate School 2017 Quaternary River Erosion, Provenance, and Climate Variability in the NW Himalaya and Vietnam Tara Nicole Jonell Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations Part of the Earth Sciences Commons Recommended Citation Jonell, Tara Nicole, "Quaternary River Erosion, Provenance, and Climate Variability in the NW Himalaya and Vietnam" (2017). LSU Doctoral Dissertations. 4423. https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations/4423 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at LSU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in LSU Doctoral Dissertations by an authorized graduate school editor of LSU Digital Commons. For more information, please [email protected]. QUATERNARY RIVER EROSION, PROVENANCE, AND CLIMATE VARIABILITY IN THE NW HIMALAYA AND VIETNAM A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in The Department of Geology and Geophysics by Tara Nicole Jonell B.S., Kent State University 2010 M.S., New Mexico State University, 2012 May 2017 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS There are so many people for which I am thankful. Words can barely express the gratitude I have for my advisor, Dr. Peter D. Clift, who has countlessly provided humor and outstanding support throughout this project. I cannot imagine completing this research without his untiring guidance both in the lab and outside in the field. I also wish to thank my advisory committee for their invaluable insight and patience: Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • 16D Tso Moriri Lake Mountain Biking
    P.O Box: 26106 Kathmandu Address: Thamel, Kathmandu, Nepal Phone: +977 1 5312359 Fax: +977 1 5351070 Email: [email protected] India: 16d Tso Moriri Lake Mountain biking Grade: Moderate Altitude: 5,303 m. Tent Days: 10 Highlights: Tso Moriri Lake is the lake situated in Ladakh part of Jammu and Kashmir in North India. The lake lies at the altitude of 4822m, which is the high altitude lake entirely within India. It is about 26 km north to south in length and 3-5 km wide. The Korzok Monastery, on the western bank of the Tso Moriri lake, is 400 years old and attracts tourists and Buddhist pilgrims. Tourism during May – September attracts a large number of foreign and local tourists. This is not much frequented but a wonderful trekking route with altogether different landscapes lies in the prohibited area. The scenery is wild and vast with snow-capped peaks lining the far horizon.  Duration:- 16 days (Delhi to Delhi) Best time:- July to September Region:- Ladhak   Trip map: Day to day: Day 01: Arrival in Delhi. o/n in Hotel : Today arrive at the Delhi International Airport and meet our local representative. By private transport, we transfer you to our Hotel. Day 02: Fly to Leh (3500 m) o/n in Hotel +O : After early morning breakfast, we transfer to the domestic airport terminal of Delhi and fly to Leh over the majestic Himalaya, in the district of Ladakh. You will be landing at 3500 mtrs. Up on arrival in Leh check in at hotel and you are free to explore the leh.
    [Show full text]
  • Th360⁰rendezvous with Life
    Th360⁰ Rendezvous with life ITINERARY – BEST OF LADAKH PACKAGE (8 nights / 9 days) Day 1: Leh An early morning arrival at Leh airport, you will be greeted by your guide and transferred directly to your hotel. After check-in, spend the day taking rest and adapting to the high altitude of Ladakh. In the late afternoon visit the beautiful Shanti stupa and capture some magnificent photos at sunset. Overnight stay inLeh hotel. Day 2: Leh - Shey - Stok - Thiksey–Hemis - Leh Start your morning with a picturesque drive to Shey Village and a visit to Shey Monastery and Palace (both built in 1655 as summer retreat spaces for the reigning King). Proceed toStok Palace museum to learn about the royal kingdoms of Ladakh and have a chance to view many royal artefacts and paraphernalia dating back to the 11th century. Have lunch in the lama run restaurant in beautiful Thiksey monastery, then take an overland safari drive to Hemisgompabefore returning to Leh for your overnight stay. Day 3: Pangong Lake This morning you will take another scenic drive to the magnificent Pangong Lake - a must see destination for your time in Ladakh and made famous by the 'Three Idiots' movie. More than half of Pangong Lake separatesLadakh from China, and the appearance of the water changes colour at every angle of the sun. This experience makes for some amazing photographs so don’t forget your camera! Return to Leh in the afternoon in time for souvenir shopping in the local bazar. Overnight stay in Leh hotel. Day 4: Nubra Valley – Disket – Hundar An early morning departure for ‘Nubra Valley’ - popularly known as the ‘valley of flowers’.
    [Show full text]
  • Threats to Habitat and Wildlife in Changthang and Rupshu Areas of Ladakh: a Case Study at Hanle
    2 Indian Birds Vol. 7 No. 1 (Publ. 25 April 2011) threats to habitat and wildlife in Changthang and Rupshu areas of Ladakh: a case study at Hanle Rishad Naoroji & Harkirat Singh Sangha Naoroji, R., & Sangha, H. S., 2011. Threats to habitat and wildlife in Changthang and Rupshu areas of Ladakh: a case study at Hanle. Indian BIRDS 7 (1): 2–6. Rishad Naoroji, Godrej Bhavan, 5th Floor, 4A Home Street, Fort, Mumbai 400001, Maharashtra, India. Email: [email protected] Harkirat Singh Sangha, B-27, Gautam Marg, Hanuman Nagar, Jaipur 302021, Rajasthan, India. Email: [email protected] Introduction downstream into northern Pakistan. Eastern Ladakh has several brackish lakes, marshes, barren snow-capped mountains, sand Summer and autumn surveys for raptors were conducted in dunes, grasslands, upland bogs, and rivers forming the western collaboration with the Indian Army from 1997 to 2003; June/July extremity of Changthang, the north-western adjunct of the 2008, and July 2009. The main objective of the surveys was to Tibetan Plateau. Altitudes in Changthang average 4,000–5,000 collect distribution and breeding data on raptors, and list all other m. Temperatures range from up to 35°C in summer to minus bird species in Ladakh (Sangha & Naoroji 2005). 45°C in winter. Precipitation is less than 100 mm per annum. The flora comprises selected elements from Afghanistan, Siberia, Geographical description of the area Tibet, and the Himalayan region together with a considerable proportion of endemic species. Ladakh is a high, cold desert, situated in the western-most Trans- Himalayan region of India, representing the western extremity of the Tibetan Plateau, and having close ecological and cultural Significance of conservation in Ladakh affinities with Tibet (Vaurie 1972).
    [Show full text]
  • Jammu & Kashmir (Including Ladakh)
    ©Lonely Planet Publications Pty Ltd Jammu & Kashmir (including Ladakh) Why Go? ladakh .......................228 Welcome to three incredibly different worlds in one state. leh .............................230 For most foreigners, J&K’s greatest attractions are the Hima- layan lands of Ladakh and Zanskar, with their disarmingly Nubra Valley ..............250 friendly Tibetan Buddhist people, timeless monasteries, arid Pangong Tso .............. 255 canyons and soaring snow-topped mountains. But neither Tso Moriri loop.......... 255 area is easily accessible, especially outside midsummer. Kargil ..........................261 Hordes of domestic visitors make pilgrimages to tem- Suru Valley .................262 ples around Hindu Jammu and love Muslim Kashmir for its cool summer air and alpine scenery. Srinagar’s romantic Zanskar ......................262 houseboat accommodation is another drawcard. However, The Kashmir Valley ...264 political volatility remains a concern. Disputes over Kash- Sonamarg ..................266 mir caused three 20th-century wars, and intercommunal Srinagar ..................... 267 strife still breaks out sporadically. Always check the security situation before travelling to Jammu or Srinagar but, even Jammu....................... 277 if things look dodgy there, you can expect Ladakh to be as meditatively calm as ever. Best Buddhist Monasteries ¨¨Yungdrung Gompa (p260) When to Go ¨¨Thekchhok Gompa (p247) Leh °C/°F Temp Rainfall inches/mm ¨¨Thiksey Gompa (p247) 40/104 32/800 ¨¨Karsha Gompa (p264) 24/600 ¨¨Diskit Gompa (p252) 20/68 16/400 0/32 8/200 Best Mountain -20/-4 0 Scenery J F DNOSAJJMAM ¨¨Pangong Tso (p255) Jun & Sep ideal Jul & Aug Perfect Winter Skiing at ¨¨Dal Lake (p267) for Srinagar and for ladakh; Pa- Gulmarg. ladakh, ¨¨Turtuk and the Shyok Sonamarg; roads halgam overflows only acces- Valley (p253) to ladakh can be with pilgrims; rain sible by air, has blocked.
    [Show full text]
  • Itinerary Itinerary
    LLLAAADDDAAAKKKHHH 2021 IITTIINNEERRAARRYY April to September PAGE 01 ABOUT LADAKH Ladakh - also known as "Land of High Passes" is a high altitude cold desert famous for breathtaking landscapes, crystal clear skies, spectacular passes, Beautiful Monasteries, Snowcapped Peaks, Meandering Rivers, Food, Culture and Festivals which makes it one of the favourite destination amongs travellers. Ladakh is picturesque it is not only known for its scenic beauty but also for some of the most difficult treks in India. BEST TIME TO VISIT April to September PLACES TO VISIT Shanti Stupa Leh Market and Palace Hemis Monastery Shey Monastery Thiksey Monastery Khardungla Pass Chang-la Pass Pangong TSO Lake Nubra Valley Diksit Monastery TSO Moriri Lake Lamayaru, Alchi Zanskar Valley ... and Many More!!! PAGE 02 ITINERARY: Plan 1 : 4 Night 5 Days Destinations Covered : Leh – Sham Valley – Khardungla Pass – Nubra Valley – Pangong Lake Day 1: Arrival – Leh – Shanti Stupa, Leh Palace On arrival at Kushok Bakula airport in Leh (situated at a height of 3,500 meters), you will be transferred to your hotel. Leh Flight is considered one of the most sensational flights in the world. During the day, acclimatize yourself with the weather and high pressure of Ladakh. Evening visit to Shanti Stupa built in 1991 by Japanese Buddhist Bhikshu Gyomyo Nakamura. Shanti stupa provides beautiful and panoramic view of the surrounding landscape. Shanti Stupa in Ladakh was built to promote world peace and a symbol of the ties between Japan and Ladakh. Leh Palace is a former royal palace of the Leh Kingdom. Located in Leh city. It is one tourist attraction of Leh city.
    [Show full text]
  • Draba Alshehbazii (Brassicaceae), a New Species from Extreme Altitudes of Eastern Ladakh (Jammu and Kashmir, India)
    Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2008, 158, 749–754. With 1 figure Draba alshehbazii (Brassicaceae), a new species from extreme altitudes of eastern Ladakh (Jammu and Kashmir, India) LEOŠ KLIMEŠ1* and DMITRY GERMAN2 1Institute of Botany, Czech Academy of Sciences, Dukelská 135, 379 01 Trˇebonˇ , Czech Republic 2South-Siberian Botanical Garden, Altai State University, Lenin str. 61, 656049 Barnaul, Russia Received 13 November 2006; accepted for publication 4 July 2008 The new species Draba alshehbazii Klimeš & D.German sp. nov. (Brassicaceae) from eastern Ladakh, India is described and illustrated. The species grows from 5310 to 6000 m in the subnival zone on solifluction soils. It resembles Draba oreades, with which it often occurs but is distinguished from all other Draba species in Ladakh by its yellow petals and tomentose indumentum. Differences from the eastern Tibetan Draba involucrata are discussed. A simplified key for the identification for Draba species in Ladakh is provided. © 2008 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2008, 158, 749–754. ADDITIONAL KEYWORDS: Cruciferae – Pangong – Rupshu – taxonomy. INTRODUCTION Himalayas is about 30. For example, in the recent treatment of Draba in Jammu and Kashmir State, 21 Within the family Brassicaceae, Draba with c. 350 species were listed (Rajeswari, Uniyal & Singh, 2002). species currently accepted (Appel & Al-Shehbaz, 2002; Similarly, Jafri (1974) reported 23 Draba species from Koch & Al-Shehbaz, 2002) is one of the largest genera, Pakistan and Kashmir. For all of India, Henry & with most species occuring in alpine and arctic regions. Janarthanan (1993) included 33 species, of which 21 The notorious taxonomic complexity of the genus, are known from Jammu and Kashmir.
    [Show full text]
  • High on Lakes, Autobild
    Feature lakes of ladakh In celebration of our third anniversary, AUTO BILD INDIA chose to explore the three highest lakes in the country. The challenge was to chart a route to these uncharted destinations. Join us as we take you to magical lakes of mystical Ladakh... Pictures: Pawan Dagia LEH High on SPANGMIK PANGONG TSO KARU UPSHI lakes MAHI TSUMDO TSO KAR TSO MORIRI KORZOK GOMPA KILLINGSARAI JISPA KEYLONG MANALI 64 www.autobild.in Issue No 01, august 1, 2011 Issue No 01, august 1, 2011 www.autobild.in 65 Feature lakes of ladakh adakh they say is a mysti- The call of the ma- night's sleep we decide to push on Treacherous cal place. Time and again jestic Himalayas to Leh next morning, certain that terrain and inhos- is always hard to pitable conditions explorers make their way the Montero's large fuel tank has ignore. Especially are a given for through treachourous ter- more than enough fuel to make it. if there is an ad- travellers from rainl and respond to its calls. Last This ensures we are amongst the venturous streak Manali to Leh. year we endured this treachery in in your heart fi rst to hit the road as the other Rain, snow, slush trying to get the cheapest car in somewhere, no few travellers head back to Tandi and landslides the world on top of Khardung la, matter how dor- to refuel. En route, we cross the can play havoc the highest road in the world. This mant. Every bend, snowy Baralacha La at 16,043 feet on one's schedule year we have embarked on a jour- every turn of the before descending to Sarchu and and it is advisable ney to travel to the highest lakes winding mountain heading towards the 21 loops of to come prepared in the country.
    [Show full text]